"Here's what you need as a teen writer." > Me, a 24 year old man "Go on." Edit: I just want to say, the sheer volume of you all proudly admitting where you are starting is a reminder to me to finish my novel. Thank you all. Edit 2: 25,000 words, y'all. I hope you are chipping away yourselves! Edit 3: Glad to see everyone is still working hard. Nearly at 40,000 words, now. Life stuff got in the way, so I am a little off course. And that is okay! I look at Brandon, often out of shameful desire to work as hard as he does. But that is envy masquerading as hope. What I truly needed was to push my limits, not meeting someone else's. Lifting more weight, not that of an Olympian. I started having 2,000 word count sessions 4 days a week. Which puts me on track to finish in March. Here's hoping. Best of luck, all! Edit 4: Hey everyone. I wanted to chime in as my progress came to a bit of a halt these last few months due to some mental issues. And while you don't need a highlight of my life, I figured since we are all reaching out to one another for a sense of grounding, it could help to mention what I've been doing. First, find small ways to contribute if you can't seem to make yourself work. What helps me is recordings. I love talking things out, it's one of the reasons I DM for my friends, and having a recording of a character arc or slab of world building really helps get my juices going. Second is read. I've been absorbed by other pleasures that have stopped feeling like such. It's withered away a lot of my self motivation. But reading seems to pull me back into effort. If you are struggling to write, pick up a fiction and chew some pages.
Brandon - Stands in front of a white board before giving tips. Me - Notices white board, also all the markers on it, gets excited to see Brandon writing/drawing up notes on said board. Brandon - Has assistant tape pre-written on pieces of paper to the white board. Me - "Wow, even your presentations are filled with unexpected plot twists, well played Mr. Sanderson!"
is he green screening in front of that whiteboard? for some reason I feel like it's a green screen, something about the difference in lighting between him and the assistant.
Ah, Brandon's version of schrodinger's cat. We have Brandon and a whiteboard. We know words will be displayed on the whiteboard. We don't know if Brandon will write the words, or his assistant. We can assume both till we see the words displayed.
just so happens most 1/a million tend to take the same classes. ;D looks more like 1/15 people who want to can succeed, the other million want to do other things.
My dad's an engineer and he used to work in the government coordinating maintenance of dams and canals for agriculture, the first time he said this to me I told him "So, you're a plumber with a college degree"
@@wachyfanning It avoids burnout. Not everyone is the same. I can work in one type of project for weeks. Then I need a shift and do something different. I work much better in bursts than by being constant. People high in the personality trait conscienciousness work better when being conatant and planning. People low in concienciousness work better in bursts of work, specially when they are high in oppeness to experience, and I'm both. Planning and being constant actually makes me much less productive and much less creative, so it's actually counterproductive.
On the note of being a successful writer being a one in a million chance: "Scientists have calculated that the chances of something so patently absurd actually existing are millions to one. But magicians have calculated that million-to-one chances crop up nine times out of ten." -Sir Terry Pratchett, Mort
I love the bit in _Guards! Guards!_ where the guys debate the probability of something and fiddle with the details so that it feels like a million to one exactly, because that's guaranteed to success.
But what’s a one-million-and-one to one chance o_o Have a wonderful day btw, God bless ^w^ Also~ “For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.” John 3:16 NIV “If you declare with your mouth, “Jesus is Lord,” and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved.” Romans 10:9 NIV “Now faith is confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not see.” Hebrews 11:1 NIV ^w^
Similar with me, but I do plan to publish. It’s still a relief! Also, whoever’s reading, ^w^ “For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.” John 3:16 NIV “If you declare with your mouth, “Jesus is Lord,” and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved.” Romans 10:9 NIV “Now faith is confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not see.” Hebrews 11:1 NIV ❤️
Here's a mantra that I tell myself whenever I doubt my ability as a writer. "I may not be as good as the best, but I'm definitely better then the worse." There's plenty of poorly written books and movies out there, and if they can get made, then I surely have the ability to succeed as well.
Even if you’re one of the worst (and it can sure feel like it if you’re relying on your own ability and see your failures, because we all mess up at some point), it’s much better to trust in God for His plan for your life and try to do even a little better than you did before, regardless if you’re the best or the worst ^w^ Like “I may not be as good as the best, but if I try, it’ll still be worth it.” Have a wonderful day! God bless ^w^ Also~ “For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.” John 3:16 NIV “If you declare with your mouth, “Jesus is Lord,” and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved.” Romans 10:9 NIV “Now faith is confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not see.” Hebrews 11:1 NIV ^w^ ❤️
This single comment has lifted such a huge weight off my shoulders, thank you! I've always been so worried that my writing skills are subpar and no one could ever like them. But hey, I know for a FACT that I can write better than some published authors. So thank you
Whenever you question your own writing ability, just know that the sentence “Somehow Palpatine has returned” was written as the only explanation for a pivotal plot point by a professional screenwriter for an actual Star Wars movie, and it made it into the final film. You got this 😂
@@thegreyinitiate3680 you're an idiot. That wasn't the explanation. The film explicitly shows you how Palpatine returned in the first five minutes of the movie.
Summary with timestamps: 1.) Advice can be good for some people but bad for others 1:15 2.) You don't have to become a professional writer 3:35 3.) ...but it is a viable job choice 6:25 4.) Nobody will make you become a writer 8:55 5.) You may not end up writing what you think you will 16:16 6.) Tastes vary, and that's okay 20:46 7.) Successful writing is usually created using techniques you should learn 22:38 8.) Revision is a different skill from writing but it is important 26:37 9.) Determination is more important than talent 30:40 10.) It doesn't have to be fun but it should be satisfying 35:56
I love how Isabel pretend to use tape to put the "PowerPoint" posters up when she was clearly glowing with Stormlight. Now I am curious if she is a windrunner or a skybreaker.
Would be windrunner or bondsmith, no? Full lashings are a surge of adhesion, not gravitation. I suppose she could be basic lashing the paper sideways though.
@@roxasthegreek you are correct, if she changed the gravitation of the poster to be twords the wall like you said it has the same effect. But if she is the 3 unnamed bondsmith I also would not be surprised. 🤣
Things I learned from this lecture: 1) Story time with Brandon Sanderson is awsome 2) Brandon Sanderson should never be a professional statistic analyzer 3) A bunch of stuff about writing
i'd say that he's about right. I'd even go further and say that it's even better than 1;15. there are probably only four or five people in that class of fifteen that actually want to go professional with their writing. That would make a chance of about 1;4 or 1;5. It as he said, it's more about perseverance than talent.
Yup. My stories are inside locked briefcases inside a locked cabinet inside a locked closet. All handwritten, because what if my computer gets hacked? I miiiight be a little paranoid, lol.
I usually hide my stories because I'm afraid they'll give people too much insight into the way I think. (I put a lot of myself into my characters.) Which is ridiculous, since the few times I've written a story with the intention of sharing it to help someone understand me, they haven't seen past the surface story at all. I'm also a kind of ashamed of their low quality, but I mostly hide them because I don't want to basically give people the ability to read my mind. And @Mandy H, I am just as paranoid as you--I write a fair amount of my stories in a secret script that has special safeguards built into it that make it much harder to crack than most codes. We can be paranoid together!
@@DryBooks EXACTLY. I'm glad I'm not the only one! Everyone always makes fun of me for wanting to hide my writing, but I'd rather be made fun of than let people snoop around inside my mind.
"If you want to make it as a professional writer you need to work as hard as the people who are trying to become engineers, but you need to do it without people giving you the structure." This is a real gem right here and something very, very few people understand.
This is me realizing that one of my least favorite things in life is structure and now Brandon is telling me that I have to do it to publish a book (great, fine, wonderful,,,, totally)
As someone getting who is an aspiring musician I feel like music and writing are so similar, writing and music don’t really have a super concrete structure and whenever you tell people you’re going into that profession they’re typically a little skeptical. That’s the arts I guess
I think I can speak for all the young writers here, the amount of learning and advice we get from watching your videos Brandon is extraordinary! It means the world to us that someone like you pulls down the curtain and desperately tries to teach us how to be successful In this industry. You are our role model in this walk and I couldn’t fathom someone being a better one!
