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Jul 2019

Yes, I would agree with that, especially for beginner writers. I suppose that's something that would be easier to tackle with experience.
That's actually exactly the reason I chose to make an extroverted character. It felt too close when I was writing introverts, I was too prone to self-pity. Now with this character, I understand his concerns and aspirations, but not quite his personality. Even if I'm writing him. Sounds strange, but that's really my feeling: I write a character I don't quite understand. I don't know if I do it well, but it is certainly refreshing for me as an author.

I was always drawing as a kid, and coming up with stories while I listened to music on my downtime. I never wrote them down, just told them audibly to myself over the music.

Did that for years, I was pretty sheltered from the current (at the time) TV and media stuff so I usually just listened to a ton of radio dramas, (they were safe or so my parents decided.

As a kid I also read a lot of Garfield, Calvin and Hobbes, and Peanuts so that had a big influence later on.

As a teenager I found a bit more freedom in what I could watch and read, so my biggest influences became Godzilla, One Piece, and Dragonball.

When I finally read the original One Punch Man by One (not the one with art by Yusuke Murata) I realized I had zero excuse to not use my art to tell stories I'd long ago created.

My inspiration(s) are pretty scattered and it took me awhile to even try, but I got there eventually.

I hope you do find a program that works for you, but most importantly, that you enjoy!
Thanks for your kind words!! And I’m wishing you the best on your future endevours too!

When I was about 14 my baby brother was diagnosed with a very serious cancer (he managed to survive against the odds) & the hospital was a three hour car ride away. Every day for years and years the whole family would get up before dark and drive to his appointments, then drive back in the afternoon so my father could work a night shift. I did my schooling by myself in the back of the car. I read books. But one day I just started writing to pass the time, pages and pages of spiral bound notebooks. There was a lot of discouragement from the people around me, and I had to hide what I was doing, but I made it through and I'm still writing to this day. I haven't thought about those dark days in years. In fact I started cartooning at around the same time, now that I think about it. Everything was so disconnected in those days, just this frenzy of the moment, when tomorrow may be someone's last day, and my parents needed strength they could barely find in themselves. A friend's child died of the same cancer (all my friends were adults) I knew writing was a sort of therapy for me, some place where I could still be a kid, so I did it even though I had to hide it. I always wrote stories with happy endings, and I continue to do that. Happy endings mean a lot to me.

your story touched me. I totally understand. my mother is currently battling cancer and it's not easy. glad he got through it..

I didn't ever has really an issue with medical staff or anything like that. My anger towards the medical industry was insurance trying to weasel their way out of trying to pay for my medical care and trying to force me to pay hundreds of dollars for pills that cost them $5 to make. Sad part was I needed my medication to live and I was losing weight at an alarming rate. It kind of felt like I was slowly dying and the industry was just standing by watching.

So as a way of trying to cope with the events I was going through at the time, I wrote stories. I can rant on and on about this stuff. Lol. But things are a lot better for me now but I started writing to really connect with other folks who were in similar situations and understand the fear of wondering if they'll be able to get their medication or not.

Fortunately, I'm one of those people who doesn't need a whole lot of sleep to function properly, lol. Fours hours or so and I'm good to go (as long as I'm not about to do something labor intensive). And yeah, it is hard to fall asleep with stories running through my mind; I do keep a notebook bedside just in case one is really good, but after 20+ years I've gotten used to it :sweat_smile:

Well I can't really think of much. I know when I was maybe 8 I saw an old cartoon (I think Tom and Jerry) and felt like wanting to make cartoons. Since that time, I've thought of ideas for new shows, comics, and other forms of storytelling EVERY SINGLE DAY. I also really love going crazy over how good a story is, which makes me want to create something as awesome as that :smiley: . Also, storytelling has a great ability to influence society's ideas, so maybe I can create something that'll help society be a little bit better.

