As you will probably have noticed before the end of this question, I’m a relatively mediocre writer. I mean, I’m not that bad, I know a lot of people who are worse at it than I am, but I still often notice a pattern in basically everything I write: exceedingly long and complex sentences, giving masses of detail with little apparent regard for how much information the person at the other end actually needs, "stick-on" weird metaphors which appear randomly every time I’m afraid I’m being too technical or annoying (so you get a wall of annoying text with a bit of canned laughter in the middle…), vague sentences that go around for a while as I’m slowly figuring out what I mean to say, long paragraphs, etc. Also, I spend ages proofreading anything I write and worrying about it…
Anyway, I’d like to get better at it. And LW is full of good writers, so surely someone will have advice?
I know the standard piece of advice is "write more stuff", or maybe "read The Sense of Style, or something". And I’ve done both these things, and they’ve helped, but I’m still a pretty mediocre writer. I’m still writing somewhat more than the average person, but if I want to go beyond that and practice even more, it will have to mean a deliberate effort to improve my writing. And if I decide to deliberately improve my writing using advice that’s not more specific than "write more stuff, and then some more again", my efforts will soon fall into that deep endless cave where people drop their New Year resolutions every 15th January…
So, any ideas?
This advice isn't specific to writing, but I believe it still applies. To get better at something, it's very often necessary to stop worrying about the overall thing and try to get better at components and contributing skills.
For technical or idea-communicative pieces, you can explicitly work on sentence length, paragraph relevance (what are you actually communicating with each fragment?), the very hard skills of writing for diverse reader preferences, etc.
Also applicable to many domains, cultivate feedback avenues. Getting someone to tell you what they got out of a piece, and what felt like it interfered, is absolute gold. But somewhat difficult to find if you're not part of communities where it's common.
Really interesting! Thanks a lot for the reminder that working on the components of the end goal is important — it should be very obvious, yet it seems like it’s not often brought to our awareness, and I often see people, including myself, neglecting it