Luckily, the people that I was in the critique group were all fantastic. They gave criticism, but constructive to the point that I find some of their opinions have really helped my work. In fact, they were nice enough NOT to say right out loud, to my face, "That's a stupid secret!" When I unveiled the secret surrounding my story. Instead, they gently offered their opinion that maybe I find something more....well...secretive...exciting...um...even interesting?? This feedback lead me to go back to the hotel, have a stiff drink and realize they were dead on right. My secret sucked. Big time!
In the car the next morning, while hubby was driving me to my workshop, I told him about the secret, about how the group politely said it sucked. His response: When did you write that???? That's REALLY stupid!! You can think of something better than that! (Did I mention that he's always brutally honest with me?)
Luckily, the secret is something that even I haven't known the truth of up until this point, so changing it only requires the rewrite of the last few chapters (drop in the bucket at this point).
So I went home and got to thinking up a brand new one. I went up to my bedroom and decided I was going to lie there, like a person on a psychiatrist couch and think of something really good!
It took me all day Sunday, but I did it.
(By the way, I ran it by hubby....he loved it.)
Now, don't get me wrong, this critique experience was not a walk in the park (I'm using a cliche..If I ran this blog posting by a critique group, they'd hang me by my toenails). There were some suggestions that I flat out refuse to even entertain. Nope. I know it in my heart. I change that, I change my character, I change the story, and I'm not doing it. Let's be honest, comments like that as easy as they are to throw out of your mind, can irritate the living crap out of you.
What's not easy to throw out of your mind (and still irritate) are the comments/suggestions that you're not really sure about. Those were and will be tough to deal with. These are the decisions that require a writer to dig deep and totally make a decision based on gut, inner voice.
So of course with all this, I got to thinking philosophically about it. What does it say about a person who is able to pour their deepest, innermost intimate thoughts and feelings out on paper and then be....criticized?
I guess that's the nature of artists...
Or is it the nature of human beings?
Maybe being critiqued is the only way we know how to learn? School is like one big critique session, isn't it? And then we graduate and get a job. And what happens in our jobs: We work hard, put forth a great amount of effort just to have a "boss" give us a review, telling us what we do well and what we need to improve. Sounds like a critique to me...
So maybe my rant isn't worth raving about. Maybe I've just been feeling too sensitive, too impatient, too possessive of my work.
Okay, I can live with that...