how did the writer feel when he learned to do small job
Answers
which ghost are you referring to?????Do questions correctly....
Answer:
I guess I'll take myself as an example for this, as I can't speak for every writer. I've been writing since I was in elementary school and I can safely say that my reasons for writing then are the same as they are now. I've always had an overactive imagination, full of ideas that are constantly swimming around in my head. As I got older, the inspiration never really faded. I struggled through a lot of my writing in middle school and high school because I had all these ideas and all these things I wanted to write about and I would act them out in my head, but when I put them on paper, it just didn't sound as elegant or beautiful as I imagined. I eventually got through this with a lot of feedback from other people, from being lucky in my education system, and just being persistent as heck. I will admit that, in the middle of college, I stopped writing stories for awhile. It wasn't something I consciously did or wanted to do, but it just happened. I had stopped reading books around that time, too. I'm not sure if it was the overabundance of essays and academic reading I had to write in my major, but there was a good 2-3 period where I was lucky if I could churn out a short story. It wasn't until recently - about a year ago - that I started writing and reading again in fervor, for the same reason I listed above: inspiration. My personal opinion is that if you have the drive, the imagination, and the passion, you will always return to writing. Writers don't "give up" unless they're not supposed to be writers. Some people try very hard, thinking they want to write, thinking there is some trick to it, but it's innate. If you feel the passion and desire, the words will flow out and you'll suddenly be at 20 pages in what felt like mere minutes of exploring your world.
The second question is a little odd in the way its phrase and hopefully I'm not misconstruing it. For me, I can't write things that I personally would not want to read. As long as I am enjoying what I'm writing and it's something that I would find myself reading, then there's no doubt that I'll continue to write it.
I have several (and I mean, several) stories that I have a good chunk written, but they've just never been finished. I occasionally go back to read through them and there are a few that I've told myself that I'd fix so that I could finish them, but I have to actually do that with any. There has only been one story that I have done that with and while I've gotten over 10 chapters of it through recently, it's still not complete. When you start a story, you never really know whether it's going to work out or not, especially if it's a spur-of-the-moment type of idea. For me, it just depends on the rate at which I'm churning out chapters. The stories where it's slow-going and I'm not hugely invested are those that I suspect will be abandoned eventually. Others, where I'm barely able to stop writing and am constantly getting ahead of myself in my head and forcing myself to slow down to write everything down, are the ones that I know will be completed. Some ideas and characters are more precious than others. So, in short - no. You never know if an idea will really work out or not. This is especially true for writers like myself, who don't construct proper outlines. For those that do outline before writing, perhaps their ideas always work. I'm not completely sure.
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