Post by account_disabled on Dec 13, 2023 2:56:35 GMT -5
The exercise to be done this time is more complex and longer. It is an exercise that triggers a process of growth and change. You can write down all the steps you plan to take to begin and complete this process. Here are some tips. Identify a phrase or quote from a writer that represents you as a person. Or even a sentence from a blogger you respect, because any sentence – as we have seen – can adapt to writing. Write a post in which you relate the sentence to your writing activity.
Make that sentence your philosophy of life and consequently your literary philosophy. Commit yourself, in the coming weeks, to carrying forward what that sentence managed to trigger in your will. Discover what you always wanted to write but never dared to. It won't be difficult to find it. It is also Phone Number Data hidden in your readings and perhaps there are books that attract you but you have not yet dared to face them. Read those books and post your impressions on your blog. Relate to your writing. Write the story you've never written before. Write and publish. Don't think about mass.
Think about the one reader – it doesn't matter if they exist or if you have a million of them. Write with the thought of satisfying only one. Find out the mistake you have always made so far. Find out what you wanted to do but always put it off. Write a post in which you describe this mistake that only slowed down your writing activity, which prevented you from emerging. Write a post about what you intend to do to commit the famous type II error. Advice from Mahatma Gandhi I leave you with a historical phrase from Gandhi, a phrase uttered for other and higher purposes, but which I am now borrowing to adapt it to writing.
Make that sentence your philosophy of life and consequently your literary philosophy. Commit yourself, in the coming weeks, to carrying forward what that sentence managed to trigger in your will. Discover what you always wanted to write but never dared to. It won't be difficult to find it. It is also Phone Number Data hidden in your readings and perhaps there are books that attract you but you have not yet dared to face them. Read those books and post your impressions on your blog. Relate to your writing. Write the story you've never written before. Write and publish. Don't think about mass.
Think about the one reader – it doesn't matter if they exist or if you have a million of them. Write with the thought of satisfying only one. Find out the mistake you have always made so far. Find out what you wanted to do but always put it off. Write a post in which you describe this mistake that only slowed down your writing activity, which prevented you from emerging. Write a post about what you intend to do to commit the famous type II error. Advice from Mahatma Gandhi I leave you with a historical phrase from Gandhi, a phrase uttered for other and higher purposes, but which I am now borrowing to adapt it to writing.