1
Introducing myself:
Hi, I'm PanzerFeck. I've been writing for most of my life to varying capacities. Approaching middle age I'm busier with writing than I've ever been with my hand in political writing, blogging on humanist issues and mental health, writing poetry and performing before live audiences.
I'm editing my debut novel for the crime fiction market at the date of writing this and I've also written and edited short stories, theatre plays and doctored indie screenplays.
I want to share, without going into too great a depth, how I go about my writing and how I went from unoriginal, insecure and attention seeking to constantly creative, confident and greatly productive.
It's not all mind over matter. It's a lot of work, depending on how much you want to write, and some handy tips from the media industry should help you to open yourself to greater possibilities.
2
The Why's, Where's, How's and Who's:
I am a Writer. I've never published a novel or been published in a paper or magazine, or paid for my work, but I am a writer. Not being a novellist doesn't stop us from being what we are.
Writers are people who live by a certain lifestyle, just as dancers club at the weekend and cooks don't have to be chefs by day to know how to make good food.
For some, it's a phase that comes and goes. For others it's a battle they don't know how to quit, but as a writer I apply my skill to everything that interests me and therefore I never run out of things to write about, nor the desire to write about them.
I have fewer hopes and dreams these days, and they're in no rush to become a reality. I was also a pretty good live musician and artist, but one day my writing left all that in the dust.
Sure, I'm not amazing or anything, but it's a lifetime craft, hence the word "lifestyle." I won't get better if I deny myself the right to advance like all other good writers have!
The Fellow Writer - I used to be the type of kid that compared himself to everyone else in the room, always worrying that I lacked something that people needed to be interesting and capable human beings. I did. I was young. I hadn't developed or experienced life like my heroes had before me. I needed to learn to be more than a poser.
In everything I've done, I've shied from competition. Not only was I bad at a lot of things, I was awful at competition itself. I was a sore loser and because of that, when I started to get the hang of things, I didn't know how to win...
But I've come to feel that, despite some sore losers who criticise others to feel better about themselves, us writers AREN'T competition.
Think about it.
The marketers, the publishers and the people looking to get publicity from our work are the competitors. Good on you if you find success, but...
Us writers are a fucked up bunch. And therefore, wherever we gather, we're a support group for intellectual fuckups and artists and our nicotine and caffeine addictions.
At Literotica we're a support group for perverts too, which is awesome.
And where would we be without our fellow writers but reading nothing other than our own work, which has no surprises in store?!
We need each other, so we should respect each other. Support your fellow fuckup, dear reader, for heroes cannot be self-proclaimed.
The Audience - on the other hand, i have to be honest, most often they're a blessing and otherwise they can be a pain in the fuckin' ass!
Critics aren't we all?!
No... We're not all critics, though we all have been or will be at some point. But there are critics who verge on Troll-status, whose who speak with brutal honesty and then those who speak with eloquent passion. I might not love them all, but guess which one I love to poke and jab at?
Get used to those trolls. But never take shit from an SJW when you have your right to intelligently defend your right to write.
Demographic - this relates to where in the world and to what people you aim your writing at. This is why movie reboots of classics tend to drop from an R-Rated/18 to a PG or a 12. It gets more views.
Literotica can't work that way for obvious reasons, but there are ways around this. Develop your writing voice and style to reach out across the English language and you'll get yourself a whole bunch of Favourites.
Also, never stop reading and educating yourself and the age of your demographic will become more inclusive of older readers.
We're not necessarily smarter, and I hate the use of the word "Superior" with a passion, but us jaded folk thirst for fresh voices.
Your demographic is your target audience!
3