People obsess over
what they don't like, sometimes entirely neglecting to mention what they do. It
is hard for me to take such criticism seriously. In my entire life, there have
been very few things I can honestly say have no redeeming value. I have never been
able to say this about a movie, much less a work of literature.
Now, I am not
trying to justify bad writing and poor composition. If there is a problem, then
it should be mentioned.... once you focus on the things the writer did right.
After all, a critique expounds on the qualities of a work, not on all the gaps
in between.
And the positive
aspects should always come first. If I tell someone they have fly-away hair, a
greasy complexion, spindly arms and knobby knees; they will not really want to hear
that I think they have a great personality. And when the negative rears its
ugly head, it should never be in the form of an insult. Human beings have
fragile egos which, just like hearts, must be handled with care.
You should
appreciate people for who they are; and their work deserves the same. Once this
is done, then it is up to the writer to be able to handle the criticism.
Everyone wants to have that rough draft which is perfect: the words drip like
honey from the page; there are no grammatical errors; cats and dogs live
together in peace and harmony... But that is the goal, not the starting point.
And as for the
hypercritical, a writer must develop a tough skin. These things will never
change, so you must change your reactions to them. Consider the criticism: is
it correct? Is this a real problem or a matter of taste? If two or more people,
who do not know each other, mention the same thing; then you should look into
it. For the goal is to reach the destination... the cats and dogs will thank
you.
How I agree - we are so quick to criticise, and not just writing. Sometimes it seems that grumbling keeps us going. But I have a different POV - celebrate the great things (the smell of hot coffee, my grandchildren giggling) and the world feels a better place. Then I try to take that into my writing.
ReplyDeleteThat's a good attitude: appreciate what you have and everything else will fall into place.
Delete