The enjoyment I get out of writing

What do you enjoy most about writing?

Writing, as a high level topic of discussion, is such a fascinating thing. There are so many ways of categorizing or classifying a piece of writing that it’s almost mind boggling. From short, dry technical documentation to fantastical long form narratives. Massive compendiums filled with real world knowledge to serialized collections of short stories. Fiction, non-fiction, biographies, recipes, obituaries, and so on. Then there’s the next level deeper. Different authors have brought their writing styles, word choices and written dialects to life, and there is so much variety for people to discover.

One of the things I personally enjoy most about writing, when considering all of those things, is that anyone can find a place they feel they belong with their writing. That I can take my thoughts, put them down on paper or type them in on my phone (as I’m doing right now, laying in bed) and have the choice to share them like I do here.

I also enjoy the ability to take my imagination and give it a life outside of me, to create worlds in writing. To find new ways to describe something. Rewriting and clarifying the details.

This post is, I believe, the 308th daily prompt I have answered on my little journey to building my writing habits. Looking back on all of them, I can’t even begin to tell you just how many I’ve rewritten, whether in part or entirely. Along the way, though, I’ve found that I’m going to have good days and bad days. I’ll write short posts and long ones. That some will be serious while others are more light hearted or even comical to some degree, and I’ve come to enjoy all of that as well.

Writing is whatever we want it to be. That’s what ultimately makes it enjoyable. (At least, that’s what I want to think of it.)

When you know your life’s direction

What gives you direction in life?

To me, knowing your life’s direction means understanding what drives you to action and fulfills you. Having a sense of fulfillment usually leads to some amount of happiness. Unfortunately, I just kind of go with the flow most of the time, no major drive to act, so I never really get a solid sense of fulfillment to know that I’m going the right way with my life.

If I’m in the right place and time, and someone needs help in a way I can help them, then I provide people with my time and effort to make sure they get that help. If I can’t directly help them but know who can then I point them that way and make sure that they connect.

Outside of all of that, I don’t actively seek out opportunities to help.

In retrospect, as I’m writing this post out, I’d say my lack of drive is probably because I’ve never made a connection with helping people in ways that I know I can do continuously. Like some authors who write books and know that their stories have helped readers around the world, which would help drive them to keep writing. The ways I’ve helped are always relatively brief. (Does this make sense?)

Maybe this is part of why I’m pushing through with writing every day.

Words to live by

Do you have a quote you live your life by or think of often?

So many people throughout history have provided wise words that hold some measure of “magic” that makes them resonate with others. There are many choices, from simple sentences to long form narratives, that we can choose from. When I first read this prompt I couldn’t decide where I wanted to go with my answer because I have four different sources of inspiration, but I think I’ll share them all with you in the order of most consistent impact they have had on my life.

The first one is simple and incredibly important. One that I think should resonate with everyone, and if you’ve watched the recent Fallout series from Amazon then you’ve heard it. It’s “The Golden Rule”. Do unto others as you would have done unto you. Now, I try to remind myself of this every day, because I believe there is so much truth to those words, however, I take it a step further. I don’t want to let people walk all over me or push me around. I won’t strike first, because I wouldn’t want to be hit, but I won’t let someone who WOULD strike first have that power over me. I won’t show them unnecessary kindness or respect if I can clearly see they mean to harm me or have otherwise ill intent. I show them the kind of treatment I would except for myself if I were in their shoes. I’ll leave it at that and let you all mull it over.

The second one is just as short and simple, if a slight bit fanciful. It comes from the game Tales of Symphonia, spoken by the character Kratos. Courage is the magic that turns dreams into reality. I don’t necessarily remind myself of this day in and day out like The Golden Rule, but I like to remind myself of this when I feel like I need to take a leap of faith. It falls in the same realm as “nothing ventured, nothing gained” and all the other phrases that sound similar.

