Life
My Process
This tiny episode, now recorded, becomes a testament to the way the mundane can be woven into the tapestry of a larger narrative, and I realize that the journal I am writing is itself a living document, constantly absorbing the present moment’s details.
By Forest Greenabout 4 hours ago in Writers
Dude, if you gonna steal my story...at least change the title.
SOOOOOOO! I wrote this 3 (three) months ago. And I just saw this pop up today, 12/3/2026 I am still deciding on which emotion to display here. Rage, ennui, laughter, pity or just downright ire and indifference.
By Novel Allenabout 9 hours ago in Writers
The Darkness He Called Home
He did not want a way out. He wanted company in the dark. It is dark in here. Not the kind of darkness that simply falls when the Sun goes down, but the kind that clings - damp, cold, airless. It settles on my skin like a second layer, seeps into my lungs, presses against my ribs. The walls sweat. The ground is unstable. Even silence feels wet here.
By Gabriella Retiabout 13 hours ago in Writers
My Process
The protracted, almost ritualistic rhythm of my writing—hours spent wrestling with each sentence, revisiting paragraphs, and constantly rearranging ideas—has become a crucible for my thought, reshaping it in ways that are both subtle and profound: as I linger over a single metaphor, the mind is forced to unpack layers of meaning it would otherwise skim, prompting connections between seemingly unrelated concepts; the inevitable pauses between drafts act like mental respirations, allowing subconscious insights to surface and then be interrogated with fresh, analytical eyes; the iterative cycle of drafting, erasing, and refining compels me to articulate not only what I know, but why I know it, exposing hidden assumptions and inviting me to renegotiate them; consequently, the very act of writing becomes a form of sustained meditation, where each painstaking turn of phrase sharpens focus, expands the horizon of curiosity, and cultivates a disciplined patience that permeates every subsequent line of reasoning, ultimately turning the long process of writing into a powerful engine that drives deeper, more nuanced, and increasingly self‑aware thinking.
By Forest Greenabout 22 hours ago in Writers
Your Partner Doesn't Understand Your Writing Life. That's Okay.
My partner has never read 1 Lovelock Drive. Not because he doesn't care, but because I asked him not to. The book draws from personal experience and the thought of him reading certain scenes, knowing which emotional truths came from our life and which were invented, felt like standing naked in the kitchen during breakfast.
By Ellen Francesabout 23 hours ago in Writers
How To Start Writing on Medium in 2026 (and Actually Get Paid)
I still remember the first $2.31 I made from the Medium Partner Program. Not the first $100 month or the first “viral” story. That strange little $2.31 on a piece I almost didn’t publish. I stared at that green number like it had opened a side door into another life.
By abualyaanart2 days ago in Writers
Knives and Forks
Alright, it’s enough, I’m not going to fall asleep anyway, and I can’t stand another hour of staring at this ceiling. Thoughts just drift through my mind, and from all this lying around, my calves start to cramp again. At least I slept through most of yesterday. Paying that debt I built with lifestyle. That helps. With that, I can push through today until the evening, as I did so many times before. I blame her for it anyway. It was definitely her who tore me out of my dreams at half past two in the morning. She did it, and now she’s pretending that nothing happened.
By George Roast6 days ago in Writers
Writing for the attention span
I've just started to write a story. Not this one. A fiction. I am often contemplating now why I write on Vocal: do I have a message? Sometimes. Is it for the joy? Always. Is it for engagement? Maybe, depending on what form that engagement takes.
By Rachel Deeming6 days ago in Writers



