(no subject)
Jun. 4th, 2007 03:13 pmDo you like reading your own writing?
My LJ or newsgroup comments always seem a bit pointless. My diary LJ entries show fairly well what I was doing at the time. Emails I sent generally turn out to be nice enough, but I was never as polite as I thought I was in official emails, and in social chatty emails the contact was nice but the content not as urgent as we thought at the time :)
In essays I generally find I may have been interesting, but wasn't putting over a thought as coherently as I might, more writing a connected series of things.
But in fiction or witterings of any sort, I always find myself much more entertained than anyone else ever seemed, as if I were narcissisticly my own favourite author.
See this post about a dangerous stellar radiation source. No-one else commented at all, but *I* thought I brought it off very well :)
My LJ or newsgroup comments always seem a bit pointless. My diary LJ entries show fairly well what I was doing at the time. Emails I sent generally turn out to be nice enough, but I was never as polite as I thought I was in official emails, and in social chatty emails the contact was nice but the content not as urgent as we thought at the time :)
In essays I generally find I may have been interesting, but wasn't putting over a thought as coherently as I might, more writing a connected series of things.
But in fiction or witterings of any sort, I always find myself much more entertained than anyone else ever seemed, as if I were narcissisticly my own favourite author.
See this post about a dangerous stellar radiation source. No-one else commented at all, but *I* thought I brought it off very well :)
no subject
Date: 2007-06-04 03:31 pm (UTC)In the same way, I have a suspicion that most of my LJ icons entertain me far more than anyone else.
One or two of the things you have written I *really* liked (and have commented on at the time) ... but I don't know if they're the ones you specially like or not.
no subject
Date: 2007-06-04 03:47 pm (UTC)Like, in the real world, I can appreciate better cakes than I can bake :)
One or two of the things you have written I *really* liked (and have commented on at the time)
Ooh, thank you. Though now I'm curious, can you remember which :)
I'd expect some difference in my favorites to other people's. Many creators have commented that their favorites aren't everyone else's. But sometimes I seem to be the only one who appreciates something at all, and sometimes the only one who doesn't :) I can imagine it being incredibly frustrating if (a little like Tolkien and LOTR) everyone praises you for something you don't think is that great...
no subject
Date: 2007-06-04 03:54 pm (UTC)I did a splendid painting out of the hobbit for my first year art exam (we were read a passage from the hobbit and then told to paint something inspired by it). Well, I was dead pleased with it. I got 38% and came bottom of the class.
last year when I was writing my nine-month report I had terrible trouble getting it to be how I wanted - I knew what was good when I saw it/managed to write it, but I couldn't see how to /get/ it, so it was a bit hit and miss.
was there something like 'how the kitten became', and a similar one about fire?
no subject
Date: 2007-06-04 04:15 pm (UTC)was there something like 'how the kitten became', and a similar one about fire?
Oh yes, thank you! Sorry, I thought you were talking about old blog posts.
no subject
Date: 2007-06-04 04:17 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-04 04:34 pm (UTC)I generally think in pictures; I just use words as an intermediary for getting the picture from my head to someone else's.
When I try and draw the pictures that are in my head, they tend not really to be drawable. Maybe my imaginarypictures<-> pictures is like the RL-Escher mapping. Or maybe I just can't draw after all :)
no subject
Date: 2007-06-04 11:25 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-04 03:50 pm (UTC)