When I sit down to write, I find myself letting the ideas that come to mind flow. From here I form them into a coherent structure of sentences; expressing myself and these ideas uniquely with the style in which I have formed.
When it comes to communicating ideas upon the sheet of paper lying before me, I simply just write. By focusing on the topic presented at the time, I create a visualization of what I am trying to describe with the use of the implements at hand (be it manual (such as a pen or pencil) or digital (computer)). All the time, having the intentions for the reader to visualize, depict, and analyze the work as well.
For me, I jot down ideas, but have exactly what I want to display on the page already in thought. Carrying with me the design that I have formerly established, only to then scroll it into a composition.
At no precise time in my life has there been an event in which that has defined myself as a writer. Instead, it is many individual moments, papers, poems, etc. that have built the style and way in which I construct my writings; for all of these combined into a representation of what the result of my compositions are today.
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My writing process has slowly evolved to the point where I now draft almost entirely on a computer, as opposed to with a pen and paper. Are there certain writing tasks that you always perform on the computer and and others you always perform on paper?
ReplyDeleteYou say that no single writing event defines you as a writer; rather you are a combination of a number of writing events. Okay. Still, though, how would you define yourself as a writer?