Subject: Ooookay, a few semi-related things.
Author:
Posted on: 2013-04-28 21:23:00 UTC
I know you've heard this multiple times, but I'm going to say it again. Constantly bringing up permission-related things in fresh topics is not going to help you. It is going to associate your name in people's minds with "is obsessed with getting permission," rather than "constructively adds to dialogue." Asking people for concrit once, on the IRC, or as a reply to one of your threads here, is cool. Asking people over and over again, and getting annoyed when they don't respond, is not cool. Please don't go hide in a hole now - I'm not trying to be a jerk, or hurt your feelings. It's just a thing - the PPC is really, really more about community than anything else. Yes, we're a community built on good-writing, and praising good writing - but the community part comes first. That's why we ask people to hang out a while before they get permission - not to give them lots of chances to ask questions about permission, but so that they can get to know people, and we can get to know them.
This is more of an aside, but I'd also note that as a permission giver, you don't actually have to submit an introduction to your agent as your writing sample. Yes, it can be done, yes it works, yes, it does serve the purpose of proving that you can write characters in-character and understand the PPC... but you can also submit a lot of other stories that prove you're a good writer - anything with dialogue and a bit of humor will work, really. Don't feel like you must write a whole new introduction just to get in.
And don't feel like this is an attack or trying to push you out, either, please. I know it's a little overwhelming, jumping into a whole new community - but take your time, we really don't bite mostly I can't speak for the zombie squirrels or the animated plushies or the minis, so don't feel like you have to be pushing your stuff all the time to get accepted. It's okay to take your time, get to know people, hang out, and apply for permission when it feels right, rather than stressing and obsessing over it for months. In fact, it's an approach I'd recommend.