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Colleen Krystyniak's avatar

Love this perspective and wholeheartedly agree!!!

I’ve often said that academia threatened to beat the creativity out of me with their ‘rules’ for writing-

so many of which don’t make for good storytelling or even a compelling essay.

I mastered expectations for papers & such, but felt called to do writing that was wholly different. FF to present day in my 5th decade of life and I’m finally just these last 5 or so years-finally pursuing writing as a passion; reveling in the art making and learning ‘craft’ from a teacher/writer/artist who views writing as a way of living; who values ‘play’ & messy as a portal to the profound.

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AGK's avatar

The question of natural talent vs. effort and practice rages on, and all too often people rush to dig their heels in on one side of the debate or the other. The boring (and often frustrating) answer is that it's both.

The good news is, regardless of how nature vs. nurture determines your ability, one side of that equation is settled, so the answer is the same regardless of where you're starting from: practice.

And to your point, recognizing the art in your craft can only help you to improve. The techniques and tools are valuable insofar as they serve the art.

Great read.

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