I'm disappointed with myself for caring so much whether people review my posted fan fiction or not.
It seems to me that, given that there's no money in fan fiction, the only reasons to do it are (1) to have the creative experience itself, (2) to touch other people, and (3) to get to indulge yourself in the characters and the settings you love.
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I didn't know that about "Monster"; when I first read it, I loved it because (1) Harry needed to be told off for dumping Ginny, and (2) I thought that bit at the end iof Ch. 1 was pretty romantic. I can imagine how I'd feel if I wrote something that conveyed meaning I cared about, but 100 people replied saying, "loved the bran muffins in chapter two; they're really tasty, aren't they?"
I guess what I'm working through is this: You and Mary and several others write really interesting, rich, gratifying replies to my work, and I love them. We have other interactions and I love them too. So I have a few good friends. My own issue, probably something to take up with my therapist, is, why do I still long to be more popular too? It's so tiresome, at 46, to be still dealing with stuff that I think dates from 32 years
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Oh, I did ask Ken if he had any original fiction. I would love to see that form all of you.
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Ken, I feel just the way you do. When I posted the first three chapters of MoO, I treasured every single review I got. 10 reviews for 3 chapters was really wonderful. People had read my story, odd as it was, and at least taken the time to let me know that they'd done so. Because, really, that's what those "Dude! Update soon!" reviews are . . . "I wuz here" graffiti on your story. Unlike most graffiti, however, they have value by their very existence.
You have to understand that I'm a little obsessive compulsive about numbers and analyses. I track, chart, and manipulate anything I can quantify, including reviews, views, favorites... all of that mess. So as I published more chapters, I watched more reviews arrive, and the craving grew. A review/chapter ratio of 3.33 was no longer acceptable. I wanted 5. Then 10. Every time a new chapter got a few ( ... )
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I don't do it for the reviews; I do it for myself more than anything and might not have even posted for others to read if it hadn't been for some encouragement from friends, but I still obsess about them anyway.
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The wonderful St. Margarets referred me to this thread, because I've recently been agonizing over the exact same things as you are in your post! I have to say it was very therapeutic for me to read this thread, as it was an intelligent and thoughtful discussion about something that came to the forefront for me after posting and concluding my latest multichaptered story. So, if this is what your LJ is like, I'd love to friend you! Is that OK? By the way - please don't let my last LJ entry scare you off - St. Margarets and I only get that silly once in a while. Thanks!
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As to today's post on your LJ, I'll confess that I only skimmed it, but was sorely tempted to add a chapter of my own in which a middle-aged fellow with thinning hair named "Rhet" picked the lock and came in to bewail all the excellent fiction that wasn't being written while the two ladies discussed their love lives...
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