Subject: Don't worry, this comment will be upifting. Hopefully
Author:
Posted on: 2016-04-11 09:37:00 UTC
In the midst of this harrowing thread. . .
First off, I haven't been following this thread too-too closely (I haven't read the story in question), but what you said here has been burning in the back of my brain for a while. Warning: what follows is a little rant-y. Really I should save this and revise it in the morning, but I'm afraid that if I keep putting this off, I'll never write it at all.
"Okay, maybe this is my not understanding normal people and their priorities very well. I have constantly been told off for giving attention to something that other people think is unimportant. Once in class, my lunch exploded in my bag. I was expected to sit there until the end of the period when I was holding back a meltdown about how yogurt was soaking into my stuff."
How do you know you're the weird one? Maybe it's the teacher who has misplaced priorities. Sure, they were in a position to tell you off for having different priorities, but might does not make right (dystopias, anyone?).
Even if the teacher is the "normal" one, there is something fundamentally wrong with trying to make your writing relatable to the most "normal" person you can imagine, and that something is the fact that people who are not strictly "normal" read, too. A lot of them are sick and tired of, say, being expected to hold back a meltdown, and your writing could be a breath of fresh air to them. I know you want to maximize your audience, but gaining the respect of smaller groups should never be discounted, because they can be very passionate. To take an example from the recent Shipfest: Scapegrace wrote a beautiful fluffy story about Iximaz and Kaitlyn in a lesbian, long-term, BDSM relationship. Is being in a lesbian BDSM relationship "normal"? No one would say that; it's a subculture within a minority. But if Scapegrace had written an equally beautiful piece about a straight vanilla couple getting married, would I take every excuse, no matter how flimsy, to wedge it into a conversation still be talking about it a month later? No. Would I be planning to spread it around to my friends? No way. Would I have decided to go back and read through every mission Scapegrace has ever written? Probably not. Would I be considering applying for permission because the Notary gave me a great idea for a character? Again, probably not. What made Scapegrace's story stand out was that she wrote honestly, about what was real to her, and that it was different. Before she wrote that story, I could count the number of beautiful fluffy lesbian BDSM stories I'd read on the fingers of one elbow. That's saying something, since I'd spent time specifically looking for a story that fit that description. But most authors were writing for "normal people," and I was about to give the idea up as futile. Then Scapegrace wrote this story and acquired a passionate fandom of one (I should mention that I am not the only one who thought this story was great, just the only one who vaguely wants to found a fan base around it). So if you were to appeal to a slightly wider group (say, people who wish that cleaning up messes was more of a priority) you could find yourself with a small but very loyal group of readers. Not to mention, I find writing from a perspective I agree with or about something I care about to be much easier, and the final product to be much better. It's the old saw about writing what you know. It's not always true, but it often is. For instance, writing this took me only a couple of hours, while writing a paper for class is taking me several days (possibly because I keep stopping in the middle to write posts like this).
Anyway, isn't this what writing is all about? Entertaining people while you convince them that the ways you see the world make sense, whether they're small ways, like the idea that "insects are super cool if you take the time to look at them," or big things like "it's important not to destroy forests" or middle-sized things like "sloppily-written fanfic is a bad thing." Or "it makes sense for people to pay attention to the fact that their lunch has exploded." Please, write a world where it's acceptable for people to stop whatever they're doing and clean up their yogurt.
I don't see any reason why that world can't be the PPC. I don't think it's been canonically determined that all PPC agents must ignore messes (that would be a pretty bizarre regulation to have in place, especially since the PPC is generally rather loose about that sort of thing). If you wanted to spend an entire interlude getting the ceiling cleaned up, I bet you could pull it off (it would be a actually be good chance to show some of your agent's character, to demonstrate the dynamics between her and other characters, and to develop the structure of the PPC's maintenance department further).
Not-normal people are valid. And interesting. Don't be afraid to write about them. Please.