Entry for a contest about how I found this website |
My Journey to Writing.Com I have been writing stories since I was a little girl. One day I was looking through an old binder my mom put together the Christmas I was fifteen and found several stories I’d written in third grade. My favorite one was about a little mouse named Mousie who travels around the world in a hot air balloon. That year I won an award for creative writing. In seventh grade, my best friend told me the best Christmas present I could give her was copies of all the stories I’d written. Junior year, my English teacher, who was nearly impossible to please, told me I had a gift. I wanted to be a professional writer, but alas, I went into speech pathology, which I thought was a more practical field. I continued writing as a hobby through high school and into college. I enjoy writing fiction, not papers or any of that scholastic nonsense I love making up stories about people and places that become as much a part of me as my heartbeat. I had been working on one particular story since I was fifteen. At the age of 26, I decided the bulk of that story was implausible and just plain silly. So I gutted it, getting rid of everything but the core characters, location and the relationship between them. I am still working on that story today. This past winter, I started listening to a lot of classic literature. I have a hard time reading many of the classics but enjoy listening to them, either on my MP3 player or CD. I would listen to these masterpieces while playing computer or Gameboy games! Believe it or not, that combination really works. At least for me! I said to myself, I want to write like this. I want to create a masterpiece like Oliver Twist or Sense and Sensibility. Just a few weeks ago, I started reading Of Human Bondage and was rededicated to create a work of fiction that would stand the test of time. In March of this year, I was told I may be laid off next year. That is also when I started having writers block: I knew who my characters were and what they did but I couldn’t figure out how to get them there. I needed feedback. I also needed an idea, a spark for new short stories. In April, I was told it was official: no job next year. In attempt to keep my anxious mind and heart busy, I started looking for a writers support group. That is how I found, and became a member of, Writing.com. Feedback I have gotten on this site about my story has been phenomenal. I also like the writing contests. Once I see the prompt-poof!-I’m off and running with an idea. As my life changes drastically, I hope I continue to write, receive feedback on my work, and perhaps achieve the greatest dream of all: publication. |