Man I Don't Even Know
Jan. 4th, 2025 10:26 amThe problem with me being a writer is that I'm too stupid to understand 99.99% of things that happen in this world. Sometimes I read science writing in particular where I'm like, "I admire the craft of your sentence structure and the precision of your vocabulary, but I have no idea what you're talking about." Instead of being able to write, I often wish I had an actually useful skill, like fixing cars or installing drywall, but alas.
ETA: The context for this is me spending two hours trying to figure out carbon offsetting, and specifically why it's a scam. I understand the bits about money laundering just fine, but I don't understand how the science is supposed to work. I can't even figure out whether in fact the science was ever supposed to work tbh.
Anyway here's a random photo of some nice apple pie, which is about the level I'm on right now.

ETA: The context for this is me spending two hours trying to figure out carbon offsetting, and specifically why it's a scam. I understand the bits about money laundering just fine, but I don't understand how the science is supposed to work. I can't even figure out whether in fact the science was ever supposed to work tbh.
Anyway here's a random photo of some nice apple pie, which is about the level I'm on right now.

no subject
Date: 2025-01-05 10:30 am (UTC)Your pie looks nice
no subject
Date: 2025-01-05 12:57 pm (UTC)Back at the beginning of 2024 I wanted to write a science fiction story about nanotechnology, so I started doing research on what the technology actually entails. This project went nowhere fast. Even after two weeks of reading for more than an hour every day, I still couldn't differentiate between what is "real" (ie, what we're actually capable of achieving), what is speculative, what is PR smoke and mirrors for large research universities, and what is an appropriation of the term used in marketing to sell, like, high-end sports shoes.
In the end I just looked at the TV Tropes page for "nanomachines" and decided that the entire concept is silly goofy clown hours. If I can't do better than Hideo Kojima in Metal Gear Solid, what's the point.
I am in awe of science fiction writers who manage to make these stories work, honestly.
no subject
Date: 2025-01-06 11:32 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2025-01-06 01:40 pm (UTC)As a reader, I'm very forgiving of writers who prioritize story over historical detail. As a writer, however, the struggle is real.
no subject
Date: 2025-01-13 05:01 pm (UTC)In other words I don't think it's your intelligence that's the problem....but now I want apple pie.
no subject
Date: 2025-01-13 05:41 pm (UTC)The Great Cash-for-Carbon Hustle
https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2023/10/23/the-great-cash-for-carbon-hustle
...which isn't the sort of "science writing" you've described, exactly, but it is 12k+ words long. I use Firefox's reader view to bypass pop-ups and ads, but still. That's a lot. Once I'm past 5k words, brain fog becomes an issue, especially during a discussion of complicated and unfamiliar concepts.
Instead of assigning final papers for my classes, I've started to assign "research articles." The assignment is that the article needs to be informative and well-researched; but, if it goes over 1k words, you fail. I feel like that sort of precision isn't taught in college classes, but it's super important for the sort of nonfiction writing that's actually useful to people.
no subject
Date: 2025-01-13 06:00 pm (UTC)I have to admit I don't read long articles on my computer; I generally throw them into Pocket, which syncs with my e-reader, so I can read them curled up in whatever soft spot is appealing today. I realize I'm a weirdo but I hate doing everything on my phone.
no subject
Date: 2025-01-13 06:28 pm (UTC)You and me can be weirdos together.
I'm still holding onto an old iPad mini that I use for longread articles and AO3. I feel like fic writers especially deserve the dignity of the full e-reader treatment.
no subject
Date: 2025-01-13 06:34 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2025-01-13 08:36 pm (UTC)