The third and fourth ones I’ll lump together more so because they’re too long to contain in a simple blog post. Third one is very much like the second one and is probably much more familiar to many people. It’s The Man in the Arena from Teddy Roosevelt. Regardless of his history and controversies from his lifetime, there is a measure of truth to his words. I’ll let you choose to look it up so that I can move right into the fourth one from Bruce Lee. I find his essay The Passionate State of Mind to be a wonderful window into the minds and souls of individuals. Self-awareness, ego, pride, self-worth. How we see and value ourselves as compared to others. Well, I keep articles bookmarked for both of these sources of inspiration so that at any given time, if I feel the need to, I can refer back to them. I would encourage you all to look into them and see how they resonate with you.

How I use social media

How do you use social media?

Social media is very different today from when I first started with Myspace 20 years ago.

I went from Myspace into Facebook during high school, with Myspace being abandoned after only a few years. Facebook was the core of my social media use for the majority of all this time. At first I was using it to seem interesting and garner the attention of my peers (like most teenagers and young adults in college did) while staying connected with them and my family. That has long since changed. Now I don’t even post anything on Facebook, or hardly use it at all, except to stay connected with family and very select friends.

When Twitter (I refuse to call it anything else) came along, I didn’t jump on it right away. When I did eventually start using it I hadn’t yet started streaming on Twitch, but that is what it ultimately became. My connection and attempts at increasing engagement. Just like everyone else. Instagram went much the same way when I finally took the plunge into that territory. The difference being that I had also begun shifting into painting miniatures, so I was trying to share my work while advertising my Twitch channel.

Somewhere in the mix of all of that I also started writing again. I had the grand idea of trying to mesh writing together with all of those platforms. I tried to create engagement with my Twitch audience by allowing requests for me to write something for them based on points. All of that was supposed to be shared here on the blog, and I did good at first but obviously that didn’t go anywhere and I still have a backlog of requests.

At some point I backed off of streaming because of the amount of time and effort it required, which I was struggling to afford when work was taking up a lot of my mental and emotional bandwidth. I tried to continue using Instagram to share my work with painting the miniatures, and I still do that today to a small degree whenever I finish something and feel inclined to share.

Now there are some other social media platforms out there, like Threads, which I have reserved my typical username on but I never really use (just like all the others.) Instead, I’ve been focusing on writing here on the blog and in my private note space for the stories I’m developing.

That should cover my history and current usage of social media. Maybe it will change again in the future, but who knows?

My NYC Midnight Round 1 Short Story

Tuesday of last week I talked about how I had participated in a writing contest. I’ll briefly recap some context for those of you who want to dig right in.

NYC Midnight ran their annual Short Story Challenge. There are four rounds (as I write this the challenge is still ongoing, with entrants having moved on to Round 2) and each round would get progressively more difficult by reducing both time to submit and maximum word count for those select few participants that passed. Participants were grouped up and each group received a prompt consisting of three things that must be included in their submission. For Round 1 we were limited to 2,500 words and seven days to submit our completed stories.

I was in group 117 and our prompt included these:

  • Genre: Sci-Fi
  • Topic: Comparison shopping
  • Character: an intern

Our short stories were to feel like they belonged in the assigned genre, and largely be focused on the topic and character.

Regardless of whether or not we moved on to the next round, each participant would receive feedback from the judges. I’ll include those pieces at the bottom after the story itself.

Now, for my submission! First is the text I included in my cover page, followed by the story exactly as I had submitted it without any corrections.

The Smugglers Intern

A university student seeking an internship finds his last chance is with a retired military veteran turned interstellar smuggler.

