hannah: (Sam and Dean - soaked)
hannah ([personal profile] hannah) wrote2021-07-23 04:48 pm

AIAI? Wrting Advice Edition

[Asking because I really don't know. Only the usernames have been changed. After this, the conversation moved onto befriending fellow ex-wives of the same man.]

Person 1: I'm trying to finish this chapter. It was done, and then it wasn't, so now I'm adding another scene...
which will suck.

Person 2: it will not

Person 3: But the spirit of the whole thing, that I love. The crazier the better

Person 2: Yes it will NOT suck

Person 4: It will not suck
We hath spoken.

Me: Yeah, it probably will.
Most first drafts do.
And then you'll put in the work to un-suck it.
De-suck it?
What's the proper conjugation here?

Person 2: [Hannah], no.
As previously discussed, telling people their work will suck is not the encouragement you think it is.

Me to Person 2: I'm thinking of every piece of practical writing advice I've gotten from people who do it for a living, and the advice of "the first draft won't be perfect" is high up there. Right up there with "don't be discouraged by frustrating initial efforts."

Person 2 to me: Yes, and I understand that. But how you say it is not this. And we've asked you to stop.

Me to Person 2: To be clear for the future, had I said, "Whatever you write, I'm sure be able to turn it into something astonishing", would that have been okay?

Person 2: yes

[In retrospect, the "it will suck" could have been in reference to the unpleasantness often associated with new, fresh composition to work already thought complete. But as no one else in the group took it in such a way, it didn't hit me to do so as well. So, AITA here?]
rionaleonhart: top gear: the start button on a bugatti veyron. (going down tonight)

[personal profile] rionaleonhart 2021-07-23 09:18 pm (UTC)(link)
I don't think you were being an arsehole; your aim was encouragement! But I think 'the first draft will probably suck' can hit differently depending on how a person writes, so how helpful it is to hear can depend on the audience. I do most of my revising as I'm going along, which means my final drafts are substantially the same as my first drafts; if someone tells me my first drafts suck, that's really bad news for me, because it means the finished pieces I post are bad as well.

Basically, if you're talking to someone whose writing approach doesn't include heavy changes after the first draft, 'the first draft will suck' can be heard as 'the story will suck', which I don't think was your intended message at all.
actiaslunaris: Galileo - Utsumi Kaoru resting her head on Yukawa Manabu's shoulder - text: a line-drawn heart (heart on his sleeve)

[personal profile] actiaslunaris 2021-07-23 10:31 pm (UTC)(link)
No. You said something pragmatic; it was not received well, though I don't see Person 1's response here, only Person 2's. I see here a miscommunication where your thoughts were different from the general consensus. This doesn't make you wrong.

Lessons from my own experience seem to indicate most people want commiseration/encouragement when they express themselves like this, not solutions. With closeness in the relationship, it's possible to offer the comfort first and then the pragmatic solution, but even then I find it's best to ask first.

I'm sorry this has caused an upset to your day. I've been there. I hope it gets better.
slaymesoftly: (Default)

[personal profile] slaymesoftly 2021-07-24 01:35 am (UTC)(link)
Since the author was saying they expected the next chapter to suck, I think it was perfectly fair for you to use their own words. Surely no one is so unaware of that to think you were saying that it was no good. You were just saying that rough first drafts often need a lot of work. That isn't true for everyone, for sure, but often enough for it to be a good rule of thumb. I took it to mean "No worries. You'll have the words and can fix them later."
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my €0.02, currently worth $0.0235 or £0.0171

[personal profile] jadelennox 2021-07-24 03:01 am (UTC)(link)

This one is complicated for me. Personally, I agree with you. I avoid places where people say "no matter what you do, it's awesome!!!!" because I find it unhelpful. It means when something does suck -- as most first drafts do, as you say -- that it's a devastating, totalizing failure. And it also means that I disbelieve all positive feedback. Whereas "yeah, it'll probably suck, but writing it is the first step to writing the awesome final draft," is actual practical encouragement. (That's probably a brain chemistry and personality thing; I don't understand people like Person 2, but I acknowledge that's how they experience the world.)

But, on the other hand, Person 2 also said:

As previously discussed and And we've asked you to stop.

So this is where context is necessary. Is Person 2 representing consensus/mod opinion, or just Person 2 themselves and maybe one or two friends? Did these conversations actually happen in a way where consensus or a mod hath spoken? If so, then you're not the asshole, per se, but you slipped up on a community rule. Also the community culture might not be right for you, if that's annoying to you (as it would be to me).

On the other hand, if Person 2 really meant, God, Hannah, Carl and I whined about this to you last week, before the rest of the community told us to shut up then Person 2 is the asshole.

