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Jul 2020

Probably the most important thing I learned is that only about 0.001% of my hard work will ever be recognized, so it's best that I simply stop expecting recognition. :]

But also once someone told me that macarons and macaroons are two different kinds of cookies. ^^ I've mentioned that here before...

That has shaken me as well. Macarons and macaroons.

One of my favorite instances of this is I had a number of episodes scheduled ahead, and in the author's note for one of them I put a reader question "I wonder if anyone can guess what they're up to?" or something like that.

But then the readers beat me to the punch and began predicting already on the page before that one xD I left the question in place the following week though and people continued with more guesses based on the new page though ahaha.

Some people like the fluffbutt, what can you do?

Hahaha I'm so glad to know. think I can say the same about you.

I think reader's imagination must be key to a story; narrative must make you think and wonder, not just assimilate. Storytelling can be a thing of two, an active action and not a passive one. Which better place than a social sharing site to nurture this?

This is just how I view things, so it is very personal.

In a mostly stationary medium like webcomics, people enjoy it when you toss in a bit of animation for flavor.

I learned that I have a knack for creating cute characters. Never my intention. I don't like cute stuff for the sake of cute stuff.

Cats will always be popular. Every time a Youtuber makes a video and there's a cat in the background, most of the comments would be people addressing said cat.

I've learned readers are very helpful in finding spelling mistakes ^_^;

Also, what they focus on depending on which platform they're reading my series on is fascinating. Sometimes their comments are similar, but other times they are so completely different on the same episode that it's mind-bending :open_mouth:

Readers also like to make predictions and guess which is really fun to read :smiley:

I looooove reading readers' guesses. If they figure it out, I feel like a proud parent :joy:

Adding airbrush shading in blue or black colors instantly makes a story feel dark. Oh and I have terrible writing structure and I need to go to school for that.

Well, since you're technically a commenter, I guess I'll change my answer.

What I've learned from my commenters is that Norman's butt is going to pay for my student loans.

Omg that is freaking hysterical :joy: and also, as a writer, terrible!! I’ve definitely written vague scenes, googled for more information and realized I was in too deep :hushed: (I also ask my husband vague, zero context questions and hope for the best LOL)

I have SEVERAL tabs open for the most random things because I’m constantly juggling whether I want something to be accurate or not. Quite a few things in my story are fantastical and of course fictional AND set in the past so I have to constantly balance historical accuracy with my own brand of world building.

And I already gave him a heads up to answer all my seemingly random questions :joy: