If you develop a reputation for not finishing your stories, men who value closure are going to be reluctant to read them. Consider that you have already abandoned Myou’ve Gotta be Kidding Me.
True. (Which is part of why I’m asking in Stupid Questions instead of Open Thread.)
As a possibly relevant detail, if I do end up unable to keep my motivation going, I have a backup plan to at least quickly finish up the current story, if not tie up as many of the dangling plot threads as I currently want to; specifically because of my experience with Myou’ve.
I think you should finish the story before you lose motivation. Writing without motivation would be really bad; I certainly don’t recommend it. But developing a habit of not finishing things could also be dangerous in long term.
Perhaps you could treat “finishing the story” as a separate project. Imagine that someone else wrote the story, then the original author has died, and you have inhereted this task. You want to finish the story meaningfully, without reducing its quality, but you also don’t want to prolong it any more than necessary.
treat “finishing the story” as a separate project.
:) In a nutshell, that’s the trick I had in mind as an alternate source of motivation, if I can’t keep my current motivation levels for writing the story up for a few more months.
If you develop a reputation for not finishing your stories, men who value closure are going to be reluctant to read them. Consider that you have already abandoned Myou’ve Gotta be Kidding Me.
Hm, now that you mention it, I think abandoning Myou’ve Gotta be Kidding Me was quite a good idea.
I’m curious; would you care to expand on your reasoning here?
To be blunt but vague, I thought it was bad, and I think your S.I. novel is fun to read and probably stretches your writing muscles more.
It’s probably good to not trapped by the themes and plot arcs of the past if it turns out they’re not so hot.
True. (Which is part of why I’m asking in Stupid Questions instead of Open Thread.)
As a possibly relevant detail, if I do end up unable to keep my motivation going, I have a backup plan to at least quickly finish up the current story, if not tie up as many of the dangling plot threads as I currently want to; specifically because of my experience with Myou’ve.
I think you should finish the story before you lose motivation. Writing without motivation would be really bad; I certainly don’t recommend it. But developing a habit of not finishing things could also be dangerous in long term.
Perhaps you could treat “finishing the story” as a separate project. Imagine that someone else wrote the story, then the original author has died, and you have inhereted this task. You want to finish the story meaningfully, without reducing its quality, but you also don’t want to prolong it any more than necessary.
:) In a nutshell, that’s the trick I had in mind as an alternate source of motivation, if I can’t keep my current motivation levels for writing the story up for a few more months.