It also depends on what you know about Person 1. If Person 2 was speaking for them and you don't think they agree, that means something as well.

likeadeuce: (Default)

[personal profile] likeadeuce 2021-07-24 01:09 pm (UTC)(link)
I think what you may be missing is that the first person is saying 'it will suck' with the hope of getting encouragement, not having a critical/philosophical conversation about the quality of first drafts. So your statement wasn't incorrect in general (though consider it might be incorrect specifically, if you don't know this person's writing process; the 'shitty first drafts' approach is NOT universal, some people don't put anything on paper until they have worked it out in their head and it only needs minor tweaks, if any; and I've personally written plenty of scenes that worked great the first time and made it into the final version. So if you are talking to a person who writes that way the subtext they take from it might well be 'because you do not rely on heavy revision to improve your initial drafts, you are an inferior writer and your work DOES suck). Bit in any case, it appears you were misreading what they wanted out of the communication.

Also, perhaps most important here, person 2 is telling you that they have previously discussed this communication issue with you before and, it seems like, after a brief conversation, you were able to work out a better way to handle that specific situation.

Communication is contextual, and a person who is willing to tell you that you've misread a situation is valuable.

likeadeuce: (Default)

[personal profile] likeadeuce 2021-07-25 01:35 am (UTC)(link)
Yes, that seems like more evidence that this person is venting frustration / wanting encouragement/ not asking for advice.
Edited 2021-07-25 01:35 (UTC)
likeadeuce: (Default)

[personal profile] likeadeuce 2021-07-25 01:49 am (UTC)(link)
Some people either instinctively or deliberately express despair or put themselves down as a way to get encouragement, and while I can see that getting annoying i think maybe the best way to handle it if it's annoying you is to just ignore it? It's ok if you don't want to be manipulated into an insincere response, but since this seems to be a group chat situation where several ppl ARE ok with responding that way, then just opting out might be best.
likeadeuce: (Default)

[personal profile] likeadeuce 2021-07-25 03:50 am (UTC)(link)
I don't know the whole context of this group, obviously but, again, if she's communicating what she wants to communicate to the extent that at least 3 of her friends are getting it, there is literally nothing wrong with what she's doing (deliberate or not) and it doesn't seem like it's your job to respond in an unwanted way (and, to go back to your original question, frankly, continuing to do so when you know it's not welcome does make you the asshole).
jadelennox: Senora Sabasa Garcia, by Goya (Default)

Re: my €0.02, currently worth $0.0235 or

[personal profile] jadelennox 2021-07-25 12:43 pm (UTC)(link)

That definitely sounds like a person 2 is TA, partially because they are talking like there’s a community rule you’re breaking, and partially because “First drafts usually suck, and that’s OK“ is absolutely encouraging someone to keep writing.

bonibaru: boot heel! (Default)

[personal profile] bonibaru 2021-07-25 02:52 pm (UTC)(link)
^^^^^^^^^^ this.
bonibaru: boot heel! (Default)

[personal profile] bonibaru 2021-07-25 02:57 pm (UTC)(link)
It's a not-uncommon coping mechanism for people who suffer from anxiety, to worst-case things out loud so that their friends will offer encouragement, which can help assuage their anxiety. Based on context that is what seems to be happening here. Based on the fact that you've said it's happened before with this person, that supports the idea that this is their coping mechanism. I agree with the commenter who is saying the best future course of action is to let it go by unremarked. It would go against your own nature to be insincere, and you certainly are under no obligation to change yourself either in this case, so in a situation where two people's forms of communication/response differ this widely, the best thing to avoid confusion or hurt feelings is to just let the social norms play out, let the feedback loop between the person seeking encouragement and the people reinforcing this by offering it in response, complete itself and move on.
rosefox: Green books on library shelves. (Default)

[personal profile] rosefox 2021-07-25 07:39 pm (UTC)(link)
I have no idea whether you identify as neurodivergent, but this is such a classic ND/NT interaction that I felt a deep pang of sympathy for you. Why can't people just SAY "Please reassure me that I'll write again someday!"?
rosefox: Green books on library shelves. (Default)

[personal profile] rosefox 2021-07-25 07:47 pm (UTC)(link)
+1 to all the above comments. Person 1 is making what sound like factual statements but have a silent "I fear that" or "I think that" in front of them. This is very very common in people who feel anxious or depressed: their brains tell them a falsehood that sounds like a truth ("Your writing sucks" "You'll never write again"), they believe it, and they repeat it, hoping someone will argue with them and reassure them that their anxiety/depression is wrong.

But you are under no obligation to help Person 1 fight their brainworms. You can just say to yourself, "There goes Person 1, speaking from their brainworms again—welp, not my business," and let Person 2 reply to their friend in the way that they both feel is useful and appropriate.

If for some reason silence isn't an option, you can try asking "What kind of support would be useful to you right now?" or "What kind of response are you looking for when you say things like that?" and then mirror back whatever they say. But it sounds like this is a person who will resent being made to admit out loud that they're looking for a particular response or type of support, because you're supposed to just know. So it's safest to pretend you didn't see it at all—you were up getting a fresh cup of coffee, in the bathroom, waxing the cat, emailing the president, whatever.
Edited 2021-07-25 19:49 (UTC)