The Musings of Jaime David
The Musings of Jaime David
@jaimedavid.blog@jaimedavid.blog

The writings of some random dude on the internet

1,117 posts
1 follower

Tag: writing process

  • WHY I APPROVE ALL COMMENTS ON MY BLOGS, EVEN THE ONES THAT DISAGREE WITH ME

    WHY I APPROVE ALL COMMENTS ON MY BLOGS, EVEN THE ONES THAT DISAGREE WITH ME

    There’s a very specific kind of expectation people have when they land on a personal blog in 2026. They assume moderation, they assume curation, they assume that whatever comment section exists has already been filtered through some invisible lens of approval, agreement, or comfort. They assume that if they say something critical, it might disappear. Or if they say something messy, it might get buried. Or if they say something bluntly opposed to the author, it might never even see the light of day.

    And I get why people assume that. That’s basically the internet we’ve built over the years. Comment sections have become either tightly controlled echo chambers or chaotic wastelands where nothing meaningful survives. So when someone finds out that I approve basically everything on my blogs, including disagreement, including criticism, including stuff that actively pushes back against what I say, the immediate reaction is usually confusion.

    Like, why would you do that?

    And the honest answer is both simpler and more complicated than people expect.

    I want engagement. Real engagement. Not filtered engagement. Not sterilized agreement. Not a comment section that exists just to validate the original post. I want the actual back-and-forth of ideas, even when it gets uncomfortable, even when it gets messy, even when it challenges me directly. Because if nobody is disagreeing with you, you are not actually having a conversation. You are performing into a mirror.

    And I’m not interested in mirrors.

    I’m interested in friction. In response. In contradiction. In the weird unpredictable ecosystem that happens when people are allowed to actually react to something without being pre-screened for ideological compatibility.

    That’s the core of it. But there’s more layers underneath.

    Because approving all comments isn’t just about engagement. It’s also about trust.

    When I write something, I’m not pretending it exists in a vacuum. I know it enters a larger world where people come from different backgrounds, different beliefs, different emotional states, different interpretations of language itself. If I publish something and only allow comments that agree with me, then I’m not actually respecting that diversity of interpretation. I’m flattening it. I’m saying only certain reactions are valid enough to exist under my words.

    And that feels dishonest.

    If I put something out into the world, I don’t want to control the emotional or intellectual reaction to it. I want to observe it. I want to see what lands, what misses, what irritates people, what resonates, what confuses them. That feedback loop is part of the writing process itself. Not an afterthought. Not a decoration. A core component.

    Because writing doesn’t end when you hit publish. That’s just the beginning of its life.

    And when comments are allowed to exist freely, even critical ones, the writing becomes something more than just a monologue. It becomes a space. A shared environment where meaning is negotiated rather than dictated.

    Of course, that doesn’t mean everything is chaos. There’s still a line somewhere. Spam, harassment, obvious bad-faith junk, that kind of thing doesn’t add value. But disagreement? Pushback? Even harsh criticism? That’s not only allowed, it’s part of the point.

    Because disagreement is information.

    If someone reads something I write and responds with “I don’t agree with this because X, Y, Z,” that tells me something real. It tells me how the idea is being received. It tells me where the gaps are. It tells me what assumptions I might have made without realizing it. Sometimes it even reveals blind spots I didn’t know were there.

    And if I only allowed positive reinforcement, I’d lose all of that.

    I think people underestimate how important that is for growth, not just for me as a writer, but for the blog itself as a living thing. A blog isn’t just a publication. It’s a dialogue over time. A record of thought interacting with other thought. And if that interaction is artificially narrowed, the whole system becomes weaker.

    There’s also something else going on here that I don’t think gets talked about enough: the psychological pressure of curated agreement.

    When every comment under your work is positive, it creates a weird distortion. It starts to feel like you’re either always right or that you’re writing for applause instead of understanding. It can subtly push you toward safe ideas, toward reinforcing what already gets approval, toward avoiding complexity that might confuse or upset your audience.

    But that’s not how real thinking works.

    Real thinking is unstable. It contradicts itself. It evolves. It gets challenged and reshaped. And sometimes it gets proven wrong. If you remove all external friction, you lose that instability, and with it, you lose intellectual honesty.

    I’d rather have a comment section where someone says “I think you’re wrong about this and here’s why” than a comment section full of “great post!” with nothing behind it.

    Not because positivity is bad, but because it’s incomplete on its own.

    There’s also a deeper philosophical angle here that I keep coming back to. If I believe in the value of expression, then I also have to believe in the value of response to that expression. You can’t really advocate for open expression and then selectively restrict how people respond to it just because it makes you uncomfortable.