The distinct clicking sounds of shoes on metal could be heard echoing down the long metal corridor of the decommissioned battleship’s lower levels. Admiral Slodpolk, trailed by his assistant Therese, approached a small reception area with what appeared to be a very old, and very much out of place and time, wooden double door. A sign outside the door read “Internship Interviews”, and across from the ancient looking door was a small group of people in various attire. They had been lined up against the wall waiting for the approaching pair as they had been instructed to do by their invitations. The furthest one from the strange doors but closest to the Admiral, a nice young man named Calvin, had spotted them first. He checked himself over quick, adjusted his tie, and straightened up. He was the last applicant to arrive and he had been feeling a little in over his head when he realized he may have overdressed in a neat grey business suit. Two people next to him, dressed in business casual attire, had been chatting loudly with the other two people dressed in military fatigues, and didn’t notice when the Admiral reached them. 

The Admiral cleared his throat loudly and made them jump to attention. A unique gift that worked even on civilians. He had developed it his decades of service to the Sol Interstellar Military.

“I appreciate everyone’s prompt attendance today for my request. Momentarily I will have Therese here call you in one at a time for your interview.” The Admiral spoke briefly, then did an about face move and entered the antique double doors that were fitted into the metal wall of the spaceship. Everyone stared after him trying to peek into the strange room without moving, but Therese had carefully placed herself in the way. 

An almost stifling silence filled the odd reception area after the door had clicked shut and Therese waited a few moments while observing the lineup. They began to fidget and shift uncomfortably as they eyed the strange doors. The chatter began again, with all but Calvin speculating loudly about what they were going to see inside. They seemed to have forgotten Therese was there. She cleared her throat, not quite as forcefully as the Admiral but just enough to illicit roughly the same reaction. 

“Yes. Let’s get this started then.” Five sets of eyes snapped their attention to her. “Each of you is here, for reasons of your own, to join the crew of The Last Opportunity, however only one of you will be selected to be the Admirals new intern. As stated, you will enter one at a time, based on order of application.”  Therese held up her datapad showing the list of applicant profiles.

“There is no definitive length to your interviews, so that will not be indicative of how well anyone does. We appreciate your patience and understanding in the event someone takes longer.” She said while staring down the talkative ones.

Therese then knocked on the wooden doors. One began to open slightly, but an odd lack of light from inside made Calvin nervous. The others didn’t seem to notice.

The first two applicants didn’t take long in their interviews, but Calvin and the other two thought it strange that the first person hadn’t left through the doors again before the second person entered. Several hours passed, and one by one they entered the dark room beyond the strange wooden doors without leaving. Finally, Therese gestured silently for Calvin to enter. He had been uncertain about applying in the first place, but it was his last chance to land an internship before he graduated university. Now he was regretting it.

He gulped a little, checked himself over one last time and walked to the doors. He stopped at the threshold. Therese stopped scrolling through information on her datapad and looked up at the trembling young man. “You’re going to do just fine in there Calvin.” She offered a rather emotionless word of encouragement. He was too nervous to make note of the emptiness in her voice. Trembling a little bit, he took a deep breath and walked into the darkness beyond the doors.

A moment later Calvin was standing in what could only be described as a desert bazaar. He covered his eyes against the bright sunlight streaming through buildings and canopies of shop stalls. A firm hand clasped his shoulder causing the already shaken Calvin to jump. The hand didn’t move, and as Calvin’s eyes adjusted he saw the Admiral standing next to him. “Ah, finally, last applicant. Very good. Let’s begin your interview!” 

“I’m sorry, what?” Calvin sputtered. He was still stunned by the sudden change in environment, combined with his already shaky nerves, and had momentarily forgotten what he was doing there to begin with. He saw the Admiral was smiling and carefully watching Calvin’s expression, waiting for realization to wash over the young man. “Yes, of course. My interview. What, um… what would you like to know first?” Calvin tried to start the interview the same way he had so many times before in the last few months. The Admiral chuckled and gestured for Calvin to follow him as he began walking the sandy streets of the bazaar. 

“What I’d like to know first? Do you see those two stalls over there behind that dry fountain?” He asked Calvin, who confusedly looked where the Admiral was pointing.

