Entry tags:
random musing
Ever notice that someone else's description of their life can seem like pure fiction, based on your own preconceptions? Maybe that's just me.
Last night, I was reading the most recent Writer's Digest. The woman who won their popular fiction contest is described as a mother of 4 who writes between 6:30 and 8:00 in the morning because the kids don't get up until 8. Based on my experience of kids, I just can't believe this. Maybe if they're teens, but even then, I'd expect at least 1 in 4 to be an early riser.
Fiction . . . but it isn't. When did I have to start practicing the willing suspension of disbelief in day-to-day life?
Last night, I was reading the most recent Writer's Digest. The woman who won their popular fiction contest is described as a mother of 4 who writes between 6:30 and 8:00 in the morning because the kids don't get up until 8. Based on my experience of kids, I just can't believe this. Maybe if they're teens, but even then, I'd expect at least 1 in 4 to be an early riser.
Fiction . . . but it isn't. When did I have to start practicing the willing suspension of disbelief in day-to-day life?
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Actually, though, I think it's stranger when you have to do that to your own life. Even if your life was pretty mundane, like mine, I still have to look at it and go, "I couldn't possibly have been that big a jerk to that ex-girlfriend, could I? I mean, that goes BEYOND Fox TV writing!"
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That's assuming your parents wanted to train you.
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