I am not young by any means and am just starting to get into writing and Brandons advice is just as relevant to me. He as an amazing person who is sharing his love of writing through both the storys he tells and the experience he is willing to share.
You know what's funny? I'm 19 and I already knew most of these... If you want lots more tips on writing and worldbuilding check out HelloFutureMe. He's someone who also does this sort of thing, although he isn't a professional writer. After all, you can't get too much help. But I'm now going to watch Brandon's lectures, let's see if there's cool stuff there (there's bound to be).
@DanDan And also, I can prove his point that writing is for everyone. I'm in a french Computer Science engineering major (more or less an M. Eng., the french education system is veeery different to the rest of the world) and I love writing and worldbuilding and creating characters and having them interact. I write to find out what happens and it's awesome!
Yeah, I learned so much more from his lectures than I have from around 15 different writing channels. His books are rlly amazing too, the plots are the best I've ever read.
Yeah. I'm so glad I knew that books were my passion so early on and started to write as young as I was. I've been writing since I was six years old, and am currently standing at twelve. My first ever story that I wrote was, as I said, when I was six, pushing on seven, on my mom's Costco page when she was writing a book filled with memories of me and my siblings when we were babies. I wrote a short book that was literally the Hobbit with different names and slightly different plot points, as I was obsessed with those movies at the time. It was to the point that there was a dragon that stole some dwarves' mountain and treasure called "Smog". Yeah, it was sad, but I guess not much more is expected from someone as young as I was, as originality didn't really exist to me when I was six. I got my own laptop a while after and started to *actually* write my *own* story. The funny thing is that right now, as I go through earlier chapters in my story and edit small things, I heavily enjoy reading my own writing, and it actually feels like I'm reading a real, published, popular book like Sanderson's himself. I'm incredibly proud of what I've accomplished so far, and even had some professional editors take a look at an excerpt of my writing from two years ago, who claimed that my writing was better than most adults' they'd worked with. Most of this is because I read a lot, and already have huge series' like WoT, Stormlight, ASOIAF, etc, under my belt. By no means am I trying to brag in any way, but I feel so lucky that I knew so early what I wanted to do, and have already evolved in my writing so much at this age. Sorry if this was long, but, if you've got this far, have a great day and good luck with your writing, I know you can do it!
Brandon: This is going to be quickfire because I have to get through ten of these Also Brandon: *explains the details and intricacies of his friend's microchip water purification job* I love these videos man, THANK YOU!
Thank you for the "it is a viable job choice" bullet point. One of the most devastating things I was told as a kid was that "wanting to write stories doesn't make you special. EVERYONE wants to write a story. The reason you say it's the only work that gets you excited every day and doesn't feel like work is because it ISN'T work. It's a passion, and a self-indulgent one-time goal at most."
That's so cruel. Writing absolutely counts as work. That's like saying gardening isn't work because some people do it as a hobby. It's still work even if you do do it as a hobby.
Most people don't realize that while they might be able to do something else, that isn't writing, for someone who wants to do it professionally will feel like they're unable to work towards anything that isn't writing. Passions are passions until they're what defines us as a person who can't live without that passion. If you can't live without writing everyday (hyperbole mostly) then you're meant to be a writer. Period.
I think the biggest piece of advice that works that I’ve gotten- it came to you- is to just write and let those drafts flow. The more you write, the better you get. 13 books before published? So? It doesn’t matter. Consistently writing is the key to success; the more you practice, the better you get.
I have a problem. My critic/analysis functions doesn't come with an off switch. Also I've tried to figure out how to word this comment about 5 times now.
@@artofthepossible7329 honestly, I feel it. It took me a lot of practice to finally turn it off. When I did, I was finally able to finish my first book and now I’m well on my way into quite a few more. Here’s the biggest thing- nobody is going to expect a first draft to be perfect. I highly recommend reading some of Brandon’s first drafts then the final works; so much changes. You’ve got this! Just go write.
°^° TIMESTAMPS °^° (1.) Advice can be GOOD for some people; but BAD for others 01:17 (2.) You don't have to become a professional writer 03:40 (3.) ...but it is a VIABLE job choice 06:29 (4.) NOBODY will make you become a writer 09:10 (5.) You may not end up writing what you think you will 16:30 (6.) Tastes vary. And that's okay 20:46 (7.) That said, SUCCESSFUL writing is usually created using TECHNIQUES you should learn 22:38 (8.) REVISION is a different skill from writing, but it is IMPORTANT 26:50 (9.) DETERMINATION is more important than TALENT 30:40 (10.) It doesn't have to be FUN, but it should be SATISFYING 35:59
I started by selling a few articles and a novella. That led to a full time job writing training materials (at a nuclear power plant, no less, lol) and then spent nearly 20 years as a technical writer, software manuals, etc. All the while, I read constantly and wrote fiction on the side. Now, retired, I just write fiction. I don't submit anything for publication. I am perfectly content writing for myself, writing stories I like to read, and putting them on my Kindle for something I can read and reread when I'm too old to write any more (though I honestly can't see me ever being that old! -- Ha-ha).
top tip - if you have motivational issues (depressive personality/etc - me) then absolutely learn to love outlines. way too often i am dragged away from my keyboard and amazing ideas/plots/etc are lost to the colander of memory, use an outline and write in a modular fashion and your condition will be less of a curse. POW. Git that writin onnnn!
As someone with attention/concentration issues as well as depression, outlines are absolutely essential for keeping track of ideas. Before I started using them, my drafts were all over the map, no consistency, forgot where the scene was going before I reached the end, contradicted myself in every chapter, and so on. Outlines, to me, are the difference between having a path to follow and getting lost in the fog.
Replying 3 years later but just wanted to say, while this is great advice, it doesn't work for me (w/ depression, motivation and attention issues) so it might not work for others with the same profile as well. I very much align with Stephen king's take of "outlining sucks out the wonder of writing", I get completely demotivated if I do an outline. I do have the aide of an excellent (even if somewhat selective) memory, so I don't get too lost while writing with no guide. My advice to people like me would be to, first, write _everything_ down, take notes of every single idea you have, DO NOT develop it, just jut it down somewhere accessible to explore it when you can write. Second, you need to master the skill of revision, this is a thousand times more important to you than to outliners imo. Something I do is set little check points to revise (for example, every five chapters) so that my draft isn't a disjointed mess when I finish it, this is risky tho, cause you can fall in the curse of eternal rewrites instead of progressing through your story, so proceed with caution and mindfulness.
He's not kidding. As hard as I try to "write everyday" my willpower gives out and go back to old habits. It's still taking time to instill proper writing habits in me.
The "You don't have to be a professional writer" is the best one. I absolutely love writing and have been building a world for years but I'm already a musician and I found I just need a creative outlet where there is no pressure to perform. I tend to have the most productive writing times when I'm under pressure for upcoming musical performance or project. If I do decide to send my work to a publisher one day then that happens but its not a goal. And I enjoy the process so much more like this. I also hide my work - I don't print it (though I back it up on multiple hard drives) and I've only let my siblings and husband read snippets.
Sixteen-year old, novel coming out either at the end of the year or next year. This is incredible. I feel very excited for the future as a writer thanks to this. Thanks so much.
Branden: "You may not end up writing what you think you will." I love horror. Reading, watching, listening to podcasts... I wanted to write horror for years, but I'm not very good at it. I've been working on a fantasy story for a year and feeling like I have no business writing fantasy. I needed to hear this.
For some reason I really needed to hear the bit about not needing to write professionally. My writing doesn't have to be lucrative to be helpful to me and/or others. This has unclogged some mental weirdness for me. Thanks, Brandon!
