
I'm good at coming up with ideas and stories, but …?
I suck at actually get them on paper. I want to write short stories and scenarios, but I'm terrible with grammar and spelling and punctuation and all that. and I can get Writers Block so easily because of all that. I tried my sister for help because she is great at things like that, but she writes her own stories and did no time to help me. and I'm afraid to ask someone else for help because they said I can not really trust anyone because they will steal my stories and ideas. I'm so stuck on the only thing I could do is write my ideas in a composition book to come to me. my junior year in high school, I had to write a short story. When I got the paper I got a 64. So I looked around and saw all the red marks and corrections. then in the end I saw a little note that said I had a fantastic story, but where the errors distracting. She wrote that I could be a great novelist Romac LOL! suggestions?
Like many people, instead of learning to write have taught the belief that you can not write. Many people learn the same beliefs about reading, math, languages, sport and many other things. However, what we often learn to ourselves is not true. Based on your question, I suspect that, having been repeatedly traumatized by your attempts to write to you became convinced that you not only had poor grammar, but you could not learn the correct grammar. In addition, because the grammar is necessary for good writing you are, by definition, a mediocre writer. In addition, each time you try to write a short story you expect to be a failure, but you know that you write is something you should do. This forces you to watch what you hope to one day have this you have not achieved, and what you expect ever to achieve. The possibility of writing a good story creates hope, but hope eventually feed the despair. You're probably familiar with Pavlov's dog. Pavlov was a scientist who taught his dog to salivate whenever the dog heard a bell by feeding it and ringing a bell. After a while the dog salivated whenever he heard a bell. Imagine what would happened if Pavlov handed over the dog food after each time he beat the dog. Most likely, the dog would have probably died of hunger would eventually Pavlov eaten. You're not a dog. You can learn things, but you can also unlearn. In short, you can overcome you're convinced that you will never learn the correct grammar, and you will never become a great writer. Writer's block has many causes, but I guess in your case, it could be due to "Why bother" that circulate in your head when you try to write. One way to break the why bother barrier in your mind is to use a storyboard, from words to expand your ideas. Illustrate your story with drawings simple on a laptop from time to begin the story to completion without using words. You can change the storyboard as often as you please. Then, write a very brief description of each picture, just a few words or at most a sentence. Then write a paragraph or two on the basis of every sentence, regardless of grammar. then develop paragraphs in mind, complete, again without worrying about grammar. As always, change history, as often as you want. then link the paragraphs with words, again without worrying about grammar. Run spell check. Run the grammar check, but look at the race consciously check grammar as a means of checking the grammar and teaching yourself grammar rules without someone criticizing you. Finally, if you doubt that you can write, watch your question. It is clear, summarizes the situation in a few paragraphs, grammar is fairly decent, and probably do not have very long to write. Your question is essentially a story well written. A true story but a story nonetheless. Also, I ran spell check my answer to you, and I learned that I misspelled repeatedly grammar. I would check the grammar in my post if Yahoo said. You can write stories short, but we must unlearn what you can not write them. This will be a challenge, but you can do.
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Quizzes for 220 Great Children’s Books: The Quest Motivational Reading Program (Through Children’s Literature) $27.00 Want a quick way to check to see whether a student has read a book? This is it. Quizzes contains objective reproducible tests for well-known children’s books, all of which are likely to be found in school and public libraries. Titles include award winners and runners-up; classics; popular books; and books by such children’s authors as Cleary, Fox, and Norton. With a new organization and layout, th… |
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Sharp Shot (Junior Library Guild Selection (G.P. Putnam)) $5.75 author Jack Higgins Chance twins are back in action! Rich and Jade Chance are once again on the run but this time, trouble finds them while their father is away on his own mission. After a breathless chase through an amusement park, Jade is taken hostage by a man from Chances past who is plotting a dastardly political coup in the Middle East with nuclear weapons as a threat. Worse still, the… |
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Stories Of The Gods And Heroes (56 pages) / A Christmas Carol (93 pages) ~ 1967 Junior Great Books (Series Three ~ Vol. #2) This is the 1967 reprint of the Junior Great Books Discussion Program…. |