    That would be a contradiction.

    And I’m not interested in building contradictions into the foundation of my work.

    Now, that doesn’t mean every comment carries equal weight. It doesn’t mean every critique is correct or even well-formed. People are messy. Language is messy. Intent gets lost constantly. Misunderstandings happen all the time. But even messy feedback still has informational value.

    Sometimes especially messy feedback.

    Because it shows how ideas travel through different minds. It shows where communication breaks down. It shows where something I thought was clear might not actually be clear at all.

    And again, that’s useful.

    There’s also a social aspect to this that matters more than people think. When readers see that disagreement is allowed, it changes the tone of participation. It signals that they don’t have to agree to be part of the conversation. It creates a space where people feel less pressure to perform agreement and more permission to be honest.

    That honesty is rare online.

    Most platforms incentivize extremes. Either total agreement or total hostility. Nuance gets filtered out because it doesn’t generate the same immediate reaction. But on a personal blog where comments are actually approved rather than algorithmically sorted, there’s an opportunity to preserve nuance in a way that larger platforms often fail to do.

    And I want that space to exist.

    Even if it gets uncomfortable sometimes.

    Because yes, it does get uncomfortable. Not every disagreement feels neutral. Sometimes criticism hits a nerve. Sometimes it forces you to sit with the fact that not everyone reads your work the way you intended it. Sometimes it even exposes flaws in how you communicated an idea.

    But discomfort isn’t a failure state. It’s part of the process.

    If anything, it means the system is working.

    A comment section where nobody ever disagrees is not a healthy environment. It’s a sealed environment. And sealed environments stagnate.

    Open environments evolve.

    There’s also a personal philosophy behind all of this that connects to how I think about creativity in general. I don’t see my writing as something that needs to be protected from critique. I see it as something that needs to be tested by it. If an idea can’t survive contact with disagreement, then it probably wasn’t fully formed to begin with.

    That doesn’t mean every piece of criticism invalidates an idea. It just means ideas should be able to withstand pressure. They should be able to be questioned. They should be able to be challenged without collapsing.

    And if they do collapse, that’s useful information too.

    It means something needs to be rebuilt.

    Approving all comments is, in a way, a commitment to that testing process. It’s a refusal to insulate myself from reaction. It’s an acknowledgment that I don’t have a monopoly on interpretation of what I write. Once something is published, it belongs in part to whoever reads it.

    And readers will interpret it in ways I never expected.

    That’s not a flaw. That’s part of what makes writing alive.

    Another reason I keep all comments visible is because I think it’s important for other readers to see disagreement too. Not just the author seeing it privately, but the audience seeing it publicly. Because it models something healthier than curated agreement: it models coexistence of different perspectives in the same space.

    Someone can read a post and agree with it, and right below that see someone who strongly disagrees, and both of those reactions are allowed to exist without one erasing the other.

    That matters more than people realize.

    It teaches readers that disagreement doesn’t automatically mean hostility, and that differing interpretations can exist without collapsing the entire space into conflict.

    Of course, that only works if the environment is moderated enough to prevent it from becoming chaos, but open enough to prevent it from becoming controlled silence. It’s a balance. Not perfect, but intentional.

    And I’ll be honest, part of this also comes down to curiosity.

    I like seeing how people respond.

    Not in a performative way. Not in a validation-seeking way. Just in a genuine “what did this idea do when it left my head and entered someone else’s” kind of way. That transformation is interesting to me. Sometimes more interesting than the original writing itself.

    Because once it’s out there, it stops being just mine.

    It becomes a shared object that people interact with differently.

    And that interaction is the real content, in a sense.

    So yeah, I approve all comments, even the ones that disagree with me, even the ones that are critical, even the ones that poke holes in what I wrote.

    Not because I think everything is equally correct.

    Not because I want chaos.

    But because I want the conversation to be real.

    And real conversation requires space for contradiction.

    Without that, it’s not conversation at all.

    It’s just broadcasting.

    And I’m not trying to broadcast into silence.

    I’m trying to build something that talks back.

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  • How to Write a Short Story: A Step-by-Step Guide for Aspiring Writers

    How to Write a Short Story: A Step-by-Step Guide for Aspiring Writers

    Writing a short story is a fulfilling and highly rewarding experience. Whether you’re creating a single story or aiming for a collection, there’s no singular “right” way to approach it. However, there are proven strategies to help you organize your thoughts and make the writing process smoother. Here’s a step-by-step guide that offers a clear structure for writing a compelling short story, packed with professional tips and insights.