I've been writing since I was 13 and I'm touching 25 now. I'm yet to publish or even finish my first "real" book but I've loved every second of the stories I've created. Plus being a note hoarder I've been able to accurately map how and when i got better, what inspired me and what I changed over the years. Ever since I started I've had one consistent story in my mind that I feel I must publish at some point, even if it flops, it's like a promise to my younger self that it wasn't all a waste of time, because even if I fail and never become a successful author I tried and I certainly enjoyed the journey regardless of the destination, success would just be a bonus at this point. Moral of the story, don't be so hard on yourself, writing is a hobby that can become a career but it's okay if doesn't, part of the beauty is that there is no pressure, it's just you putting pen to paper and making yourself happy because you're allowed to.
I've found that my skill as a fiction writer has greatly benefited from my academic career. Writing diverse papers to a high standard has drilled into me certain habits like revision, research, writing technique, grasp of voice etc. It probably helps that my subject is History and I specialize in analysis of aspects of the 'norm' and the 'other' as they appear in historical literature and mythology. I quite literally study and write about stories.
I always love to hear people talk about things they're passionate about. Doesn't matter what it is. As long as they're passionate, their passion shines through, an it becomes interesting.
Thank you so much, your advice is great! I'm 16 and extremely dyslexic. After getting picked on at school when I was around 10 years old. I decided I wanted to overcome my disability and become a writer. I have been grinding for about 6 years and learning as much as I can about writing and creating stories. thank you so much for the advice and encouragement!
You could use a voice to text generator that way and develop the skill to edit your stories by voicing it out, just tailor what you do to your strengths and compensate for the weaknesses
This might sound weird or supremely melodramatic, but thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you! I just started writing a year ago, but even now I wish I had found this video because there has been lots of crying over this, hehe. Especially when I get stuck writing then overthink about how terrible and cliche my whole story is. I don't really like posting comments at all, but: This video sorta fortified me and making me excited to write something that I've been stuck on for weeks, so thank you. (Also, you managed to keep my eyes on the video the entire time, which doesn't happen most of the time :D I wish there was a love it button)
He’s very right about revision. When I was a teenager I never wanted to edit/revise my work. To me if it was meant to be perfect it would come out that way. Now as someone in my late 20’s I realize editing is so very much an important aspect to writing something. It can turn an alright piece into a solid piece. And no one is going to judge you for editing!
I appreciate that one of your tips is "write consistently" not "write every day" or "follow this formulaic writing process". I finished my first novel in the 15-20 min before class on Tuesdays and Thursdays in college. Just sat in that coffee shop and wrote. Sure I wrote other times when I felt inspired, but twice a week I had dedicated writing time. And it's a lot like doing homework. When I'm taking 6 classes, I'm not going to be doing homework from every class every day. I dedicate 1 day a week to each class's homework. Once a week is consistent and that's what counts.
hello Brandon, I'm 15 and listening to you talk passionately about what you do is better then watching any movie! thank you for inspiring me and thousands of other creative people, cant wait until I experience that feeling of finishing a book! thank you once again. :)
I really liked what Brandon had accomplished with Wheel of Time. I don’t think it’s perfect, but that series is still one of my absolute favorite. I read one of Brandons books a couple years later. I got through about 6-10 chapters (Warbreaker I think, it was a long time ago so I don’t remember) and I was bored out of my mind. Despite this, Brandon’s classes and advice videos are S tier learning in my opinion.
I've been writing since I was 8. I've learned all these over time. I'm 18 right now, and I dislike listening to advise that authors give. No art is static, and like, sure, no art should be made by you in order to impress other authors. You should write what you want.
Was planning to comment that as an adult who returned to university for additional degrees, Mr. Sanderson’s lectures outweigh the majority of my professors’. With that said, the Macdonald triad tangent made me lol. My first degree and career was mortuary science in my 20s but after injury got addicted to prescribed meds and went down a weird road. Got clean, went back to school because I couldn’t work anymore due to injury. I picked criminal justice due to part “lulz” of my past and now doing that and just general interest. I’m wrapping up my MS but wholly unsatisfied and have to take a leave due to health issues so I’m spending more time writing, which had been dominating my studies past 1 1/2 semesters anyway…. Number 5, despite being 37 and not a teen, hit home. I needed that. Thank you Mr. Sanderson as well as all the positive people discussing their paths. I feel like I’m not alone.
I'm definitely not an outliner! You just made me realize that. So many times I just gave up and lost motivation to write because I had everything outlined and then I didn't want to "write it all over again". I did this my whole life basically. Maybe going spontaneous will get good stories out of me
Number 5 really resonates with me. I thought i was weird for loving to read a broad range of genres but especially epic fantasies and mysteries. But now I finally have the opportunity to be published soon in my country and ended up writing drama. Thank you Brandon! I love your books!
Thanks, Sanderson! I'm a mexican writer, and I basically went through all the things you described. It is inspiring, and I totally agree with the "create a writing habit" bit. That's what I try to hammer into my students; without a habit, you won't write anything, ever.
Very inspiring, Brandon! :) Gonna have to rewatch this whole thing! The thing about Luck, something I wanted to share.... I have read some stoic philosophy, and one quote from the philosopher Seneca is "Luck is what happens when opportunity meets preparation". Now, of course there are moments when things just seem to fall down into your lap, but I have started to think of luck as just that: Preparation + Opportunity. Say for example when you were at the con with your friend and you HADN'T written anything, you were still dreaming about it but hadn't gone the distance? You wouldn't have been prepared. Or say you hadn't gone to the con with your friend? You would've missed the opportunity.
First point is SOOO GOOD: Sanderson is King of good advice + grain of salt = find what works for you. Second point even better: I've never enjoyed/been passionate about anything like I am about writing, so I'll keep doing it regardless of conventional success. Thanks for all you do!
What a king to mention fanfiction, family histories, and RPGs. This is super true, that's how most people nowadays write, they're not publishing stories all the time, they're sharing them online and getting critique and advice and growing.
I think he was making a reference to an old Robert Heinlein time travel short story called "All You Zombies", which is inspired, if I remember it right, by an old bluegrass song called "I am my own Grandpa". It got a chuckle out of me as well.
I love this man. An author and teacher that richly deserves sincere admiration and respect from all of us. You have inspired me to pick up my passion with both hands and instilled in my heart true determination to not only be the best writer I can be, but also to find real satisfaction in the work I do. Take care and keep the wonder and wisdom flowing. Thank you Brandon.
I love the last one (I agree with all of them) but the last one is amazing I’ve loved writing since I was a little girl and I’m currently writing a book or novel idk, but I’m almost finished with Chapter 4, I’m 38 pages in and 18,400 something words and I’ve never thought I would get here, I’ve written a lot of short things that I wanted to turn into a book but they weren’t right, I’m 3 months into my book so I’m kinda slow at it but I’m very proud of myself
I don't think you can be slow in the long journey of writing a book. Keep up with the good work, at your pace, and trust the process! I hope your book is turning out good😊
Parents: you should try engineering. Teacher: you absolutely should study literature, and absolutely creative writing! But maybe look into teaching? Lecturer: have you considered copywriting? And by the way - we only accept literary fiction here.. Me: guess I can't just write books then. Me now: working in an office is the absolute worst, why didn't I spend the last 5 years writing?! Oh yeah, because everyone told me its not possible.
I apparently lack responsibility for myself, though dispite the discouragement I have a degree in writing, and I responsibly got a job that I didn't want out of necessity. My point, for those that struggle to comprehend it, is that while you should have support because writing is a talent and a profession, you probably will not, so make sure that you trust in yourself as much as you trust in your family and friends.
The second point was the most important thing I needed to hear. It unlocked me completely.. now I write for fun, and tell people I write for fun.. I dont hide it anymore (like I used to). Brandon is so right that we must stop treating art this way.
This were honestly the best tips I heard in a while, I'm so pumped up to write right now. Maybe I should listen to him each time before I write so I know I can do it!
“Build a consistent writing habit.” Check! Brandon can you please post a video telling us your story on how you worked out building a consistent writing habit for yourself with all the stuff you have going on in your life?