Yeah I heard there were some people who have the minimum sleep requirement and still go through out the day without problems. I probably need 7 to 8 hours of sleep for me to be hmm satisfied? But I do sleep a lot on different times of the day, generally when I feel sleepy I'll just go and sleep haha ;; I might've gotten influenced by my household cat lol

I would say the number one thing driving my creativity is the desire to make my own versions of things I liked without directly copying, especially if that thing didn't actually exist in real life.

I made my own "real life" Pokémon by finding bugs outside and gluing plants together. Yu-Gi-Oh lead me to making my own card game. I remember the Megaman NT Warrior show came out (apparently known as Rockman.EXE in Japan or whatever... not sure, really), I wanted my own Net Navi so bad that I made a new trading card game in order to simulate it called Gambler Battlers (named so because I felt it was more luck-based than most trading card games). Stuff like that...

The Skyman is basically "If I was in charge of writing Superman, I would do this". It's not obvious (hopefully), but if you were in my head, youd6be able to spot all the Superman nods.

I was bit by a radioactive comic book.... That murdered my parents.

My... now not so secret identity...is Mint Condition.

It’s really hard to say what inspired me specifically. I guess if I had to pin it down, like many other of the creators in this thread said, it would be loneliness and a sense of non belonging—but also solidarity.

I’ve always been kind of a loner child, but getting bullied severely for years didn’t help. On top of that, I was considered one of the “weird” kids for mental conditions I won’t list here—plus, I later discovered in life that not only am I trans, I am also gay, so that further alienated me from the general population. I drifted towards internet communities since I couldn’t really “connect” with the people around me and I haven’t regretted that since.

It was online that I discovered the depth of the horror genre and people like me, who felt like they didn’t belong. With them, I could share my creativity. They inspired me to keep pursuing my art career, and without them I probably would have stopped drawing and creating stories entirely. So while my stories do focus on the feeling of not belonging... I also want them to focus on finding a community of people like you, who genuinely care for and love you and will always support you, even if it seems like the whole world’s huge and scary and unaccepting.

That... kind of turned into a long sappy rant, but. Yeah.

I'd say is devotion for telling stories and creating new worlds

17 days later

I.................... have no idea............

I've been writing comics for longer than I can remember. My first comic idea were probably from when I was... what? 6, 7? And I have drawings from when I was 4... I can imagine that there may have been an inspiration back then but heck if I know what it would have been...

I've always had a passion/desire to create comics- been doing it basically since I was a kid, drawing up comics on notebook paper...that evolved to drawing on bristol and eventually comic boards. I started self publishing my own comics about 20 yrs ago, then took a break to do the parent thing. I started back creating about 5 yrs ago, remastering my comics that I had done years ago, then started drawing & inking digitally to make a webcomic series.

I like making comics...I like seeing others read my comics.

I loved this. Not about the cancer, but how it was (sorta) similar to when we used to have to drive really far to the doctor for my little brother for his tourettes syndrome. I connected a lot with music during that time. Not nearly as terrifying as what you dealt with.
I’m really glad your brother beat cancer. And it’s awesome you found inspiration during such hard times.

I have had a love affair with stories for as long as I remember. I devoured books as a child, and eventually started making my own stories in my head. Then I realized I could write them down. It's like breathing, now, like I have to do it or I'll die. I know that's dramatic, but it's the best description I can give. The fear that I'd never write poetry again made my world unhinged until I was able to write one again. Words have always been my friend, my sword and shield. Writer's block could easily induce a panic attack in me, so much so that once I get stuck on a story, I don't hang around, I move on to the next one, which is quite a problem, as things rarely end up moving forward or finished. Reading my old writing is like visiting an old friend, and relaxes me like nothing else in this world. Oddly enough, I don't feel the same way about art. My comic is just a project I'm working on to prove to myself I can do something difficult a stick with it, even while working a full-time job. The inspiration for the art comes from my favorite webcomics. But it's still telling a story, of course, and I enjoy that part of it quite a lot, every page finished is a step closer to the story's completion. Hopefully my readers enjoy it as much as I do lol