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Tuesday, July 24, 2007
Letting Go of Perfectionism
Posted by maria
Hi Writers,
I was sitting in an online workshop last week. Dozens of other magazine and book editors were present as well as much of upper management, including our CEO. And he made a statement that I've been thinking about ever since: when it comes to the Internet, we need to let go of our perfectionism.
Now I've always believed that perfectionism is ultimately frustrating, since it can really cripple creativity. But as the editor of a print magazine, perfectionism is always the goal, even if it's never quite achieved. We hone and polish the magazine to a high shine, send it off to press with a wish and a prayer and cringe when the inevitable typo gets through. It's an editor's way to want the baby to be as perfect as possible. (By the way, there's a wonderful essay on this topic in
Salon
:
Let Us Now Praise Editors
.)
But the Internet is fast and loose and free. More casual language rules and no one seems to care if you get lax with your commas or use a dash where there should have been a semi-colon. Perfectionism slows you down. And I have to admit that this is really appealing to the writer in me.
So this is a dichotomy for the writer, isn't it? All writers are editors, in a sense. And letting go of perfectionism can be difficult.
Are you a perfectionist with your writing? And do you relax your standards when you write online?
As always, I'd love to hear from you, especially all of you busy writer/bloggers out there.
Yours in non-perfectionism.
Keep Writing,
Maria
blogs and online writing
7/24/2007 11:34:40 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
Comments [9]
7/24/2007 2:21:11 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
I don't relax enough with my online work. This is a good post. I need to relax more...
Chuck Sambuchino
7/24/2007 11:20:06 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
I completely disagree. Non-writers can do as they please, I don't nit pick e-mails or blogs, but I will never lower my standards for myself. Grammar and spelling are a writer's tools; what craftsman abandons a hammer for a rock, what doctor replaces a scalpel with a butter knife.
Kim Reynolds
|
Kimrey26AT NOSPAMhotmail dot com
7/25/2007 11:24:24 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
Thank goodness for this "Perspective". My mother's favorite line when I was a child was "if you can't do it right the first time, don't do it at all." Everytime I sit down to write, I hear her over my shoulder. It has been difficult trying to silence her enough to write rough draft.
When polishing however, I look for mistakes like a blood hound looking for lost clues. It's maddening. I once rewrote a piece, trying to improve it, so many times my editor emailed and told me to, "Send it in. You're killing it." Yikes!
For years, I've written a blog and have always been self-conscious of it because I don't have time to spend on rewriting and editing it like I should. Thank goodness for your words of encouragement.
I will continue to do my best, but maybe I too, will loosen up a bit.
Deborah Bouziden
|
DBouzidenAT NOSPAMhotmail dot com
7/25/2007 4:32:21 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
Sometimes creative flow requires letting go of perfectionism. I find writing during those less inhibited times to be the most blissful.
mia
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miasevAT NOSPAMcomcast dot net
7/25/2007 6:04:55 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
While I write often in my blog.
I don't aim for perfection so
much as clearity of my topic.
Sometimes that is so darn hard
when you know what you want to
convey yet the words must be
juggled to do so.I always look
for a comfortable flow in my posts.
To me if reads smoothly..that is
good enough..and if it doesn't,
well then I know I am trying too
hard to get it perfect.lol
Tab
Tabitha
|
cupcakemonkeyAT NOSPAMshaw dot ca
7/26/2007 10:46:57 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
I completely agree with Kim Reynolds. I enjoy many blogs and appreciate that real-life people have easier opportunities to offer raw, unfiltered perspectives on what's happening in the world. But sooner or later, when this initial free-for-all of blogs and "citizen journalism" starts to get to be too much to absorb, the average person will get sick of the cocophony of mediocrity. It's the well-reasoned, well-edited, well-written and -presented work that will make its way to the top and have real impact. Don't give up the fight for perfectionism, writers! Expect only the best of yourself.
kdg
7/26/2007 10:49:17 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
HA! And of course I spelled "cacophony" wrong in my post. This is why I don't have a blog of my own. :)
kdg
7/26/2007 1:28:11 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
Maria,
You could not be more wrong. Writing, in my opinion, is very civilized (more so than spoken language) Letting go of grammar does not seem to me to be the right idea, in fact it seems backwards. I do not think that perfectionism is what prevents us from double checking every comma, but I do think it’s laziness that lets us be excited about lax grammar rules online.
Ginny
(Having said that, my blog is horrendous and I have no excuse for that…)
Virginia Carroll
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ginnibeth1984AT NOSPAMhotmail dot com
7/30/2007 12:10:44 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
Kim is so right!! "I will never lower my standards for myself." That's were writers need to be and need to stay. It doesn't matter if we're filling out a form for the doctor's office or working on a novel -- words, grammar and spelling are our tools!
Well-said Kim.
Julie
Julie Webb Kelley
|
juliewebbkelleyAT NOSPAMyahoo dot com
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