I know you're an author and it's therefore to be expected, but the thing I love most about this video is the proper use of "I had known" after "wish", and not the typical (and aggravating) "I wish I knew". :D
I'm so glad this cool ass dude just happens to write absolutely standout, phenomenal books. One of the few times getting to know more about a writer is better and enhances your appreciation of the work.
Not a teen author. But defnitely need to hear this because it resonated so much with me. Sometimes you forget and think there is one way, but every writer's journey is unique. All the best to all you storytellers!
“Maybe some of you like to write stories because you like fanfiction” Me: *currently watching writing videos to avoid working on my fanfic bc of writers block*
I’ve recently gotten into writing and reading fanfiction again to help me deal with trauma and the dial ointment of life, and I forgot how much I loved writing. The point about revision vs writing is so true. Sometimes I think I’m a better Revisor than writer, and sometimes the opposite. And the last tip is important for all jobs and, honestly, all sides of life. It’s won’t always be fun, but it should be satisfying 😊 thanks for putting that into words!
In all honesty, I think I am like this Mr. Dan you spoke of. Every time I feel as though I have bettered my writing skills by a significant degree, I revise my writings. As a matter of fact, I have revised a 40k piece of work about 4 and a half times now.
I've never heard someone quantify this realization until I heard you say it. Realizing there are infinite correct ways to right a story is something you dont get until you see it for yourself.
I am currently 16 years old in 2022 from Australia and I am consistently writing and this entire lecture has made me want to be a writer so much more. As well as affirmed my own beliefs and justification to keep writing
Even the printed draft of an unfinished book can give me that sense of satisfaction you mentioned in the last tip, compelling me to keep going, because I want that feeling to persist and to become greater. And that's why I keep writing.
This advice applied to me more than I thought as a wastewater treatment engineering student opting to take extra writing classes to get better 😂 I am masochistic when it comes to homework I guess lol
Something I would like to add to the whole 1 in a million chance topic. People tend to confuse two different types of probability. If you buy a lottery ticket, then you have a specific probability that you are going to win. And you can't increase that chance for this lottery ticket - it's the same for all of them. But when it comes to making it as a writer (or singer, or actor or UA-camr...) people might say the same thing but it is under your control. It might be true that out of 10000 or 100000 or even a million people who try it only 1 will succeed, but that's because those who fail weren't trying hard enough, didn't have the skills etc. You can influence whether you are going to be the one or the rest of the million. That's also why there are so many in those writing classes who go pro - just the mere fact that they are taking a class instead of not studying anything related to their goal makes it so much more likely that they will succeed. Don't let odds scare you.
Writing is a viable option. When I started I wanted to be a rich, famous, admired novelist, but ended up in the field of technical and grant writing. I did this to eat and provide shelter for my immediate family. I consider myself a semi-professional fiction writer having published and earned some, but not making a living at it. I still work at being that novelist, but mainly I work at being a better storyteller. That's me.
Brandon Sanderson was so right in suggesting that you might not end up writing what you think you will. I always thought I loved historical fiction and had been working on a historical fiction novel for ten years. I hated it and ended up throwing it aside. I am now writing in a genre I never would have expected and I'm loving it. I've already written more for this new genre in one year than I had written in my decade of work in my historical fiction novel.
"Here's what you need as a teen writer."
> Me, a 24 year old man
"Go on."
Edit: I just want to say, the sheer volume of you all proudly admitting where you are starting is a reminder to me to finish my novel. Thank you all.
Edit 2: 25,000 words, y'all. I hope you are chipping away yourselves!
Edit 3: Glad to see everyone is still working hard. Nearly at 40,000 words, now. Life stuff got in the way, so I am a little off course. And that is okay! I look at Brandon, often out of shameful desire to work as hard as he does. But that is envy masquerading as hope. What I truly needed was to push my limits, not meeting someone else's. Lifting more weight, not that of an Olympian. I started having 2,000 word count sessions 4 days a week. Which puts me on track to finish in March. Here's hoping. Best of luck, all!
Edit 4: Hey everyone. I wanted to chime in as my progress came to a bit of a halt these last few months due to some mental issues. And while you don't need a highlight of my life, I figured since we are all reaching out to one another for a sense of grounding, it could help to mention what I've been doing. First, find small ways to contribute if you can't seem to make yourself work. What helps me is recordings. I love talking things out, it's one of the reasons I DM for my friends, and having a recording of a character arc or slab of world building really helps get my juices going. Second is read. I've been absorbed by other pleasures that have stopped feeling like such. It's withered away a lot of my self motivation. But reading seems to pull me back into effort. If you are struggling to write, pick up a fiction and chew some pages.
I am a 30 year old man and I don't even write.
37 year old man here...
Me, as a 47-year-old man.
aren't we all teenagers in writing years?
lol, I'm 31 here. XD
Brandon - Stands in front of a white board before giving tips.
Me - Notices white board, also all the markers on it, gets excited to see Brandon writing/drawing up notes on said board.
Brandon - Has assistant tape pre-written on pieces of paper to the white board.
Me - "Wow, even your presentations are filled with unexpected plot twists, well played Mr. Sanderson!"
Such a epic person.
Chekhov's whiteboard...
He enjoys these 3d chest plays.
is he green screening in front of that whiteboard? for some reason I feel like it's a green screen, something about the difference in lighting between him and the assistant.
Ah, Brandon's version of schrodinger's cat.
We have Brandon and a whiteboard.
We know words will be displayed on the whiteboard.
We don't know if Brandon will write the words, or his assistant. We can assume both till we see the words displayed.
Brandon's quick tips are 40 minutes long, and that just makes so much sense (not a bad thing).
What did u expect. Its brandon sanderson
This is the edited version. The Complete Short Tips is 50 hours long.
Imagine if Peter Jackson directed this too!
He accidently wrote a novel too while talking about this
It's him, what do you expect?
Brandon: "If you want to be a writer, you need to work as hard as an engineer"
Me who is studying chemical engineering: "Interesting"
Me, a 42 year old who just discovered multiplication: aaaahhhhhhhhh!!!!!!!!!
Lmaooo me as well
That's a double whammy. Did it work out for you?
do you happen to plan on being a microchip factory's sewage waste management?
People: That's a one in a million shot.
Sanderson: *so you're SAYING there's a chance!*
"Million-to-one chances crop up nine times out of ten." - Terry Pratchett
just so happens most 1/a million tend to take the same classes. ;D
looks more like 1/15 people who want to can succeed, the other million want to do other things.
1 in a million, there are only around 8000 authors, actors, singers, dancers, illustrators, etc. that's how the world works, obviously
Classic - thank you for that Dumb and Dumber movie gem reference! 🤣
As an actual sewage treatment engineer I am offended. We’re a lot cooler than IBM workers
🤣 Touché, sir. 🧐
lmao
is this what passes for trash talk? ;;;D
My dad's an engineer and he used to work in the government coordinating maintenance of dams and canals for agriculture, the first time he said this to me I told him "So, you're a plumber with a college degree"
@Startconnexions You are SOOOOOO right!!!!!
"I am going to go quickly through these"
*Spends 10 minuttes talking about his roommate who is a sewage treatment engineer*
:DDDDDDD
Lol... I see what you mean.
15:16
Teacher: 3 out of 25 of you will go pro.
Everybody else: What?!
My mind: *I AM THE CHOSEN ONE!*
Yes, had the same thought
I AM GREATER THAN ALL ELSE
If you fail just take the course again. Infinite chances
It's not like I'm encouraging, but If 22 of your classmates faced some unfortunate and tragic end this would increase your chances 👀
HE IS THE MESSIAH
Write consistently is one of the most difficult things to do indeed.
But the must important
@@wachyfanning this is an advice I'm sure doesn't apply to everyone.
@@Ignasimp Not many come to mind who wouldn't benefit from constant writing.
