“Do I Have Writing Talent?” It’s A Mistaken Question

Over the years, many people have asked me to look at their writing. “I need to know, do I have talent or not,” they say. “Then I’ll know if I should pursue writing or stick to accounting.”

Their request is seriously flawed, I’d reply. Anyone can become a better writer. When I taught English Composition at various colleges, I saw irrefutable proof of this. Students who submitted hackneyed, half-dead writing to start with turned in lively, well-written essays by the end of the semester. Likewise, I’ve seen plenty of writers whose work seems plain and unimaginative get assignment upon assignment from magazines while others with dazzling wordcraft skills can’t get published anywhere.

According to Stanford psychology professor Carol Dweck, I was right to question the query about talent. Dweck’s book, Mind-set: The New Psychology of Success, reports research showing that in education, the arts and business, people who believe talent is fixed and inborn do not fully develop their potential and do not recover easily from setbacks.

Those who believe talent can be developed, regardless of apparent starting point, not only achieve more but also prompt greater achievement in their children and staff.

Her best news: You can change your mind-set about talent or intelligence. In only two months, kids who were taught that the brain, like a muscle, improves with exercise saw
their math scores rocket from F’s to B’s.

Toss out the belief that you either have writing talent or you don’t. Instead, approach getting published as requiring a set of skills that you can deliberately learn. These skills include:

1. Being sensitive to the differences between words. A good dictionary can help with this, if you consult it to learn, for example, whether a “cauldron” is the same as a “kettle” or when a gang member would be said to have “bravery” and when “bravado.”

2. Recognizing that getting your message across has less to do with what you meant and more to do with how readers understand the words you put together. If no one “gets it,” you must write it differently. Often this lesson is harder for those who feel desperately called to write than for those with a more matter-of-fact attitude toward writing.

3. Being willing to put a piece of writing aside, look at again in the cold light of the morning and rearrange, replace and revise the elements of the piece to tell the story more clearly and more artfully.

4. Having the discipline to learn and apply the rules of spelling, grammar and usage. Yes, when your work is accepted for publication you’ll usually have an editor who’ll save you from major mistakes. But editors prefer working with those who know and follow the standards of professional writing.

5. Being able to bounce back from disappointment. In the writing business, the possibility of rejection never goes away. Successful writers learn not to take it personally for more than an hour or so, then they simply go on to the next publication outlet or the next writing project.

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Tips For Writing Poetry I

Writing poetry has always been about emotion; thrilling, bitterness and even humorous. Although it sounds simple enough, it isn’t always. Poetry can be as complicated or as frivolous possible, it’s all up to the author.

Poetry is food for thought and all food has its ingredients.
Writing poetry techniques

Show all senses. A genuine poem offers its readers a variety of senses to endure while reading.

  • Smell. Give the readers a mental smell of the scene. Create a situation where the reader can distinguish between a ‘good’ or ‘bad’ scent.
  • Touch. Is it rough, smooth, pleasurable? Give the reader a way to ‘touch’ the scenery.
  • Sight. What does it look like? Describe the scenery, describe the situation. Use words which will describe it easily without going too far into detail.
  • Hearing. Does it screech? Does it yelp? Or is it smoothing and sensual? Again, let the situation give a sense of what the surroundings sound like.
  • Taste. Is it salty or bitter? It doesn’t always have to be food that has a taste. It could be a situation which leaves a ‘bad taste in your mouth’ or even a good taste.

Other tips will be posted on the second part of the article within a week. So stay tune :)

Fiction Writing Tips – an Intro

Almost of the fiction writers learn to write by writing. Though writing is an art, there are also skills, software, vocabulary game and include many techniques that should be learned to develop inner talent of the writers. Additional help from constructive criticism and feedback should make it better in the end.

You need to read a lot in order to be a good writer. On the other hand, you should observe and analyze everything around you more carefully. Based on your observation, you should write a lot to practice. Writing needs discipline, it can be a hard work but can be fun also. Scheduling your activity is very important since you will have structured terms and goals and make your writing better.

Fiction writers need to have a brilliant, or at least good grasp of the language, they also must be storytellers. A very nice story may compensate for less-than-brilliant writing, but brilliant writing will not save a bad story.

Readers of your story want the story to be believable. And your task is produce a story that fulfil their requirement. The writer should write about what he or she already knows through experience or can learn about through research. The narrative should read as if the writer really knows what he or she is writing about.

The article above is just brief introduction of the tips, next we’ll talk about major components of the stories.