Writing and rewriting personally is something done almost instinctively. I will make spelling, grammar, and information errors. Usually my writings contain a broken story or have much misinformation. Nothing is perfected ever the first time drafting up my writings. Even my hand written drafts are incoherent or just poor handwriting that I can’t even decipher. I have been told that my hand written ability is very bad but on occasion my handwritten ability was beautiful. I try to incorporate personal life knowledge in any writings that I engage with but if I am expected to be un-bias in my viewpoints I will incorporate purely true informative dialogue with quotes to back what I am portraying to the audience.

I find that reading has helped me dramatically in determining styles of writing. Getting the big picture to the audience and information across. Story telling in writings be it fictional or non-fictional has always been a favorite. The writing attributes that I seem to follow is it does not matter how I do it as shown in: ” Secret # 3: Rewriting Takes Time (and it doesn’t matter how or when you do it). For most people, a first draft implies a complete draft, from prologue to epilogue. But not everyone writes that way. Diana Gabaldon, author of the best-selling Outlander series, says, “I get asked, ‘How many drafts do you go through?’ all the time. The answer is either ‘one’ or ‘infinity,’ but I don’t know how to tell the difference. I don’t write, leave, come back later and revise.  I work slow and fiddle constantly, so the revision is pretty much done as part of the original writing.  By the time I’m done with a scene, I’m done with it.”    Usually my style is to build a topic in my mind and jot information down like note taking to gather information. The compilation is than written down in an entire sitting from beginning to finish similarly what I am doing within this blog. At other times it can be broken up into different times a number of sittings with numerous revisions.

Shope, B. (2002). True writing is rewriting. In G. Lazette, (Ed.) Vision: A Resource for Writers. Retrieved from Vision@sff.net