@@wachyfanning It avoids burnout. Not everyone is the same. I can work in one type of project for weeks. Then I need a shift and do something different. I work much better in bursts than by being constant. People high in the personality trait conscienciousness work better when being conatant and planning. People low in concienciousness work better in bursts of work, specially when they are high in oppeness to experience, and I'm both. Planning and being constant actually makes me much less productive and much less creative, so it's actually counterproductive.
If you love it, you will do it.
On the note of being a successful writer being a one in a million chance:
"Scientists have calculated that the chances of something so patently absurd actually existing are millions to one.
But magicians have calculated that million-to-one chances crop up nine times out of ten."
-Sir Terry Pratchett, Mort
I love the bit in _Guards! Guards!_ where the guys debate the probability of something and fiddle with the details so that it feels like a million to one exactly, because that's guaranteed to success.
@@Mikeztarp And then it fails because the result was always going to be 0%.
Sounds like a magic powered version of the infinite probability engine
@@Mikeztarp ah yes. Everybody knows how when its a million to one chance it always works.
But what’s a one-million-and-one to one chance o_o
Have a wonderful day btw, God bless ^w^ Also~
“For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.”
John 3:16 NIV
“If you declare with your mouth, “Jesus is Lord,” and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved.”
Romans 10:9 NIV
“Now faith is confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not see.”
Hebrews 11:1 NIV
^w^
“So what do you do for a living?”
“I make water more watery”
"I write suicide letters byproxy."
Ani me girl
The moment I accepted it was okay to just want to write fanfiction and never become a professional writer, a weight was taken off my shoulders!
Exactly!! But I'd love to write something original one day too!
Well I mean you can write original stuff without intending to be a professional writer.
@@legrandliseurtri7495 totally! it's the expectation that you need to monetize your hobby for it to be worth it that is hard to shake off imo
Similar with me, but I do plan to publish. It’s still a relief!
Also, whoever’s reading, ^w^
“For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.”
John 3:16 NIV
“If you declare with your mouth, “Jesus is Lord,” and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved.”
Romans 10:9 NIV
“Now faith is confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not see.”
Hebrews 11:1 NIV
❤️
@@peanut3438 nothing against your religion, but i don’t know what Jesus has to do with better writing
Here's a mantra that I tell myself whenever I doubt my ability as a writer.
"I may not be as good as the best, but I'm definitely better then the worse."
There's plenty of poorly written books and movies out there, and if they can get made, then I surely have the ability to succeed as well.
Thats how i think too
Even if you’re one of the worst (and it can sure feel like it if you’re relying on your own ability and see your failures, because we all mess up at some point), it’s much better to trust in God for His plan for your life and try to do even a little better than you did before, regardless if you’re the best or the worst ^w^ Like “I may not be as good as the best, but if I try, it’ll still be worth it.”
Have a wonderful day! God bless ^w^
Also~
“For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.”
John 3:16 NIV
“If you declare with your mouth, “Jesus is Lord,” and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved.”
Romans 10:9 NIV
“Now faith is confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not see.”
Hebrews 11:1 NIV
^w^ ❤️
This single comment has lifted such a huge weight off my shoulders, thank you! I've always been so worried that my writing skills are subpar and no one could ever like them. But hey, I know for a FACT that I can write better than some published authors. So thank you
Whenever you question your own writing ability, just know that the sentence “Somehow Palpatine has returned” was written as the only explanation for a pivotal plot point by a professional screenwriter for an actual Star Wars movie, and it made it into the final film. You got this 😂
@@thegreyinitiate3680 you're an idiot. That wasn't the explanation. The film explicitly shows you how Palpatine returned in the first five minutes of the movie.
"There are as many right ways of writing as there are authors" that's the smartest thing I have heard all day.
Now I want to write a book about dragon law enforcement.
I was looking for you, commenter. Looking for the one who would do this thing. DO IT.
Yknow what? I'd totally read that.
Please do. I would love to read that.
Totally read
Update us if you start writing
Summary with timestamps:
1.) Advice can be good for some people but bad for others 1:15
2.) You don't have to become a professional writer 3:35
3.) ...but it is a viable job choice 6:25
4.) Nobody will make you become a writer 8:55
5.) You may not end up writing what you think you will 16:16
6.) Tastes vary, and that's okay 20:46
7.) Successful writing is usually created using techniques you should learn 22:38
8.) Revision is a different skill from writing but it is important 26:37
9.) Determination is more important than talent 30:40
10.) It doesn't have to be fun but it should be satisfying 35:56
thank you!
Those last two are really the standout ones
Hero 😅
Thank you!!
thank you!
I love how Isabel pretend to use tape to put the "PowerPoint" posters up when she was clearly glowing with Stormlight. Now I am curious if she is a windrunner or a skybreaker.
Would be windrunner or bondsmith, no? Full lashings are a surge of adhesion, not gravitation. I suppose she could be basic lashing the paper sideways though.
@@roxasthegreek you are correct, if she changed the gravitation of the poster to be twords the wall like you said it has the same effect. But if she is the 3 unnamed bondsmith I also would not be surprised. 🤣
Alright anyone got timestamps where the spren is visible
@@them631 unfortunately I do not know how many of the alaii'iku are in the comments at this time.
@@lonsunocook I don't know if even they could see it if the camera doesn't.
Things I learned from this lecture:
1) Story time with Brandon Sanderson is awsome
2) Brandon Sanderson should never be a professional statistic analyzer
3) A bunch of stuff about writing
So was he horribly wrong on the one in a million thing within his class? Lol
i'd say that he's about right. I'd even go further and say that it's even better than 1;15. there are probably only four or five people in that class of fifteen that actually want to go professional with their writing. That would make a chance of about 1;4 or 1;5. It as he said, it's more about perseverance than talent.
Hiding stories because you are ashamed of them is literally the story of my life!
Yup. My stories are inside locked briefcases inside a locked cabinet inside a locked closet. All handwritten, because what if my computer gets hacked? I miiiight be a little paranoid, lol.
@@Newfiecat so maybe I’m not that... careful. But I get the feeling lol
I usually hide my stories because I'm afraid they'll give people too much insight into the way I think. (I put a lot of myself into my characters.) Which is ridiculous, since the few times I've written a story with the intention of sharing it to help someone understand me, they haven't seen past the surface story at all.
I'm also a kind of ashamed of their low quality, but I mostly hide them because I don't want to basically give people the ability to read my mind. And @Mandy H, I am just as paranoid as you--I write a fair amount of my stories in a secret script that has special safeguards built into it that make it much harder to crack than most codes. We can be paranoid together!
@@storystimmler having someone read my writing always makes me feel like they read my soul. So I get it.
@@DryBooks EXACTLY. I'm glad I'm not the only one! Everyone always makes fun of me for wanting to hide my writing, but I'd rather be made fun of than let people snoop around inside my mind.
"If you want to make it as a professional writer you need to work as hard as the people who are trying to become engineers, but you need to do it without people giving you the structure." This is a real gem right here and something very, very few people understand.
This is me realizing that one of my least favorite things in life is structure and now Brandon is telling me that I have to do it to publish a book (great, fine, wonderful,,,, totally)
As someone getting who is an aspiring musician I feel like music and writing are so similar, writing and music don’t really have a super concrete structure and whenever you tell people you’re going into that profession they’re typically a little skeptical. That’s the arts I guess
I think I can speak for all the young writers here, the amount of learning and advice we get from watching your videos Brandon is extraordinary! It means the world to us that someone like you pulls down the curtain and desperately tries to teach us how to be successful In this industry. You are our role model in this walk and I couldn’t fathom someone being a better one!
I am not young by any means and am just starting to get into writing and Brandons advice is just as relevant to me. He as an amazing person who is sharing his love of writing through both the storys he tells and the experience he is willing to share.
You know what's funny? I'm 19 and I already knew most of these... If you want lots more tips on writing and worldbuilding check out HelloFutureMe. He's someone who also does this sort of thing, although he isn't a professional writer. After all, you can't get too much help.
But I'm now going to watch Brandon's lectures, let's see if there's cool stuff there (there's bound to be).
