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4 votes
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The reaction economy
3 votes -
I painted on all my favorite books
1 vote -
Roald Dahl books rewritten to remove language deemed offensive
14 votes -
Humanity’s written heritage, preserved forever
9 votes -
Charles Silverstein, who helped declassify homosexuality as mental illness, dies at 87
8 votes -
The murky, salty mystery of Worcestershire sauce - The peppery sauce may be wildly popular, but its ingredient list and origin story are shrouded in secrecy
7 votes -
The case of the medieval castle and the opportunity cost of warfare
7 votes -
Andy’s Pop Life - Revisiting Steve Schapiro’s historic 1965 visit to Andy Warhol’s Factory and his travels across the US with a cadre of Superstars
2 votes -
The inner beauty of basic electronics
6 votes -
Apple introduces new AI-based audiobook narration service
15 votes -
Barnes and Noble's surprising turnaround
18 votes -
The superheroes of beautiful Kinshasa
3 votes -
A tech worker is selling a children's book he made using AI, then the death threats started
15 votes -
Darwin's Barometer
3 votes -
To build a delightful library for kids, start with these ninety-nine books
7 votes -
The incredible Calypso: Jacques Cousteau's crazy exploration vessel
7 votes -
Amazon CEO Andy Jassy said the company does not have plans to stop selling the antisemitic film that gained notoriety recently after Brooklyn Nets guard Kyrie Irving tweeted out an Amazon link to it
8 votes -
Bed Habits - One insomniac’s descent into the world of sleep research to understand what screens before bed are doing to our brains
4 votes -
The Wonderful Wizard of Oz
6 votes -
The REAL reason ships go missing in the Bermuda Triangle!!!
9 votes -
Making of mathematical instruments - transforming a public domain book into a website
14 votes -
A historian's perspective on the Battle of Helms Deep
13 votes -
The biggest mapping mistake of all time
7 votes -
The Proverbial Pen #2
Thanks a lot for the responses yesterday. I'm glad to be on Tildes, this seems to be a very vibrant and happy community unlike many others! Today is the second post in a series (hopefully) of...
Thanks a lot for the responses yesterday. I'm glad to be on Tildes, this seems to be a very vibrant and happy community unlike many others! Today is the second post in a series (hopefully) of writing exercises to get rid of my writer's block.
Today is the second day of my battle against Writer's Block. A very basic question I want to ask is what exactly is writing inspiration and where does it come from? If it comes from within you (as many claim) then why doesn't it always keep flowing like a river, why is it so scarce a resource? The mechanisms of subconscious mind are probably too complex for even the mind itself to work out!
What I've found though is that it's much easier to do freehand writing or writing nothing in particular (as I'm doing now) but it gets a bit tricky when you want to write about something specific like an article or research paper or a book. That's when you must start worrying about the content quality, research material, story background, plot, etc. But even freehand writing is a great exercise I think to flex your writing muscles at frequent intervals and ensure that they stay in order.
Of course, other antagonists like lethargy, procrastination, impostor syndrome, self censoring, etc. are always waiting in their closets to jump out and play their part in the battle! These are like natural foes. Whatever you do about them, they'll always lurk back in some form or other given the right environment! Especially in 2022 when oodles of great literature already exist on any given topic, the pressure to perform on a writer is tremendous. Wiser, smarter and more intelligent people than me already seem to have written whatever there is to write about literature, mathematics, computer science, physical sciences, social sciences, etc., what exactly is there left for me to write anyways? So the impostor wonders aloud!
When all else fails, the pundits ask you to "write about yourself" or "write about your own experiences". That's easy to say actually but my own life has been so mundane and ordinary (just like most other people's, I suppose) that there is hardly anything inspiring or worthwhile to get out of that. They say "open yourself up" but what if there is nothing inside but just a hollow and empty shell when you open up? My life has been one of the most "typical" or "average" as I'd put it whereas writing is supposed to be creative and extra ordinary.
Another obvious source of writing is reading. They say the more you read, a better writer you'll become as you'll keep adding to the raw material to pick from. I have a good collection of books and I used to read a lot many years ago, an activity which has reduced a lot lately due to work and other factors. Just like writer's block, I also seem to have gotten myself a "reader's block" if there is such a thing!
As I keep battling with the proverbial pen day after day, I hope something good will come out of it and I might become a better writer than I presently am. Today is just the second day, I just hope I'll be able to keep up with this pace and write daily. Please wish me luck! Thanks for reading.
5 votes -
A mom’s campaign to ban library books divided a Texas town — and her own family
7 votes -
What’s the strangest thing you ever found in a book?
12 votes -
The Harry Potter fallacy
6 votes -
Where do you acquire books?
Hello! I do a fair bit of my reading via Libby (I have memberships at the NYPL and Brooklyn Public Library) but I like to pick up some physical copies as well. I've spent some time in a couple of...
Hello! I do a fair bit of my reading via Libby (I have memberships at the NYPL and Brooklyn Public Library) but I like to pick up some physical copies as well. I've spent some time in a couple of NYC bookstores but I'm curious about online portals folks here use to buy books. I've switched to bookshop.org for new books but what's the go to for used books?
Thanks!
20 votes -
The Contradictory Christ
4 votes -
Time Travel: Probability and Impossibility
4 votes -
Twilight of the libraries: What gets lost when books go off-site and online
4 votes -
Gender has a history and its more recent than you may realize—The story of how society, ignorant of medical research, made a stigma of something our bodies do naturally: not conform to a sexual binary
3 votes -
The Penguin Classics Marvel Collection breathes new life into iconic stories
3 votes -
Autopsy of Adam & Eve: Looking at a selection of paper instruments from the 15th-17th century, at the Royal Society
3 votes -
Museum dedicated to Danish fairytale author Hans Christian Andersen, designed as an experiential fantasy world, has officially opened in Odense
6 votes -
Protesters denouncing the intention of a far-right group to burn a Quran in Örebro in central Sweden attacked police on Friday, injuring at least nine
8 votes -
Book review of A Square Meal: A Culinary History of the Great Depression
7 votes -
The Internet Is Not What You Think It Is: A history, a philosophy, a warning
9 votes -
Hannah Gadsby on her autism diagnosis: ‘I’ve always been plagued by a sense that I was a little out of whack’
7 votes -
Dungeons & Dragons’ next anthology is written entirely by Black and Brown authors
12 votes -
Why a tire company is the judge of fine dining
10 votes -
It’s not easy running a geeky business
4 votes -
Disaster planning for regular folks
9 votes -
How our ancestors used to sleep can help the sleep-deprived today
7 votes -
The rise and fall of rationality in language
7 votes -
Thinking about calibre
18 votes -
How a NYTimes reporter, Ian Urbina, collects royalties from hundreds of musicians via the Outlaw Ocean Music Project
10 votes -
The hidden, magnificent history of chop suey - Discrimination and mistranslation have long obscured the dish’s true origins
5 votes -
Émile-Antoine Bayard's illustrations for 'Around the Moon' by Jules Verne (1870)
7 votes