Hmmm... it was interesting that teachers were mentioned in that
blog - because I am an English teacher. And she is right - we do
praise and encourage the use of techniques. I am my department's
creative writing go-to girl when it comes to getting kids past
'then he said lets go to the park and she said okay and they went
to the park and just then there was a dog and it growled and like
ran to them and they were scared' stage - so I do tend to draw on
what I use and teach every day. I think you can get a distorted
view of literature when you are analysing it every day of your
working life - for example, I teach 'Great Expectations',
concentrating on chapter 1 and 27 (and maybe the end if I have a
bright group), looking at how Pip changes. To do this, we
actively pick out every single technique used and go through why
they are there, leading to a possibly distorted view that for it
to count, it has to have subtext - no sentence is just a
sentence, it has to MATTER (it warrants the capital letters!),
and this is where I end up coming from. It isn't a case of
showing off and saying 'hey, look what I can do!', for me, it's
definitely a case of 'if I don't do this - if doesn't have some
sort of subtext - then it's soulless rubbish'... which is
obviously not the case!
My problem now is that, in trying to curb my own rather purple
habits, I have crippled myself. I end up tying myself in knots
over silly little things, fretting over 'is this too much?'
rather than just writing. I've become unable to judge, on any
level, my own ability to string two words together. I know what
to avoid. I have helpful critique from here, books on writing
lining my shelves, blogs bookmarked; it's a case of
intellectually I know what to do, but actually doing it.. well,
that's another matter!