Subject: I started work on my Permission piece and characters early.
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Posted on: 2016-06-05 16:00:00 UTC

Around the point when someone asked if I planned to go for Permission and the idea stuck in my head, actually.

On the other hand, I took nearly three months about creating my request. During that time, I read a whole lot of the wiki, read a ton of missions as well as rereading a lot of the ones I'd read years earlier, and consulted people on various pieces of the PPC and what I was developing. I also did a *ton* of editing, including reading my writing piece out loud, and wrote scenes to develop my characters' personalities. I also developed their backstories which, believe me, definitely changed and developed as I went on. And on top of that, I was hanging out on the Board and having fun with that (and going 'eek, oldbies are talking to me!', but I think we all go through that stage :) ).

So I don't think there's any real issue with beginning to figure things out early--so long as you're also doing research (=reading all the things! Or at least a lot of them) to learn about what fits and makes sense in the PPC, and how it functions. Not to mention hanging around on the Board--you get to ask questions, get to know the community as it gets to know you, and see new missions as they come out. To use a bit of teacher speak: it's a great learning opportunity.

Also, yeah. Polish, polish, polish. Also, research (ie, read a ton of missions and interludes and the wiki. Don't worry, it's fun!) and get to know the community. There's no need to rush to get your request out--believe me, it takes some time to refine your characters to the seeing, because it takes time to properly learn the setting! So my advice is: give yourself the time to edit and polish and revise. Your characters will be more developed, your written pieces better presented, and your knowledge *much* more complete. All of that can only help you, with Permission, future missions and interludes, and, quite honestly, *life*. Most people do need to know how to write things for school and work; developing your writing skills (writing, revision, self-editing, and peer-editing) is a wonderful idea.

~DF

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