Back in October 1995 I met Kurt Vonnegut, one of my writing idols, who
gave a great lecture about writing at The Arlington Street Church for
the Boston Center for Adult Learning's 1st Annual Writers
Festival. He said that a writer should have a good proofreader to
look at his/her work before sending out to an editor or a literary
agent.
Getting feedback was always hard for me, especially after a job
interview. For some reason the interviewer didn't want to talk to
me ever again or even send a rejection letter. So it was hard to
me to know what I was saying was appropriate or not. It's the same
feeling I have with my writing. Sometimes I'm not certain I'm
writing something that's going to be misunderstood as offensive or
whatever.
When I sometimes received criticism, it usually didn't make any
sense. For example, the person would say "You should know...." or
"You already know..." but the truth was that I didn't know or just
didn't understand why I should know that point that person was
criticizing me about. Sometimes I wondered if they were talking
about me or someone else because what they were criticizing didn't
sound like something I said, did or wrote.
I'm not sensitive to criticism because I have joined writers workshops
and writers groups and had a good time being part of it. I am
even with a few writers forums on the Internet. I haven't had any
problems with receiving criticism.
Before I was diagnosed, I was sensitive to things people said to me
because I couldn't tell whether or not they were being verbally
abusive. That's my only guess why a few people would think I was
sensitive to criticism. The truth was that I was emotionally
abused a lot and it wrecked my self-esteem. I've spent most of my
adult life improving it.
Monday, July 18, 2005
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