    1. Start with an Idea — The Seed of Your Story

    The first step in writing any story is coming up with an idea. But how do you generate that spark of inspiration?

    • Where to Find Ideas: Your story might be inspired by a random thought, a memory, a scene you can’t shake, or a question you’ve been pondering. It could even be inspired by an image or emotion.
    • Tip: Keep a journal or a digital note app handy for random ideas, dreams, observations, or intriguing conversations. These fleeting moments can turn into the core of your next short story.
    • Key Questions: What theme do I want to explore? What do I want the reader to feel? Is it a character-driven or plot-driven story? Getting clarity here will set the foundation for everything that comes next.

    2. Plan Your Story (or Don’t)

    Some writers love outlining, while others prefer a more organic approach, writing as they go. The key is to find what works best for you.

    • Outlining: If you thrive with structure, create a simple outline. You don’t need to detail every scene but outline the beginning, middle, and end. Consider the story arc, the rise and fall of tension, and how the plot will unfold.
    • Pantser Approach: If you’re more of an instinctual writer, let your characters guide the story. Allow them to evolve as you write and see where the plot takes you.
    • Tip: Even if you’re not an outliner, it’s helpful to have a sense of the core conflict and ending. These elements will anchor your story without limiting creativity.

    3. Write the First Draft — Don’t Worry About Perfection

    The first draft is all about getting the story out. Don’t worry about making it perfect or editing as you go. The goal here is momentum.

    • Tip: Write without stopping. If you’re worried about missing details, just make a note and keep going. Editing is for later. The priority now is to fill the page.
    • Reminder: No first draft is perfect. Get the story down, then you can refine it. A messy first draft is better than an empty page.

    4. Take a Break — Let the Story Sit for a While

    Once your first draft is done, step away from the story. It’s tempting to jump right into editing, but distance will give you fresh perspective.

    • Tip: Take at least a few days (or even a week) away from your story. Do something unrelated — read, relax, or start another project. When you come back, you’ll be able to spot issues you missed before.
    • Why It Works: You’ll return with fresh eyes and an objective mind. Sometimes the problems in a story aren’t obvious until you’ve let it rest.

    5. Edit for Structure, Plot, and Character Development

    Editing isn’t just about fixing grammar; it’s about refining the structure and flow of the story.

    • Key Focus Areas:
      • Story Arc: Ensure the conflict is clear, the rising action is compelling, and the resolution is satisfying.
      • Character Development: Ask yourself if your characters grow and change. Are they motivated by their internal conflicts?
      • Pacing: Make sure the story moves forward at a good pace without dragging in any sections.
    • Tip: Don’t get bogged down in grammar yet. Look at the big picture first: structure, plot, and character. Once you’re happy with these, go back and fine-tune the details.

    6. Polish the Details — Grammar, Pacing, and Clarity

    Now that your story structure is solid, it’s time to focus on the details.

    • Tip: Use tools like Grammarly or ProWritingAid for basic grammar and punctuation issues. But don’t rely entirely on them; read through your story as a whole to catch things like tone consistency and clarity.
    • Note: Ensure your sentences flow smoothly and don’t disrupt the reader’s experience. Edit for clarity, eliminating anything that feels out of place.

    7. Share and Seek Feedback — The Final Step

    Once you’re happy with your revisions, it’s time to share your work. Beta readers can provide invaluable feedback.

    • Tip: Send your story to multiple readers, each with different backgrounds or perspectives. A diverse set of feedback will help you improve your story from all angles.
    • Why It’s Important: Feedback helps spot blind spots in your work. Maybe a plot point is unclear, or a character’s motivations aren’t strong enough. Use this feedback to make your story even better.

    8. Submit or Publish

    After all the editing, it’s time to submit your story for publication. If you’re going the indie route, self-publish it on platforms like Amazon or Smashwords.

    • Tip: Submit your story to literary magazines or anthologies. If you’re interested in a collection, start building your portfolio. You can also consider posting it to websites like Medium or Wattpad.

    Final Thoughts — Keep Writing and Improving

    The most important thing to remember is that writing is a journey. Your first short story might not be perfect, but every story you write helps you improve your craft. Don’t get discouraged by setbacks. Keep experimenting, learning, and growing as a writer.

    • Tip: Embrace imperfection. The more you write, the more you’ll refine your voice and discover what works for you. Keep going, and remember: every short story brings you closer to mastery.

  • How to Write a Novel: A Step-by-Step Guide for Beginners

    How to Write a Novel: A Step-by-Step Guide for Beginners

    Writing a novel is an exciting but challenging journey that requires planning, perseverance, and dedication. As someone who’s been through the process, here’s a structured guide that not only breaks down what you need to do but gives you a roadmap to avoid burnout and stay focused.