@DanDan And also, I can prove his point that writing is for everyone. I'm in a french Computer Science engineering major (more or less an M. Eng., the french education system is veeery different to the rest of the world) and I love writing and worldbuilding and creating characters and having them interact. I write to find out what happens and it's awesome!
Yeah, I learned so much more from his lectures than I have from around 15 different writing channels. His books are rlly amazing too, the plots are the best I've ever read.
Yeah. I'm so glad I knew that books were my passion so early on and started to write as young as I was. I've been writing since I was six years old, and am currently standing at twelve. My first ever story that I wrote was, as I said, when I was six, pushing on seven, on my mom's Costco page when she was writing a book filled with memories of me and my siblings when we were babies. I wrote a short book that was literally the Hobbit with different names and slightly different plot points, as I was obsessed with those movies at the time. It was to the point that there was a dragon that stole some dwarves' mountain and treasure called "Smog". Yeah, it was sad, but I guess not much more is expected from someone as young as I was, as originality didn't really exist to me when I was six. I got my own laptop a while after and started to *actually* write my *own* story. The funny thing is that right now, as I go through earlier chapters in my story and edit small things, I heavily enjoy reading my own writing, and it actually feels like I'm reading a real, published, popular book like Sanderson's himself. I'm incredibly proud of what I've accomplished so far, and even had some professional editors take a look at an excerpt of my writing from two years ago, who claimed that my writing was better than most adults' they'd worked with. Most of this is because I read a lot, and already have huge series' like WoT, Stormlight, ASOIAF, etc, under my belt. By no means am I trying to brag in any way, but I feel so lucky that I knew so early what I wanted to do, and have already evolved in my writing so much at this age. Sorry if this was long, but, if you've got this far, have a great day and good luck with your writing, I know you can do it!
38:27
The comedic timing of this final poster just... flopping down like that, literally at the very end of the whole presentation, is *hilarious*
I was looking for this comment!
How come nobody else said anything about that?
@@cinthiagoch I KNOW RIGHT
I came to the comments section to say this :)
Brandon: This is going to be quickfire because I have to get through ten of these
Also Brandon: *explains the details and intricacies of his friend's microchip water purification job*
I love these videos man, THANK YOU!
Thank you for the "it is a viable job choice" bullet point. One of the most devastating things I was told as a kid was that "wanting to write stories doesn't make you special. EVERYONE wants to write a story. The reason you say it's the only work that gets you excited every day and doesn't feel like work is because it ISN'T work. It's a passion, and a self-indulgent one-time goal at most."
That's so cruel. Writing absolutely counts as work. That's like saying gardening isn't work because some people do it as a hobby. It's still work even if you do do it as a hobby.
Doing it 'as a hobby' removes a lot of pressure. (And some successful authors believe that working at other jobs keeps them grounded.)
Most people don't realize that while they might be able to do something else, that isn't writing, for someone who wants to do it professionally will feel like they're unable to work towards anything that isn't writing. Passions are passions until they're what defines us as a person who can't live without that passion. If you can't live without writing everyday (hyperbole mostly) then you're meant to be a writer. Period.
“These 10 tips will be pretty rapid fire” - video is 40 minutes long...😂😂
I put it in ×2 speed
I always do that
but i guess is not a bad option
typical sanderson
Thats epic fantasy writer for you!
That is 4 min for each tip, that is reasonable
I think the biggest piece of advice that works that I’ve gotten- it came to you- is to just write and let those drafts flow. The more you write, the better you get. 13 books before published? So? It doesn’t matter. Consistently writing is the key to success; the more you practice, the better you get.
So true! Practice is the only magic wand...
I have a problem. My critic/analysis functions doesn't come with an off switch.
Also I've tried to figure out how to word this comment about 5 times now.
@@artofthepossible7329 honestly, I feel it. It took me a lot of practice to finally turn it off. When I did, I was finally able to finish my first book and now I’m well on my way into quite a few more. Here’s the biggest thing- nobody is going to expect a first draft to be perfect. I highly recommend reading some of Brandon’s first drafts then the final works; so much changes. You’ve got this! Just go write.
13? Those are rookie numbers.
I have over a hundred unfinished books lmao
You don't need to be consisten. You just need to write a lot.
*automatically looks for timestamp guy*
Saaaaame! 😂
LOL. glad I could be of use.
°^° TIMESTAMPS °^°
(1.) Advice can be GOOD for some people; but BAD for others 01:17
(2.) You don't have to become a professional writer 03:40
(3.) ...but it is a VIABLE job choice 06:29
(4.) NOBODY will make you become a writer 09:10
(5.) You may not end up writing what you think you will 16:30
(6.) Tastes vary. And that's okay 20:46
(7.) That said, SUCCESSFUL writing is usually created using TECHNIQUES you should learn 22:38
(8.) REVISION is a different skill from writing, but it is IMPORTANT 26:50
(9.) DETERMINATION is more important than TALENT 30:40
(10.) It doesn't have to be FUN, but it should be SATISFYING 35:59
@@lisasternenkind6467 thank chu
@@lisasternenkind6467 you are god among men
I started by selling a few articles and a novella. That led to a full time job writing training materials (at a nuclear power plant, no less, lol) and then spent nearly 20 years as a technical writer, software manuals, etc. All the while, I read constantly and wrote fiction on the side. Now, retired, I just write fiction. I don't submit anything for publication. I am perfectly content writing for myself, writing stories I like to read, and putting them on my Kindle for something I can read and reread when I'm too old to write any more (though I honestly can't see me ever being that old! -- Ha-ha).
You could put them on online publishing sites and see how it goes. No pressure.
This story is comforting to me! Thank you for sharing :)
So awesome!!
Writers will find a way to write- no matter where life took them. I'm hoping that all of your books bring you great comfort going forward
As a TA called Isabelle I had a moment of irrational panic right at the start there xD
top tip - if you have motivational issues (depressive personality/etc - me) then absolutely learn to love outlines. way too often i am dragged away from my keyboard and amazing ideas/plots/etc are lost to the colander of memory, use an outline and write in a modular fashion and your condition will be less of a curse. POW. Git that writin onnnn!
thank you
Yes thank you
As someone with attention/concentration issues as well as depression, outlines are absolutely essential for keeping track of ideas. Before I started using them, my drafts were all over the map, no consistency, forgot where the scene was going before I reached the end, contradicted myself in every chapter, and so on. Outlines, to me, are the difference between having a path to follow and getting lost in the fog.
Replying 3 years later but just wanted to say, while this is great advice, it doesn't work for me (w/ depression, motivation and attention issues) so it might not work for others with the same profile as well. I very much align with Stephen king's take of "outlining sucks out the wonder of writing", I get completely demotivated if I do an outline. I do have the aide of an excellent (even if somewhat selective) memory, so I don't get too lost while writing with no guide. My advice to people like me would be to, first, write _everything_ down, take notes of every single idea you have, DO NOT develop it, just jut it down somewhere accessible to explore it when you can write. Second, you need to master the skill of revision, this is a thousand times more important to you than to outliners imo. Something I do is set little check points to revise (for example, every five chapters) so that my draft isn't a disjointed mess when I finish it, this is risky tho, cause you can fall in the curse of eternal rewrites instead of progressing through your story, so proceed with caution and mindfulness.
37:03 "the 4th draft of a thousand-page novel" man i really can't imagine what book he could possibly be talking about there
Lmao
"These tips are going to be pretty rapid-fire"
Sure they are, Brandon, sure they are.
He's not kidding. As hard as I try to "write everyday" my willpower gives out and go back to old habits. It's still taking time to instill proper writing habits in me.
"These are gonna be pretty rapid-fire"
40 minutes later
Lol we love you Brandon
I mean, he could be explaining these in four hours.
This type of advice is awesome, even for a non-teenage. It really seems to apply to anyone interested in starting writing.