“Um, okay. Yes, I see them, what… what about them, Sir?” He replied.

“They are selling the same thing, are they not?” The Admiral asked, his demeanor pulling Calvin along closer to the stalls. They were filled with fruits of different kinds, both alien and familiar. 

“Yes, they do appear to be selling the same kinds of fruits. I see apples, oranges…” Calvin tried to answer, unsure what the Admiral’s point was in asking such a question, but was glad when he was cut off. 

“Alright, good, you pass that test. Moving along. These next two stalls, same question.” The Admiral didn’t waste any time moving through the bazaar, two stalls at a time, asking Calvin to examine their wares each time. 

Calvin’s nerves had settle down, and in fact he grew more bored each time the Admiral asked the same question. They made a full lap through the stalls and were standing in front of the fruit vendors when Calvin decided to challenge the Admiral’s motives. “I’m sorry, sir, but is there a point to this? I thought this was supposed to be an interview?” 

The Admiral stopped and, for the first time since the interview began, turned to properly face Calvin. He was smiling again. “Humor me, if you would. Let’s look again.” He gestured at the fruit stalls. Calvin looked again, seeing the fruits with prices on signboards. Having finally calmed down he was able to see details he missed on the first pass. Bruising and wilting. He looked up at the price boards and began comparing the stalls. Calvin caught a glimpse of something in the next stall over that made him turn around and properly look at the rest of the bazaar. The prices of the closest stalls he could see were different from the first pass. His jaw dropped a little as he was about to ask the Admiral what was going on, but thought better of it for the moment. Calvin returned to examining the fruit stalls. The Admiral watched the gears turn in Calvin’s head, and his smile broadened a little.

A couple hours had passed by in the blink of an eye. Calvin had walked the whole bazaar, examining and comparing the contents of each pair of stalls while asking the clearly holographic merchants questions about their products. Where they sourced everything, how it was transported, age, material. When the Admiral was satisfied, he clapped his hands twice. The holographic images collapsed and vanished before Calvin’s eyes as he was asking another question of the merchant at a mechanical junk stall.

“You really found your stride there young man. I commend you on your observation skills!” The Admiral walked to sit behind an antique wooden desk in front of a large window that looked down on a blue and yellow planet. He gestured at the chair in front of the desk for Calvin.

“I understand that it was a strange interview, but I like you Calvin. Once you figured out what was going on you dove in to the simulation and really showed off that you could spot the small differences in so many different things. The rest of the applicants spotted the differences in the fruits on the second or third pass.” Admiral Slodpolk shook his head disappointedly.

“I listened to them chatting outside the doors before the interviews began. They all seemed so competent and confident. What was it they did wrong?” Calvin couldn’t help but ask, wondering what exactly it was that he may have done differently.

The smile returned to the Admirals face. “You, Calvin, didn’t waste time trying to impress me. The others liked to talk about themselves and their accomplishments. A lot. Sure, they noticed the differences eventually, but they did what most people do in standard interviews and try to liken the experience back to something they had done. I don’t care about that. Yes, their records helped get them in the door, but their hearts weren’t in it.”

“So, I passed all your tests? I got the internship?” Calvin’s heart started racing.

The Admiral slapped the desk and laughed. “Yes, but I have one final question. How do you feel about interstellar piracy and slavery?” The Admiral stared intently at Calvin with a smirk. This caught Calvin by surprise and his face twisted a little with concern.

“Well, the slavery part is obviously atrocious, but I suppose the piracy is probably a necessity? I thought this wasn’t a military vessel anymore?” Calvin tried to make sense of the question under the current circumstances. The ship had been decommissioned and the Admiral was officially retired, according to what Calvin had researched.

“Spectacular! You passed the final test! If you’ll accept, you will be my intern for the next six cycles.” The Admiral stood up and offered his hand. Calvin stood slowly and shook the Admirals hand. “With that settled, you’ll sign the contract on Therese’s datapad.” He gestured to Therese, who was standing behind Calvin. He nearly jumped out of his suit in surprise. She hadn’t made a sound when she entered the room. She smiled and offered the datapad to him. “See, you did just fine.”

