Oh, sweetie ....

For example, a woman is submitting her artist resume and portfolio as part of the application process for joining a fine art gallery. She starts with how she has never taken a class or shown her work before, but all her friends tell her she is "so good!!!" Her art would be promising for a high school student, but the gallery shows art from professionals with 10+ years experience, frequently 20 or 30 years who have won awards in national competition.
Reminds me of what one of my English professors said about Timon of Athens:

"It's terrible Shakespeare. It would be really great for you and me, but it's terrible Shakespeare."
 
As T.S. Eliot said, "Immature poets imitate; mature poets steal."
"Steal Like An Artist" is the title of the best book on creativity I ever found.
What a high school art teacher tried to explain and failed so badly I gave up on art for a decade, that book explains beautifully
 
I know we all write differently, but is this a common sentiment?
I love writing dialog - my characters often tend to display verbal gymnastics that would perhaps be unlikely IRL.

I watched a documentary about Buffy and one of the - thirty-something - writers said that they write dialog how they wished they had spoken in high school.
 
I do not always start my stories with dialogue, and sometimes I do, but then I might not use any dialogue afterward. I often find writing dialogue a bit difficult because there are so many grammatical rules involved, so I try to avoid it when I can.

I read part of the story, and yes, it contains a lot of information, but there is also internal dialogue, or at least the main character’s thoughts. The topic does not really appeal to me, but it was nicely written.

When I look at my own stories, I also cut out a lot of what I consider unnecessary, but I do like to describe things in detail, what is happening, why it is happening, and what is meant by it. Sometimes that works well, and sometimes it becomes a bit long-winded.

I think everyone should be able to write in their own way. That is what makes us unique as writers and why it is interesting to read work from a variety of different voices.
Yes everyone should be able to write in their own way. But it's a shame if something like a few grammar rules is restricting the palette for you to choose from.

I assume it's the punctuation rules for where commas go versus quotes and those things. Have you looked at @FrancesScott how to on this? Once you internalize a couple of rules, 99% of the cases are easy.
 
Yes everyone should be able to write in their own way. But it's a shame if something like a few grammar rules is restricting the palette for you to choose from.

I assume it's the punctuation rules for where commas go versus quotes and those things. Have you looked at @FrancesScott how to on this? Once you internalize a couple of rules, 99% of the cases are easy.
Hi!
 
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