September 24, 2014
Questions for Discussion and Journaling
I think it’s because people are scared to read it. They feel like they have to be great writers right off the bat and they’re afraid if someone were to read what they wrote they would get laughed at.
I could relate with Anne Lamott. I usually don’t know how to start off a paper and I would spend hours on the introduction; so, I typically just start off by writing a bunch of semi-coherent sentences and try to figure out in what direction I want to take my paper. By the time I get to the body I would get a “lightbulb moment” and I would go back an edit.
My favorite line was “I’d obsessed over getting creamed by a car before I could write a decent second draft” because I could totally relate to this. I often find myself wishing certain impending doom sometimes than to write a paper that I don’t know where to start.
She uses cuss words and other jokes to make the reader relate, stay engaged, and feel comfortable.
I never really figured out who the voice in my head is, but it’s not my own. When I’m planning out or writing something it’s always talking, at first I thought it was my own voice but t’s sort of different between when I’m just thinking in my head on a regular basis versus when I’m writing an important document.
Questions for Discussion and Journaling
I think it’s because people are scared to read it. They feel like they have to be great writers right off the bat and they’re afraid if someone were to read what they wrote they would get laughed at.
I could relate with Anne Lamott. I usually don’t know how to start off a paper and I would spend hours on the introduction; so, I typically just start off by writing a bunch of semi-coherent sentences and try to figure out in what direction I want to take my paper. By the time I get to the body I would get a “lightbulb moment” and I would go back an edit.
My favorite line was “I’d obsessed over getting creamed by a car before I could write a decent second draft” because I could totally relate to this. I often find myself wishing certain impending doom sometimes than to write a paper that I don’t know where to start.
She uses cuss words and other jokes to make the reader relate, stay engaged, and feel comfortable.
I never really figured out who the voice in my head is, but it’s not my own. When I’m planning out or writing something it’s always talking, at first I thought it was my own voice but t’s sort of different between when I’m just thinking in my head on a regular basis versus when I’m writing an important document.
Questions for Discussion and Journaling
I think it’s because people are scared to read it. They feel like they have to be great writers right off the bat and they’re afraid if someone were to read what they wrote they would get laughed at.
I could relate with Anne Lamott. I usually don’t know how to start off a paper and I would spend hours on the introduction; so, I typically just start off by writing a bunch of semi-coherent sentences and try to figure out in what direction I want to take my paper. By the time I get to the body I would get a “lightbulb moment” and I would go back an edit.
My favorite line was “I’d obsessed over getting creamed by a car before I could write a decent second draft” because I could totally relate to this. I often find myself wishing certain impending doom sometimes than to write a paper that I don’t know where to start.
She uses cuss words and other jokes to make the reader relate, stay engaged, and feel comfortable.
I never really figured out who the voice in my head is, but it’s not my own. When I’m planning out or writing something it’s always talking, at first I thought it was my own voice but t’s sort of different between when I’m just thinking in my head on a regular basis versus when I’m writing an important document.
Questions for Discussion and Journaling
I think it’s because people are