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Kory Wells's avatar

“Until a piece is accepted for publication, writing is blissfully and cursedly solitary work. There’s no one to tell me if I’m on the right track or help me through a sticking point.”

For me, writing community means first and foremost trusted writer friends who read my drafts and help me see if my pieces are on track or not. I do the same for them. For me this trust evolves through writing groups (both in person and online), through connecting at readings and conferences with people whose work I admire, and infrequently through an “I loved your piece in such and such journal” email or social media message. It has also evolved through the shared work of organizing readings, workshops, and other projects. Community in a rural or suburban area can also mean showing up to cheer other people’s creativity, even if their genre or style is very different than mine. Maybe I’m weird; maybe I spent long enough in my first career in tech to be struck by the differences between community and networking, but for me writing community has been a source of some of my best friends and most meaningful and enjoyable times.

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Claire Sheridan's avatar

First, let me say I am a Luddite who would prefer to return to the days of stone tablets more often than not—but the internet has been essential for finding and CREATING community! And, I hate social media; that is not community, in my opinion.

Sure, there are some encouraging groups for writers out there, but the morass one must endure to find these gems is absolutely not worth the time and effort—again, in my opinion.

What’s a social-media-hating writer, who prefers to write longhand, to do? Well, I created community by getting trained to facilitate workshops. The training opened up a network of other facilitators, and I can honestly say the writers in my groups have become my favorite people.

ZOOM! Zoom is absolutely the answer—this from a person who swore she’d never appreciate a virtual workshop. I remember (somewhat fondly), the good old days of 2019, back before Zoom was installed on any of my devices. Sigh!

The pandemic opened up a whole world of opportunities to connect with writers all over the world, for which I am extremely grateful.

Shameless personal plug: If you’re working on a book, l’d love to connect with you. Check out my community at—

www.igniteyourwrite.com

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