    1. Clarify Your ‘Why’ — Why Do You Want to Write a Novel?

    Before you dive into writing, it’s critical to clarify your motivation. Why do you want to write this novel? Are you writing to tell a unique story, express a personal experience, or simply because you love writing? Understanding the purpose behind your project will help you stay focused and motivated when the process gets tough.

    2. Find Your Core Idea — Start with What Inspires You

    Start by identifying the core concept of your novel. This could be a character, a setting, or a scene that sparks your imagination.

    Once you have your starting point, think about why this idea excites you. What do you want to explore? From this, you’ll begin to develop the central theme of your story.

    Themes are the emotional heart of your novel, giving your story depth and meaning. If you can identify your theme early, you’ll have a solid foundation to build the rest of your narrative around.

    3. Flesh Out Characters and Plot

    With your theme in mind, start developing your characters. Think about their goals, desires, flaws, and how they relate to your theme. Ask yourself: How will your characters’ personal journeys align with the emotional arc of the story?

    Next, outline your plot. Character and plot development go hand in hand— your plot should be shaped by your characters’ decisions, challenges, and transformations. Focus on creating emotional conflicts that tie into the theme you identified earlier.

    4. Outlining Your Novel (or Not)

    If you’re a planner, outlining your novel can be a game-changer. However, if you’re more of a pantser (someone who writes without a rigid plan), don’t stress. A loose outline can still be helpful to stay on track. If outlining feels restrictive, just start with a basic framework: the beginning, middle, and end.

    Here are some ideas to consider:

    • The Three-Act Structure: Divide your plot into three key parts — beginning, middle, and end.
    • The Snowflake Method: Start with a one-sentence summary of your novel and expand from there, gradually adding complexity.

    Whether you choose to outline in detail or write more freely, the goal is to have enough structure to guide you through the story.

    5. Write the First Draft — Just Write!

    Once you’ve set up your characters and plot, it’s time to write. Don’t worry about perfection during the first draft. The goal here is to get the story down. It’s common to feel like the first draft is a mess — that’s okay! You can fix everything later.

    • Tip: Focus on momentum, not perfection. Don’t stop to edit — keep writing and push through the rough parts. Every word written brings you closer to your goal.

    6. Take a Break Before Revising

    After finishing your first draft, it’s time to step back. Put your manuscript aside for a few days or weeks. This will give you fresh eyes when you return to it.

    When you come back, don’t dive straight into line editing. Instead, focus on big-picture revisions:

    • Does the plot flow logically?
    • Are the character arcs clear and satisfying?
    • Does the theme come through?

    7. Rewriting & Refining

    Once you’ve done the major revisions, it’s time to refine your novel.

    • Focus on pacing: Ensure the narrative doesn’t drag or feel rushed. Each scene should serve a purpose in advancing the plot or character development.
    • Improve dialogue: Dialogue should feel natural and reveal character traits. If it feels stilted, read it aloud to see how it sounds.
    • Strengthen emotional impact: Go deeper into the emotions your characters experience and how those emotions shape their actions.

    The key here is to rework the narrative until it matches your vision. Don’t be afraid to cut or rework sections that aren’t serving the story.

    8. Seek External Feedback

    After you’ve revised, seek feedback from trusted beta readers or a writing group. Choose people who will give you honest feedback on your writing, not just praise. Pay attention to their comments on pacing, character development, and whether the theme comes through effectively.

    9. Study Craft — Keep Improving

    Writing is a lifelong learning process. Study your weaknesses and continue to improve. If your dialogue feels stiff, read books or take courses on writing great dialogue. If you struggle with pacing, learn about building tension and creating suspense. Use the feedback you get from beta readers to focus your study on areas you need to grow in.

    Remember, it’s normal for your writing to evolve — perfection comes with practice.

    10. The Final Draft — Publish or Submit

    Once you’ve finished your manuscript, you have two options: self-publish or submit to agents/publishers. If you self-publish, make sure to invest in quality editing and cover design to make your book stand out.

    Whether you self-publish or go the traditional route, start building your author platform early on. Build a blog, a social media presence, and an email list to connect with readers and promote your book when it’s ready.


    In Conclusion: Keep Writing

    Writing a novel isn’t a straight path. There will be obstacles, frustrations, and moments of doubt. But it’s also a deeply rewarding journey. Stay committed to your vision, keep writing, and remember that the process itself is part of what makes your story meaningful.

    Writing your novel is a marathon, not a sprint — but with the right tools, patience, and persistence, you’ll get there. Start today and keep pushing forward!