The "You don't have to be a professional writer" is the best one. I absolutely love writing and have been building a world for years but I'm already a musician and I found I just need a creative outlet where there is no pressure to perform. I tend to have the most productive writing times when I'm under pressure for upcoming musical performance or project. If I do decide to send my work to a publisher one day then that happens but its not a goal. And I enjoy the process so much more like this. I also hide my work - I don't print it (though I back it up on multiple hard drives) and I've only let my siblings and husband read snippets.
Sixteen-year old, novel coming out either at the end of the year or next year. This is incredible. I feel very excited for the future as a writer thanks to this. Thanks so much.
I believe these things he mentioned don't just apply to writing, they apply to most forms of art.
Watching Brandon Sanderson talking about how a 60% in engineering is good is honestly so relatable
Branden: "You may not end up writing what you think you will."
I love horror. Reading, watching, listening to podcasts... I wanted to write horror for years, but I'm not very good at it. I've been working on a fantasy story for a year and feeling like I have no business writing fantasy. I needed to hear this.
For some reason I really needed to hear the bit about not needing to write professionally. My writing doesn't have to be lucrative to be helpful to me and/or others. This has unclogged some mental weirdness for me. Thanks, Brandon!
I've been writing since I was 13 and I'm touching 25 now. I'm yet to publish or even finish my first "real" book but I've loved every second of the stories I've created. Plus being a note hoarder I've been able to accurately map how and when i got better, what inspired me and what I changed over the years. Ever since I started I've had one consistent story in my mind that I feel I must publish at some point, even if it flops, it's like a promise to my younger self that it wasn't all a waste of time, because even if I fail and never become a successful author I tried and I certainly enjoyed the journey regardless of the destination, success would just be a bonus at this point.
Moral of the story, don't be so hard on yourself, writing is a hobby that can become a career but it's okay if doesn't, part of the beauty is that there is no pressure, it's just you putting pen to paper and making yourself happy because you're allowed to.
I grew up reading heroic fantasy and thought, yeah-I want to do that! Then I started writing and it was not at all heroic fantasy. Blew my mind.
I've found that my skill as a fiction writer has greatly benefited from my academic career. Writing diverse papers to a high standard has drilled into me certain habits like revision, research, writing technique, grasp of voice etc.
It probably helps that my subject is History and I specialize in analysis of aspects of the 'norm' and the 'other' as they appear in historical literature and mythology. I quite literally study and write about stories.
So when are you publishing and where can we find your works?
@@MerlinTheCommenterwhat?
Hi, I have zero interest in writing; I just love to listen to Brando Sando talk about stuff
I came here to say this. Hello, fellow non-writer!
@@Epitome613 o/
I always love to hear people talk about things they're passionate about. Doesn't matter what it is. As long as they're passionate, their passion shines through, an it becomes interesting.
Exactly the same.
Thank you so much, your advice is great! I'm 16 and extremely dyslexic. After getting picked on at school when I was around 10 years old. I decided I wanted to overcome my disability and become a writer. I have been grinding for about 6 years and learning as much as I can about writing and creating stories. thank you so much for the advice and encouragement!
I Hope u became a writer or are on the road!
Know always u are better then does bully can ever be!
You could use a voice to text generator that way and develop the skill to edit your stories by voicing it out, just tailor what you do to your strengths and compensate for the weaknesses
I just want to say as a teen writer, I knew about none of these things and I am very appreciative of the help you give writers in need. Thank you.
My favorite Picasso quote keeps me motivated- “When your muse arrives, she must find you WORKING!”
This might sound weird or supremely melodramatic, but thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you! I just started writing a year ago, but even now I wish I had found this video because there has been lots of crying over this, hehe. Especially when I get stuck writing then overthink about how terrible and cliche my whole story is. I don't really like posting comments at all, but: This video sorta fortified me and making me excited to write something that I've been stuck on for weeks, so thank you. (Also, you managed to keep my eyes on the video the entire time, which doesn't happen most of the time :D I wish there was a love it button)
"Chaos become Order!" That is quotable.
Gives me that Jordan Peterson, you know?
He’s very right about revision. When I was a teenager I never wanted to edit/revise my work. To me if it was meant to be perfect it would come out that way. Now as someone in my late 20’s I realize editing is so very much an important aspect to writing something. It can turn an alright piece into a solid piece. And no one is going to judge you for editing!
as a thirteen year old writer, this helps sooo much. thank you for this. you're an inspiration.
I appreciate that one of your tips is "write consistently" not "write every day" or "follow this formulaic writing process". I finished my first novel in the 15-20 min before class on Tuesdays and Thursdays in college. Just sat in that coffee shop and wrote. Sure I wrote other times when I felt inspired, but twice a week I had dedicated writing time. And it's a lot like doing homework. When I'm taking 6 classes, I'm not going to be doing homework from every class every day. I dedicate 1 day a week to each class's homework. Once a week is consistent and that's what counts.
Shout-out to Brandon's assistant who put the papers perfectly on the whiteboard! You also helped the flow of the video and giving the advice.
hello Brandon, I'm 15 and listening to you talk passionately about what you do is better then watching any movie! thank you for inspiring me and thousands of other creative people, cant wait until I experience that feeling of finishing a book! thank you once again. :)
I really liked what Brandon had accomplished with Wheel of Time. I don’t think it’s perfect, but that series is still one of my absolute favorite. I read one of Brandons books a couple years later. I got through about 6-10 chapters (Warbreaker I think, it was a long time ago so I don’t remember) and I was bored out of my mind. Despite this, Brandon’s classes and advice videos are S tier learning in my opinion.
I've just decided I wanted to be a writer, and I'm 32 years old😂 I may never write anything worth a damn, but I'm going to try!
Good luck (:
@@xtonibx5770 Thanks!
@Will B Literally haven't started, yet haha. I have no idea what the hell I'm waiting on.
We absolutely loved having Brandon participate in our conference again. He is awesome!
Me, at damn near 40 years old:
:::FURIOUSLY SCRIBBLING NOTES:::
Number 11: It's never too late to start a hobby.
I've been writing since I was 8. I've learned all these over time. I'm 18 right now, and I dislike listening to advise that authors give. No art is static, and like, sure, no art should be made by you in order to impress other authors. You should write what you want.
Was planning to comment that as an adult who returned to university for additional degrees, Mr. Sanderson’s lectures outweigh the majority of my professors’.
With that said, the Macdonald triad tangent made me lol. My first degree and career was mortuary science in my 20s but after injury got addicted to prescribed meds and went down a weird road. Got clean, went back to school because I couldn’t work anymore due to injury. I picked criminal justice due to part “lulz” of my past and now doing that and just general interest. I’m wrapping up my MS but wholly unsatisfied and have to take a leave due to health issues so I’m spending more time writing, which had been dominating my studies past 1 1/2 semesters anyway…. Number 5, despite being 37 and not a teen, hit home. I needed that.
Thank you Mr. Sanderson as well as all the positive people discussing their paths. I feel like I’m not alone.
He really called me out with the starting a new book instead of revising my old ones
I'm definitely not an outliner! You just made me realize that. So many times I just gave up and lost motivation to write because I had everything outlined and then I didn't want to "write it all over again". I did this my whole life basically. Maybe going spontaneous will get good stories out of me
Number 5 really resonates with me. I thought i was weird for loving to read a broad range of genres but especially epic fantasies and mysteries. But now I finally have the opportunity to be published soon in my country and ended up writing drama. Thank you Brandon! I love your books!
"He makes water more watery" true wisdom
Thanks, Sanderson! I'm a mexican writer, and I basically went through all the things you described. It is inspiring, and I totally agree with the "create a writing habit" bit. That's what I try to hammer into my students; without a habit, you won't write anything, ever.
Dont write a story about the drug cartels bro or u will disappear! 😳
Do you write in both Spanish and English?
I'd be willing to bet the other 22 out of 25 didn't have the perseverance to write 12 books to keep fighting to go pro -- that matters!
