I said mine, what's yours.
Yes, I would love to make it a career, so I suppose when the alarm goes off before the sun comes up I would point to that as my reason, but barring that I'd have to say because it's about the only holdover from career day.
I wrote and almost finished a choose your own adventure book when I was 11. I should have just read and enjoyed them, and I suppose I did, but for whatever reason simply reading them was not good enough. I had to write one as well.
That feeling hasn't ever gone away.
Life and video games and college and work and kids have all been thrown in my path as writing killing distractions - and I must admit it's the damn video games that have done the most damage - but here I am still plugging away a few words/paragraphs/pages at a time in order to complete some stories that I hope will one day see the world, and vice versa.
Axe
quote:
I must admit it's the damn video games
I know that story all too well, though getting married and having kids have weaned me down to just a few hours a week of gaming.
I write, when you come down to the very essence of it, because it gives me a rush of adrenaline. You know the feeling when you are 'in the zone' when writing.
There are many other reasons. It is an outlet for my imagination. I'm a person who lives more inside of my head than outside of it. So bringing those worlds and ideas out a necessary outlet.
Yes, I'd also love to make a full-time career out of it, to spend my working hours doing something I love. That aspect motivates me to write when I'm not in the mood to do it.
[This message has been edited by Osiris (edited May 01, 2011).]
I think to me it is the thought of creating people and worlds from nothing. I have a rather boring job where I get a lot of time on my own and I started creating scenes and characters to while away the time without ever setting anything down on paper until I finally hit 25 and thought I'm not getting an younger and if I don't write that book now I never will.
The thought of actually having a book written by myself with a beginning a middle and an end is great. I think it's more a personal goal to create this thing and to have these things I've seen in my minds eye down in black and white and to be personally happy with them--that's what I really want to achieve.
Seriously though it's a fun hobby if if it never goes anywhere.
It started that way. Right now it continues out of inertia...most of the writers I wanted to be published among have departed, died or moved on to other things or just not publishing anymore...I've grown seriously disillusioned with the process itself...I found I got a more lively response writing Internet Fan Fiction than from anything I've sent in to an SF market...I don't even read much SF these days, but can't find some other field to concentrate my efforts on...
Ah, well. "There never was much hope," as Gandalf said, at least in the movie version.
I agree with you there, Robert. My Warcraft fanfiction is two books long now, running at around 500,000 words. I've had more fun with it than just about any of my other stories.
[This message has been edited by Natej11 (edited May 01, 2011).]
I also have a strong entrepreneural spirit and once I hone my craft I believe I can do an excellent job of self-promotion and epublishing along the lines of Joe Konrath. I've worked at a large advertising/marketing agency for the past four years and have learned a lot about self-promotion, and I've always been a salesman of one sort or another.
The trick for me is to learn the discipline to get from mere pretty words and interesting ideas to having a polished salable package. I'm still working through writing out my million words of garbage. I have one novel, two novellas, and a few short stories behind me. I'm forming a writing group with three other locals serious about learning the craft and hopefully that will bear some fruit.
Once I realized I could do it with some resemblance of ability, then I started doing it in the hopes other would enjoy it.
Now I hope to be published like (to quote Robert) "all those cool Science Fictiion stories".
I see a couple of posts above regarding fanfic. I never understood it to be honest, although I heard an interview with a woman who wrote some stargate fanfic and was later commissioned to write novels in the stargate universe.
What would I even choose if I had to write in another universe? Stargate? Star wars?
Not sure...
----
It's like asking why athletes do sports, why painters paint, why musicians play, why dancers dance, why filmmakers make movies.
We do it because it enriches our own lives and the lives of those around us.
Humans are here on this earth to connect with each other, and we forge these connections in so many different ways. Writing has a unique ability to allow a person to empathize with aspects of humanity they haven't encountered before. Reading a story is like doing a "dress rehearsal" for life. By reading about the trials and tribulations of others, even if those "others" are fictional people, it encourages people to build their own sense of values and beliefs, opening their minds to lifestyles and mindsets that are wholly different than their own.
Very few people alive today have lived through ordeals as tragic and heartbreaking as The Holocaust, but by reading stories of this part of our history, whether they're fictional and non-fictional, we better understand the reality of things that took place, and will be more prepared to take action if history begins to repeat itself.
Even reading about a boy wizard—orphaned and alone learning how to stand up to evil and face trials with bravery—it forces readers to imagine who they are as a person, what they would do in the face of such trials. It's a kind of hypothetical self-examination, that's also entertaining and enlightening. People learn things about themselves when they read.
Writers write because they want to make those connections, they want to entertain and enlighten, they want to teach and they want to share. They want to change people, and change the world for the better.
I write for all the geeky cool girls out there, because I have their stories to tell.
* I can't make a living at it.
* The likelihood of professional publication is miniscule.
* I can't make or dedicate time to get better at it.
* It detracts from my pleasures and necessities including reading, exercise, and time with my family--i.e. living life.
* The quality of my writing is inconsistent.
I can only conclude that I write....
Because I'm stupid.
Respectfully,
Dr. Bob
quote:Well put Osiris.
That aspect motivates me to write when I'm not in the mood to do it
Wonderbus - Finishing a book is a rush. It's a novel, and you wrote it, and it can't ever be taken away. From that point on, you're a novelist.
Natej - Did you enter the Warcraft writing contest?
quote:Good call KayTi. I'm not sure what the % is, but if I had to breakdown my answer, out of 100%, this would be in there somewhere.
I write because nobody has written the stories I wanted to read
DrBob- That could sum it up couldn't it. :O
Axe
Speaking of which I need to get my current submissions to the post office. Aieee.
This is a tough competition, as you could imagine. To be named, or even win a prize would be a serious boon.
I wrote what I thought was a pretty good story. I don't know how far I got - but I didn't place. They receive thousands of stories...
The first year's word limit was higher than last.
I think it was 7500 word limit last time.
I'd suggest since you've got so much material already to pluck a great scene out and turn it into a complete story now, then wait for the official rules and tweak it.
Also be sure to read the past winners so you see what tickles their fancy. The first year's winner was fantastic.
p.s. I'd also have to say a % of why I write is to enter contests. Both here (intro challenges) and WotF, WoW, etc.
Axe
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[This message has been edited by axeminister (edited May 03, 2011).]
Oh, and getting paid helps. Yes, yes it does.
I have to shovel what's in the head onto the paper and sometimes, there's a nugget of gold among the mounds.