Calvin, through the rollercoaster of emotions and surprises, hesitated in taking the datapad but eventually signed the contract.

“Very good, please sit back down and let’s get to business.” The Admiral snapped his fingers and started gesturing through the air at holographic images floating over his desk.

“Officially, The Last Opportunity is a decommissioned military vessel that was modified into a shipping freighter carrying goods between the Terra Prime and Terra Nova star systems. Unofficially, we’re smugglers.” The Admiral flipped some images around to face Calvin. “We specialize in finding the best deals in products that the various governments and military factions don’t want spreading too much. That’s part of why I tested your observational skills in the simulation. You’re going to help me with researching products, comparing them between the different off-book sources we have so we can make a profit.”

Realizing he really had gotten himself in over his head, Calvin swallowed hard.

And that’s it! Final word count was 1,925.

I’m not sure if I’m supposed to share the judges feedback but it’s all anonymous so I don’t see the harm in doing so, plus I genuinely appreciated and agreed with each judge. This is pulled directly from the email I received with only some minor edits for readability.

WHAT THE JUDGES LIKED ABOUT YOUR STORY –

{2305}  I like the surprising ending; what an interesting place for the interview to end up. That’s a clever sort of interview for the Admiral to do. It makes sense as a way of testing for what he really needs in an intern. And “The Last Opportunity” is a very appropriate name for a military-turned-pirate vessel.  

{2089}  There’s a fun sense of comedic mundanity to this piece. We think of sci-fi smugglers as cool Han Solo or Mal Reynolds types — loveable rogues swashbuckling around the universe. But you give us something more real, here — comparative shopping, quotas, profits, etc. — it’s funny, it’s grounded, it makes more sense than most smuggler tropes we see in sci-fi. It feels like you’ve transported something mundane and everyday to space, providing us with a fresh insight for the genre. I love some of the details of the piece — the strange wooden door and the simulated bazaar are standouts — but its the human elements that work best. The relatable nerves of an interview. The overcocky applicants putting Calvin on edge. The emotionless Therese. All great observations, and, again, everyday elements transcended into a sci-fi setting. Overall, I really like your vision for sci-fi — it feels real, lived-in, human. Gone are aliens and space battles — instead, we have genuine human emotion and reaction, real-life setups, and real-life payoffs. 

{2133}  The premise of this unconventional interviewing process was nicely set up. The details of the interviewees were helpful in establishing the scene. And the main character, Calvin, had a nice level of interiority and self-awareness that made the narrative engaging.

WHAT THE JUDGES FEEL NEEDS WORK –

{2305}  The beginning isn’t clear who the point-of-view character is going to be. I’d suggest starting with Calvin, not the Admiral. Even just saying that he’s the one hearing those clicking footsteps would help. And there are a couple other spots where the POV wavers a bit from things that Calvin would know, like when we learn that the Admiral developed his attention-getting throat clearing in the military, and when we hear that the other candidates think it’s weird that the others haven’t left. Speaking of which, an explanation for that would be grand. Did they walk the futuristic plank, or get teleported back to dock? You’ve got enough wordcount left to explain it.  

{2089}  Firstly, minor note, but do we need the word ‘sounds’ in the opening sentence? Isn’t that implied? Consider if your work is as clear, concise, and direct as possible — I recommend cutting out unnecessary words to help your story flow. Similarly, if you can find a word to replace a phrase, or cut down wordy sentences, do this. ‘out of place and time’ could be ‘anachronistic’, for instance, or even just ‘inexplicable’. ‘an about face move’ — this feels unclear as an action. You also don’t need to repeat the explanation about the door. Don’t repeat — keep your story moving forwards. Why had they forgotten Therese? Does she have little presence? Could you describe her in this instance and add more dimension? Calvin appears to be our ‘in’ to the story — keep him reacting, keep him observing, and keep bringing the narrative back to him. Would the anxious Calvin speak first — ‘what would you like to know?’ or wait to be spoken to, then respond? I think the latter. What happens next? I’d like more of a coda — not just Calvin’s realisation. What does he do? Any character development? Does he weigh up his options? Does he take the job? 

