Your goal should be (well, this is my goal; it could be yours too) writing in a way to "trick" people into liking what you like. Writing to market is easy, as you said. Writing what you want that's not marketable is lonely, as you well know. Well... think of how to be marketable without changing. That's the ultimate challenge.And writing to market is, frankly, easy. So what practical reason is there to not just give up on one's own ideas and just exclusively serve others?
Because you said you were lonely lol. So, I (and probably the others) thought that you wanted external validation. What advice were you looking for? To be able to go on even if zero people read your work? As of now, I do not visits my dashboards or reply to messages or read reviews of my story either here on SH or on RR. Effectively, it's as if I'm writing to no one but myself. But I reached this phase of "zen", not caring about numbers, because I was addicted to numbers before and managed to break away from it.a lot of stuff encourages chasing external validation
This is mostly just a matter of perspective and objectives, because it depends on what you mean by external validation. Does validation mean landing your story in some kind of journal or magazine or does it mean having lots of fans? In the case of the latter, people say that writing to market is easy (I would argue it's actually more difficult now than any time in history), but precisely because the "market" (or whatever nebulous amorphous way you want to describe the general marketplace for produced writing) is so saturated, galvanizing a large fanbase is pretty difficult since reading is technically a zero sum game.K, thanks for the attempts all.
I don't feel most of these responses managed to address my actual concern (on why not give up on one's own passions and just write to market) -- if anything, a lot of stuff encourages chasing external validation -- but I did remember why I choose to follow my passions even if I fear everything I do will go unappreciated and is a futile effort.
To quote the first part, the question I ended off on that went ignored:Because you said you were lonely lol. So, I (and probably the others) thought that you wanted external validation. What advice were you looking for? To be able to go on even if zero people read your work? As of now, I do not visits my dashboards or reply to messages or read reviews of my story either here on SH or on RR. Effectively, it's as if I'm writing to no one but myself. But I reached this phase of "zen", not caring about numbers, because I was addicted to numbers before and managed to break away from it.
Soooo... my advice would be, sell out, get burnt out, then see if you still have passion to continue with what you wanted to write that's not marketable. If no more fire within you, then drop writing and find something else to do.
And this is much closer to what I was thinking about.This is mostly just a matter of perspective and objectives, because it depends on what you mean by external validation. Does validation mean landing your story in some kind of journal or magazine or does it mean having lots of fans? In the case of the latter, people say that writing to market is easy (I would argue it's actually more difficult now than any time in history), but precisely because the "market" (or whatever nebulous amorphous way you want to describe the general marketplace for produced writing) is so saturated, galvanizing a large fanbase is pretty difficult since reading is technically a zero sum game.
If your validation concerns the former, just getting published regardless of whether people actually end up reading your work, you can probably pay subscriptions to those aggregators that just give you places to submit and sort by the highest acceptance rate.
I actually think this naturally inspires a kind of existential dread, especially for most writers nowadays, because if writing for yourself was the only drive, then the solution would simply be to write in your diary and never publish. Why publish if the only person you're writing for is yourself? That being said, I do think that people should try their best to move away from modes of thinking that concerns trying to appease some difficult to define idea of the "literary market." Not only does it not really exist in the way that you think it does, it's also possible that the market, which is quite segmented, might have considerable overlap with the things that you like to write.
Spending less money on anti-depressants because you won't hate your job and will find meaning on what you do is a pretty practical reason! ^^)/"So what practical reason is there to not just give up on one's own ideas and just exclusively serve others?"
The saying "fine i'll do it myself" describe very clearly why i became a writter.