Site hosted by Angelfire.com: Build your free website today!
Vickie's Writing Place
« January 2026 »
S M T W T F S
1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31
Entries by Topic
All topics
Abyss
Amazing
Art vs Science
Audience and Tools
Audio and Visual
Awesome Stories
Back on Track
Back to Basics
Best Fit
Blog Update
Blog?
Can't Win
Change
Chocolate
Choices
Consequences
Diamonds
Differing Opinions
Do More with Less
Don't Force It
Don't Lose Message
Exercises
Expand Your Horizons
Fairy Tales
General
Getting into the Habit
Getting Read
Human Nature
Ignorance
Keep Going
KISS
More Kissing
National Poetry Month
Newsletters
On Writing
Outline to Write
Perspective
Poetry Brd Etiquette
Point A to Point B
Practice/Perfect
Preserve or Destroy
Professionalism
Rambling On
Ready Publication?
Reinforcement
Saying So
Sit on It
So-So Results
Sometimes
Spoken vs Written
Start of Another Draft
Starting Point
Stimulating Creativity
Subj. Appreciation
The Balance Beam  «
The Blank Page
The Ending Wrote Itself
The Shortest Distance
The Value of Words
There Comes A Time
Try Something New
Twenty Minute Test
Very Rough Draft
We Write to be Read
What's the Rush?
When All Else Fails...
When Life Interferes
Why Bother?
Words
Workshop or Not
Writing is Not Easy
Years Later
You Never Know
Blog Tools
Edit your Blog
Build a Blog
View Profile
You are not logged in. Log in
Friday, 8 April 2005
The Balance Beam
Topic: The Balance Beam
Sometimes we have to make decisions between too little and too much. In normal circumstances, balance is the key. We want to provide just enough. In the case where too many questions arise because we have provided the improper balance, decisions must be made. It is a good idea to have someone we trust test our work for us.

Too little can leave our reader unsatisfied and empty. I recently wrote a poem that referred to ?he? a number of times. A couple of my readers were very curious as to who ?he? was. Did I provide too little? Maybe not since the poem was a complete work. Who he is wasn?t important in the grand scheme of the poem. Granted, the poem could have gained some length if I had included clues about him. Instead, I actually gave myself the inspiration to write another poem about him.

Too much can get us mixed reactions in knowing what the point was. In poetry, especially, too much can be a bad thing. Most poems are smaller works; filling them with more stuffing than necessary leads to an overflow in the oven. We all know or can imagine how awful that is to clean up.


Posted by moon/vlk234 at 8:56 PM EDT
Post Comment | Permalink | Share This Post

Newer | Latest | Older