{2133}  There could have been a few more scene-setting details once Calvin enters the interview and the bazaar appears. For instance, explaining that the merchants were holographic would have helped set up the surreal nature of the experience for Calvin. Finally, the last line of the story is a bit flat. The same sentiment could be shown by having Calvin swallow hard and then have a bit of interiority about what the ramifications of having “gotten himself in over his head” really means.

If you’ve taken the time to read all the way through this post, thank you! If you also would like to leave some constructive feedback then please do.

There was an attempt: a writing contest

A couple months ago I saw an ad on Facebook for a writing contest with cash prizes and writing feedback for all entrants, and since I’ve been on this journey of getting back into writing consistently, I thought I might give it a try. I was a little suspicious of how they were going to afford cash prizes until I saw there was an entry fee, but that only made me more suspicious of the whole thing. Was it actually a scam? Unfortunately, at the time, the deadline for signing up was only a day or two away and I knew nothing of writing contests so I had to do some quick research.

Thankfully this particular contest appeared reputable with a long history, so I signed up.

Anyways, the contest itself, through NYC Midnight, was for writing short stories. According to the rules there would be four rounds, and each entrant would have a limited amount of time to write based on a randomly selected prompt setup, of which the final output would be judged and a certain number from each group would move on. The rules also stated that we couldn’t publicly share our work until ten days after results for the round were announced. So, I won’t be sharing my round one entry here just yet.

Sadly, I did not pass round one, and now I’m just waiting for feedback. Cash prizes aside, that was a big draw for me to sign up, so I’m looking forward to seeing what kind of feedback I get on my writing.

I’m always looking to improve, so I’m not going to let this loss discourage me from continuing to write. Once I get my feedback and the ten days have passed I plan on sharing my one short story here, and then maybe you all can also provide some feedback!

We’ll see where things go from here.

NaNoWriMo 2023 Personal Results

I didn’t feel like answering today’s writing prompt because it seemed silly. My feelings about meat? I like meat.

So instead I’m going to share my progress results for this year’s NaNoWriMo!

This year was the first time I committed to writing for it, and it was challenging to juggle life priorities to fit in time to write. I had already been making sure I would write, even a little, every day, and that’s why I was answering those prompts. So, while I didn’t meet the 50k word goal for NaNoWriMo, I decided to include my blog word count for the month of November in the total count. I still didn’t reach 50k.

  • NaNoWriMo Goal: 50,000
  • Actual written: 39,898 (79.8%)
  • Blog word count: 8,382 (16.8%)
  • Total: 48,280 (96.6%)

I got really close! I may not have reached the goal, but between these final numbers and the daily tracking spreadsheet someone was kind enough to make and share, I proved to myself what I am capable of accomplishing if I stick to it. Which in the grand scheme of things was the real goal for me.

As you can see in the snapshot above, there were multiple days where I wrote nothing except the daily blog post, and several where I wrote very little when compared to the daily average target for hitting 50k. If I had kept up the momentum from those first 15 days, I would have CRUSHED the 50k goal! Oh well. I’ll try again next year.

In the meantime, I’m planning on finishing out the story I started and also maintaining the daily writing habit for the blog. I think today is day 47 in a row for posting, so I think I’m on the right track.

Long-term planning is not my forte

What will your life be like in three years?

I’m going to be honest, I suck at planning my future. I struggle to plan where I’ll be one year from now, let alone three or even five. The best I ever did was “I’m going to work for my current employer for at least seven years.” And now I’m almost at eight. So, go me for that plan!

