tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6560948310084622323.post623469434528171106..comments2023-10-18T07:27:13.938-07:00Comments on Decadent Divas: Writing Quirks by Wendi ZwadukJennifer Kaceyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06998255404206333718noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6560948310084622323.post-44687070923108369702014-10-25T17:53:51.943-07:002014-10-25T17:53:51.943-07:00For me it's therapeutic to write long hand. Ma...For me it's therapeutic to write long hand. Makes me slow down and think through what the characters want to do. Although i have to admit once I get going it can be REALLY hard to understand what the heck i wrote down. I've had to stare at my handwriting and really think about what I was thinking on. Or if all else fails, I type up what i've started and after that I just sort of wing it. I'm good at winging it. :-PWendi Zwaduk and Megan Slayerhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01583513293847035769noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6560948310084622323.post-19110077433093796912014-10-25T16:34:20.494-07:002014-10-25T16:34:20.494-07:00I share your quirk of not knowing where a story is...I share your quirk of not knowing where a story is going until the characters write it (I had written "until I I write it," but let's be honest here...they dictate, I just write it down!), but I'm afraid I write very little long hand anymore. Only when a scene is giving me fits do I pull out the pencil (always pencil, never pen. Why? No idea, but I've been doing it that way since...well...a long time). Good post! Always fun to see inside another writer's mind. :)Diana Hunterhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09822908285490316742noreply@blogger.com