A writers’ group run by Thanet Creative. Anyone is welcome but you will get the most out of being here if you geographically located near Thanet. Members of this group automatically get contributor status on the Thanet Creative Blog.
- Sample Page
- Thanet Creative: Writers, Poets, Authors, Artists
- Blog
- Writers
- Poets
- Charity
- Projects
- Confirm Subscription
- Directory
- Directory Terms of Use
- Terms of use
- Submissions Agreement
- Become a contributor
- About
- Mentions
- Contact Thanet Creative
- Blog Archives
- Blog posts from the last two weeks
- Monthly blog archive
- Writers Explore
- Keep me updated
- Authors
- Words Counted
- About: Words Counted
- Writers’ groups in Thanet
- Writers’ groups in Kent
- Glossary of writing terms
- Useful tools for writers from Thanet Creative
Where imposter syndrome hits me hardest
November 2, 2024 in editing-your-work by Matthew Brown
As a writer, have you ever felt like an imposter? I know I have. Imposter syndrome can be no laughing matter. There are days when I ask myself, “Matt, who exactly are you kidding with this?” Those are the days when I feel like a fraud. The days when the fake writer police must surely be hunting for me.
On the whole, I tend to feel that I can write a pretty good story. Then there are the days when I am certain it is just the Dunning-Kruger effect and the truth is I have no idea what I am doing.
That lier imposter syndrome lurks (perhaps for all of us) around every corner. Yet there are times when it hits me harder than others. One of those times is when I have written and the editing process must start. That’s when the impossibility of the task glares down at me like an impossibly tall cliff. You can’t do this, it says, you don’t even know where to start.
This is the point where I would love to tell you that I have an answer. I don’t. I try to muddle along feeling like a fraud and hoping for the best. Sometimes this leads to over-editing and I ruin the story by thinking too much. Or, when the feeling is strongest, it stops me from editing at all.
I don’t have an answer to imposter syndrome. The reason for this post is just to let you know that you are not alone in feeling like that. It gets us all some days. I struggle with it. I know others who do too. All I know how to do is just not give up. It’s not much but it’s all I have.
How does imposter syndrome hit you?
Thanet Creative’s last writers’ night of 2024 is the 5th of December
October 31, 2024 in events by Matthew Brown
Our last writers’ night this year (2024) will be Thursday the 5th of December. We will begin meeting again in the new year (the exact day to be decided).
Charity members and attendees of the writers’ night who wish to attend the Thanet Creative Christmas meal should contact Matt or Janet as soon as possible as it requires a deposit.
Thank you to all who make our writers’ night the special thing that it is. If we don’t see you again this year, I hope we can catch up again in January 2025.
Oops. Words Counted is now working again
October 14, 2024 in thanet-creative by Matthew Brown
When I updated the look for the Thanet Creative blog, I accidentally left the Words Counted tool out of the update. Words Counted lets you stick in some writing and it counts how many times you have used each word.
It is now back in full working order. Like before, Words Counted does not save the text you give it. The word length chart is still there. All the features are fully working in our new theme.
Give Words Counted a try.
Reminder: Our writers’ night is every Thursday at the Wheatsheaf in Margate
October 11, 2024 in events by Matthew Brown
Thanet Creative run a writers’ night (almost) every Thursday at 7:30pm in The Wheatsheaf Margate. The writers’ night is open to anyone. We discuss all aspects of writing and editing with a core part of the evening being a time to review and give feedback to each other on written work.
If you would like some of your writing critiqued, please bring about five copies – in a good-sized font (12pt+). We suggest no more than five sides of A4 so that we can read the work of everyone who may have brought some.
When you arrive, if you cannot immediately spot us please ask the lovely staff who will be happy to point us out to you.
The only failure in writing is giving up
October 9, 2024 in motivation by Matthew Brown
Whether it was a rejection submission, a story no one liked, or a competition you did not win, the only failure in writing is giving up.
Just finishing a story makes you amazing. You have done what few others have done. You had an idea and you wrote it.
It was not you that was rejected, it was just that version of your story. You can edit it some more and try again or you can open a blank page and write the next one. So long as you don’t give up, you cannot fail as a writer.
Keep going. Each story you tell equips you with the experience needed to tell the next story.
You’ve got this.
Blog Activity
-
Matthew Brown wrote a new post on the site Thanet Creative 7 years, 1 month ago
There is something magical about finding a fun writer’s group.
At last weekend’s Sunday Writers group we tried out a new activity – Word Bingo. Now, before you groan here me out – this was a far more fun than […]
-
Matthew Brown wrote a new post on the site Thanet Creative 7 years, 1 month ago
In this post, I am going to take a brief look at constructing the idea of Alien Numbers in your alien world.
World building your alien world is a topic I hope to visit a few times. Perhaps not to the same […]
-
jessjoysite commented on the post, Writers Explore: Mental Illness, on the site Thanet Creative 7 years, 2 months ago
I can’t help the nagging feeling that my competition entry prompted this post. Or am I just paranoid? Or conceited? Your post makes for an interesting read and raises the issue of a writer’s moral responsibility […]
-
Matthew Brown wrote a new post on the site Thanet Creative 7 years, 2 months ago
I could give you advice on writing better (in general) but as I am still learning, here is what the experts are saying.
We recently asked what makes a good writer? Here are some tips (mostly from other people) […]
-
Matthew Brown wrote a new post on the site Thanet Creative 7 years, 2 months ago
Hack writing is the fastest way to go from interesting story to trite and boring without really trying.
In almost all cases hack writing is a result of lazy storytelling often combined with a failure to write […]