But if I had to jot down some things I would like to have happen I can do that. I just won’t be in the “will be” camp. Can’t be too certain and I don’t like to plan for disappointment on major life events.

Anyways, where I would like to be or things I would like to have happen in the next three years? Let’s get a list going.

  • Own a home
  • Publish a novel
  • Have my student loans paid off/forgiven (this is part of that “work for seven years” deal. Working for a nonprofit. Three years to go for the ten year requirement or whatever)
  • Maybe meet someone and start a romantic relationship
  • Visit friends in other States and Countries
  • Find and purchase that motorcycle I really wanted (2015 Yamaha Bolt C-Spec, green)
  • Maybe publish a second novel, while I’m at it

Do I have plans to accomplish any of these things? Not particularly. I start things and get sidetracked or something comes up that alters my course. So far the closest things I could see happening are owning a home and publishing a novel. (Doing NaNoWriMo this year for a change. One week in and I’m at 13,640 words!)

So there you go, stuff to aim for in the next three years.

Potential for reinvention

Since I started digging into writing again I’ve been giving myself time to think and research various things related to blogging and writing as a whole. Well, yesterday while I was sitting at work, a thought flashed through my mind.

What if I rebranded my blog?

Why would I do that, and if I did what would that look like?

One of the original reasons for the blog was to serve as a space for the things that came from my streaming on Twitch, so naturally that’s where I sourced the idea for the name and icon. The thing is now, though, that I’m not streaming regularly and I haven’t for probably more than a couple years. Life happened and I didn’t have the same drive for it anymore. I might still do it on rare occasions but it is no longer the pillar of my life it was back then, and I’ll still work on the backlog of requests from my streams because I owe it to my friends and viewers who put them in.

But where do I go from here? I’ll need to think about it more. The whole “rebranding” idea isn’t unreasonable, but if I move forward with it I need it to make sense for the things I’m doing with my time.

Taking on new ventures

What’s the biggest risk you’d like to take — but haven’t been able to?

There are two things that I have wished I could do for a living. Streaming full-time, or becoming a full-time writer putting out books for the rest of my life.

Some people look at streamers, particularly the most popular ones that make a lot of money every year, and think “all they’re doing is playing games all day, that’s easy, I could do that!” I was one of those people at first but before I jumped in to try my hand at it, I made sure to connect with smaller streamers (some of them I’m still friends with even after I stopped streaming) because then I could get better interactions and responses to understand what they were doing. I could see the toll it takes on some of them (when they publicly shared that information) and saw the way their faces could light up with a shot of instant gratification when someone would donate/tip or subscribe. The things I’ve learned along the way tell me that if I really wanted to do it, I would have to put in so much more effort than I could muster to try and build everything up, from the equipment to the audience, just to even be able to take the risk of quitting my job and making that leap. So for now, that’s a back burner hobby that I don’t do very often anymore.

So the other option is writing for a living. By comparison, this one is much easier to accomplish long term because it would be less taxing mentally and emotionally. Where streaming would require tons of “on” time for being engaging, writing can be done at my own pace and will have sporadic levels of engagement with other people. That being said, writing DOES cone with its own problems. It’s a much more “solo” enterprise if you consider that when you write you’re doing it by yourself. You’re in your own head, typically without interacting with others. Streaming is kind of the opposite because your head and mind are in a different place, and you have constant interaction with tons of people who are all yelling (typing) to be heard and seen, cheering for your wins and laughing at your digital hardships. With writing you sometimes have to be your own cheerleader. Nobody will laugh or jeer in real time to the things you’re doing. Which is okay! Aside from all of that, the risk with writing is that you can put in so much effort and not see any sort of return for years, if at all, while trying the different publishing routes. I wouldn’t be able to quit my job to shift to writing full-time unless I had landed a publishing deal. Which I obviously don’t have at this time, but maybe someday!