intorduction + further explanation

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i was reading point of retreat by coleen hoover and stumbled upon this slam poem:

"Write poorly.
Suck
Write awful
Terribly
Frightfully

Don't care
Turn off the inner editor
Let yourself write
Let it flow
Let yourself fail
Do something crazy
Write fifty thousand words in the month of
November.
I did it.
It was fun , it was insane , it was one thousand six
hundred and sixty-seven words a day.

It was possible.
But you have to turn off your inner critic.
Off completely.
Just write.
Quickly.

In bursts.
With joy.
If you can't write, run away for a few.
Come back.
Write again.
Writing is like anything else.
You won't get good at it immediately.
It's a craft, you have to keep getting better.
You don't get to Juilliard unless you practice.
If you want to get to Carnegie Hall, practice, practice, practice.
...Or give them a lot of money.
Like anything else, it takes ten thousand hours to master.
Just like Malcolm Gladwell says.
So write.
Fail.

Get your thoughts down.
Let it rest.
Let it marinate.
Then edit.
But don't edit as you type,
that just slows the brain down.
Find a daily practice,
for me it's blogging every day.
And it's fun.
The more you write, the easier it gets. The more it is a flow, the less a worry. It's not for school, it's not for a grade, it's just to get your thoughts out there.
You know they want to come out.
So keep at it. Make it a practice. And write poorly, write awfully, write with abandon and it may end up being
really
really
good.
"


Other than Edmund  Davis-Quinn though, I won't write 1667 words a day, but a thousand. it'll just be unfiltered thoughts, maybe even short stories or poems or story ideas. just whatever's floating around in my head at the time.

i'm not sure about the time span of this project yet, but i'm definitely excited to start it and hope i can master it for at least some time!

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