A Writer's Notebook, Day Six-Hundred-And-Fifty-Eight

I have always felt that it is important, as a writer, to engage with the world and with  important issues such as those we are struggling with in this nation right now.  I am often afraid to exclude readers, not because I am unwilling to be straightforward or to express an opinion, but because my goal is to communicate, and to cannot speak to a person who has walked away.  I would rather be able to reach people who do not agree with me, and to, perhaps, make them consider some ideas and perspectives that they had not considered.  I believe that often this can be done nimby removing aspects of the context while allowing the structure to remain in tact.  This is, of course, essential in all metaphor, but it is often done in ways that are intended to be transparent.  In my approach, I want to leave a space for the reader to process the ideas in the abstract.  It is my goal to allow the perspectives and understandings in the metaphor to be understood without explicit reference, so that it becomes a form of internal understanding, not a lesson that is told, but one that is experienced from within.

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