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Writing a fantasy book was something I had never expected to go like this. But turns out, you don't understand the peril of your favourite writers until you put yourself in their socks, or shoes, whatever.
First of all, Welcome! I am Shipra Agrawal, Eso to shorten it, an ambitious teenager who had taken up the very impossible task of writing a fantasy book at the age of 15, maybe a few weeks ago, powered by sheer will that crumbles down every time something bad happens to me, and a tub of coffee for each passing hour that goes by.
The last line is a bit exaggerated, but- Meh.
So, what am I here for today?
Good question! Heavens know if I know the answer to it myself.
There is just something about this app that attracts my sleep-deprived, overfilled brain, just how I like running into red flags like its cosy firelight, and I am the CEO of self-destruction.
So, back to the topic at hand today. Writing a goddamn fantasy book.
The first book I had ever wrote, well not actually a book, it was just a pathetic, hormone-induced way of letting out steam that builds up in every single pre-matured teen's body because their parents are so strict and kissing someone feels like a slow punishment for all the sins your four feet five inch asshat persona has ever done. In short, it was bad. And now, I wouldn't dare call that piece of words string on a virtual paper (I am pretty sure even the paper was close to vomiting over whatever it had been forcefully forced to bear), a book.
It was a fanfiction. To be more specific, a Jimin fanfiction.
Yes, I used to be that kind of BTS fan too, who went around calling the members husbands like they were my personal property, spamming purple hearts until the person on the other side was unsure about my sanity and sure about the lack of it.
It was, for the lack of a better word, an embarrassing phase of my life. I don't like it.
Am I over it? Thankfully, yes. Now, being a fan means occasional twitching eyes seeing the members display themselves like the Greek gods they are, no complaints there, I am still a teenager lol, and embarrassing karaoke nights at 3 am in my room, a blasphemy, I know, since it is, of course, very hard to even try imitating Yoongi, but I am depressed you know? Snooze works like a balm to my invisible and maybe non-existent wounds that I create myself with the hoard of expectations I present to myself with every passing opportunity I get.
Again, I went off-topic, but yeah, I am very angry with myself that I waited 3 years for them to come back, only to miss the first live they had together.
The first book I ever wrote did not make sense. The first book I wrote that made at least some sense was probably the fifteenth try I had given at writing. I got 2k views on it, and deleted it this past week in an emotional/mental breakdown. It was the best feeling ever.
The book I am writing currently is a spin-off of an HP fanfic I am still working on alongside. But, I do think I have changed enough in that world that it is surely an original concept by now. Bonkers, I know. But I am pretty sure J.K. Rowling did not have an exoplanet in her world with beings that came into existence on Earth itself and were sealed entry through a portal of unknown origins.
How did I even come up with such a monster concept? Should be your first question. If it isn't, come, my darling, I would kill for a hug with you.
The answer to that, my dearest friends, is, *dramatic flourish*, Worldbuilding.
'Worldbuilding: Because writing a love story is more impactful when gravity exists.' - Science first, smooches second.
'World-building: where you invent languages, cultures, and ecosystems, then forget about them entirely by chapter five.' — Consistency is for amateurs, of course.
'Worldbuilding is inventing religions, gods, and rituals your characters will ignore in favour of personal angst.' — Divine drama, discontinued.
'Worldbuilding isn’t about realism—it’s about establishing why dragons are allergic to gluten.' — Canonically celiac drakes.
Honestly speaking, writing a fantasy book wasn’t on my life bingo card, but here we are—fingers stained with metaphorical ink, heart stitched together with plot holes, and a world that somehow exists because I refused to give up.
This isn't a journey. It’s a fever dream with a word count.
And I’m not done yet.
See you again, one day when I am once again unsure about if I really want to go on with things or just lie down on the middle of the road like the rogue cattle like doing it in front of my house (I live in India) and see if I am lucky enough to pass on to the after-life and start a new chapter, where I am sure I will be nit-picking the brain of the devil who refuses to give me facts about the workings of hell and if he's got a secret human-looking form that has sexy toes and slippery abbs.
Toodles!
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Now I know I’m not alone, writing can be so challenging, I have so many plot holes in my own projects and its even worse when I get a great idea for another different project and then another idea, to where its almost too much to work on.
ReplyDeleteI think you will for sure achieve your dreams of being an author! Some advice I know is that your first book might not hit big, but to keep writing for your enjoyment! I know I'll definitely be looking forward to reading it. ✨