"Make fun of him for being a glorified sewage treatment engineer"
*seems like a good way to make fun of my friends*
The two dislikes are from 1) Adam the social media director and 2) Adam's pro golf dreams. 4:40
Also tom the sewage engineer
Please keep posting and writing, Brandon! You are a big inspiration
Very inspiring, Brandon! :) Gonna have to rewatch this whole thing!
The thing about Luck, something I wanted to share.... I have read some stoic philosophy, and one quote from the philosopher Seneca is "Luck is what happens when opportunity meets preparation".
Now, of course there are moments when things just seem to fall down into your lap, but I have started to think of luck as just that: Preparation + Opportunity. Say for example when you were at the con with your friend and you HADN'T written anything, you were still dreaming about it but hadn't gone the distance? You wouldn't have been prepared.
Or say you hadn't gone to the con with your friend? You would've missed the opportunity.
First point is SOOO GOOD: Sanderson is King of good advice + grain of salt = find what works for you. Second point even better: I've never enjoyed/been passionate about anything like I am about writing, so I'll keep doing it regardless of conventional success. Thanks for all you do!
Yes, keep going!
9:18 - "If you can't tell, story time is what I like." -- Best line ever
What a king to mention fanfiction, family histories, and RPGs. This is super true, that's how most people nowadays write, they're not publishing stories all the time, they're sharing them online and getting critique and advice and growing.
This is so tru! fan fictions and the others are super great easy to write
Brandon is possibly the worlds biggest nerd. He is utterly secure and himself which is very cool.
That grandfather joke caught me off guard. Nearly spit out my coffee.
I think he was making a reference to an old Robert Heinlein time travel short story called "All You Zombies", which is inspired, if I remember it right, by an old bluegrass song called "I am my own Grandpa". It got a chuckle out of me as well.
@@pavelowjohn9167 Exactly! That's why I thought it was so fn funny. Im glad that we can enjoy that deep cut/inside joke. :)
@@pavelowjohn9167 oh, and a bit you probably already know, the movie Predestination is loose based of that short.
DARK reference
I have studied and pursued writing advice/guidance for over ten years now, and this is one of the most useful videos I've ever seen. Holy crap.
I love this man. An author and teacher that richly deserves sincere admiration and respect from all of us. You have inspired me to pick up my passion with both hands and instilled in my heart true determination to not only be the best writer I can be, but also to find real satisfaction in the work I do. Take care and keep the wonder and wisdom flowing. Thank you Brandon.
I love the last one (I agree with all of them) but the last one is amazing I’ve loved writing since I was a little girl and I’m currently writing a book or novel idk, but I’m almost finished with Chapter 4, I’m 38 pages in and 18,400 something words and I’ve never thought I would get here, I’ve written a lot of short things that I wanted to turn into a book but they weren’t right, I’m 3 months into my book so I’m kinda slow at it but I’m very proud of myself
I don't think you can be slow in the long journey of writing a book. Keep up with the good work, at your pace, and trust the process! I hope your book is turning out good😊
Proud of you, hope you continiued!
Hope the work has gone well!
Parents: you should try engineering.
Teacher: you absolutely should study literature, and absolutely creative writing! But maybe look into teaching?
Lecturer: have you considered copywriting? And by the way - we only accept literary fiction here..
Me: guess I can't just write books then.
Me now: working in an office is the absolute worst, why didn't I spend the last 5 years writing?! Oh yeah, because everyone told me its not possible.
This reminds me of The little prince... I don't know why
You don't need others to tell you what to do. You tell yourself what to do.
Well let’s just say in the next five years you will take responsibility for yourself, good? That was easy
I apparently lack responsibility for myself, though dispite the discouragement I have a degree in writing, and I responsibly got a job that I didn't want out of necessity.
My point, for those that struggle to comprehend it, is that while you should have support because writing is a talent and a profession, you probably will not, so make sure that you trust in yourself as much as you trust in your family and friends.
@@rednaxelA11 yes you are definitely right about that. The first comment did not do your point justice, sorry for being harsh
The second point was the most important thing I needed to hear. It unlocked me completely.. now I write for fun, and tell people I write for fun.. I dont hide it anymore (like I used to). Brandon is so right that we must stop treating art this way.
This were honestly the best tips I heard in a while, I'm so pumped up to write right now. Maybe I should listen to him each time before I write so I know I can do it!
That is actually a great idea :)
29:48 The hallmarks of a successful creator, are people who know how to take good stories they've created, and make them great
14:00
“Build a consistent writing habit.” Check! Brandon can you please post a video telling us your story on how you worked out building a consistent writing habit for yourself with all the stuff you have going on in your life?
Yeeeessss! This!
I know you're an author and it's therefore to be expected, but the thing I love most about this video is the proper use of "I had known" after "wish", and not the typical (and aggravating) "I wish I knew". :D
I'm so glad this cool ass dude just happens to write absolutely standout, phenomenal books. One of the few times getting to know more about a writer is better and enhances your appreciation of the work.
Not a teen author. But defnitely need to hear this because it resonated so much with me. Sometimes you forget and think there is one way, but every writer's journey is unique. All the best to all you storytellers!
“Maybe some of you like to write stories because you like fanfiction”
Me: *currently watching writing videos to avoid working on my fanfic bc of writers block*
Omg SAME
so true though
I’ve recently gotten into writing and reading fanfiction again to help me deal with trauma and the dial ointment of life, and I forgot how much I loved writing.
The point about revision vs writing is so true. Sometimes I think I’m a better Revisor than writer, and sometimes the opposite.
And the last tip is important for all jobs and, honestly, all sides of life. It’s won’t always be fun, but it should be satisfying 😊 thanks for putting that into words!
In all honesty, I think I am like this Mr. Dan you spoke of. Every time I feel as though I have bettered my writing skills by a significant degree, I revise my writings. As a matter of fact, I have revised a 40k piece of work about 4 and a half times now.
I've never heard someone quantify this realization until I heard you say it. Realizing there are infinite correct ways to right a story is something you dont get until you see it for yourself.
Brandon’s new videos are really showcasing his love of science fiction short stories and I am here for it!
I am currently 16 years old in 2022 from Australia and I am consistently writing and this entire lecture has made me want to be a writer so much more. As well as affirmed my own beliefs and justification to keep writing
Brandon comes across as such a generous-hearted person.
At the end of the day, knowing a lot of people, and communicating with them, is the most important thing that you need to become successful.
I love the bow by the final poster XD
Even the printed draft of an unfinished book can give me that sense of satisfaction you mentioned in the last tip, compelling me to keep going, because I want that feeling to persist and to become greater. And that's why I keep writing.
This advice applied to me more than I thought as a wastewater treatment engineering student opting to take extra writing classes to get better 😂
I am masochistic when it comes to homework I guess lol
Something I would like to add to the whole 1 in a million chance topic. People tend to confuse two different types of probability. If you buy a lottery ticket, then you have a specific probability that you are going to win. And you can't increase that chance for this lottery ticket - it's the same for all of them. But when it comes to making it as a writer (or singer, or actor or UA-camr...) people might say the same thing but it is under your control. It might be true that out of 10000 or 100000 or even a million people who try it only 1 will succeed, but that's because those who fail weren't trying hard enough, didn't have the skills etc. You can influence whether you are going to be the one or the rest of the million. That's also why there are so many in those writing classes who go pro - just the mere fact that they are taking a class instead of not studying anything related to their goal makes it so much more likely that they will succeed. Don't let odds scare you.
Writing is a viable option. When I started I wanted to be a rich, famous, admired novelist, but ended up in the field of technical and grant writing. I did this to eat and provide shelter for my immediate family. I consider myself a semi-professional fiction writer having published and earned some, but not making a living at it. I still work at being that novelist, but mainly I work at being a better storyteller. That's me.
Brandon Sanderson was so right in suggesting that you might not end up writing what you think you will. I always thought I loved historical fiction and had been working on a historical fiction novel for ten years. I hated it and ended up throwing it aside. I am now writing in a genre I never would have expected and I'm loving it. I've already written more for this new genre in one year than I had written in my decade of work in my historical fiction novel.