Colleen Thomas
Ultrafemme
- Joined
- Feb 11, 2002
- Posts
- 21,545
dreampilot79 said:Collie... what makes it personal and makes it hurt... is the truth in it!
I've had personal slams before that didn't bother me.. because they were about the characters in the story.. the characters are NOT me. I could shake those off because it's what the character did, NOT what I would do or feel.
This time, it's about me and I do get it! I created an incident AWAY from the story line, and then promptly put it in the background. I did not explain myself or the incident.
I was guilty of trivializing a traumatic event. I AM THE ONE who trivialized it. I am guilty. It is my guilt that hurts much more than the comments themselves.
Hun, we all make mistakes in writing. Even Shang will occasionally make one. You don't learn if you don't expand your work and you can't get better if you find niche and stay there.
If you feel like it was an egrigious error, then don't pull the work. Go back and edit it, treating the event with the importance you seem to believe it deserves now. You have oun something you didn't handel well by your own reckoning. that's half the battle. Now you need to giveit the time and consideration and the best of your consideravble talent to see if you can handle it in a way you deem appropriate.
If you can, then this contest has given you something invaluable. It has given you an opportunity to refine your grasp of your craft. If you just can't find a way to make it work, then it has still given you something invaluable, it has given you a natural bound to the conceptual phase of further works.
Don't get down on yourself or let self recrimination rule the day hun. Take the negative here and use it to better yourself as an author.
The kind of feedback that exposes a glaring error in your work is rare and a gift. Even if it hurts terribly, it's a rare opportunity to grow as an author in a way that is measureable and tangible.



