True, most of what I write sucks, but I publish it or send it anyway. If you wait until your writing doesn't suck, you'll never get anything published, and your emails won't be delivered. I think my emails and posts are better than they were when I started. That only happens when you write every day. When you finish writing something, publish it. You can always clean it up later or rewrite it better. Every now and then, you'll write something pretty good. The gap between the sucky stuff and the good stuff gets smaller. With practice and feedback, you'll end up writing mostly good stuff with the occasional brilliant stuff. Then that gap gets smaller. Suddenly you discover that you no longer write sucky stuff. Your worst day of writing is pretty good stuff, with most of it great to brilliant. How long will that take? How much can you write every day? The more you write and publish, the faster you'll get to the great stage. Writers write. If you want to make a buck online, you have to write or pay someone to write for you. It's much better to learn how to write for yourself.
You haven't written anything since school, and even then, your marks were average at best. My reports nearly all said, "could do better". I had an idea that I could write, but that was suppressed by my teachers. I didn't know anyone who wrote for a living and didn't know it was even possible. Today anyone can write and get published. It could be emails, blog posts, ebooks, etc. Someone will read everything you write, they may not like it, but that is irrelevant. If you evoke some reaction, you only need to work out how to get the reaction you want rather than some random response. Getting the reaction you want is a learned thing. You can learn by writing for years and checking your feedback, or you can speed up that learning here. https://link.wm-tips.com/reviews. |
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Brent Milne 12 Torrens St Happy Valley South Australia |
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