The Objective.

If there is no objective, then what is writing? Some may scoff this off as a rhetorical question, but I posit this idea seriously. What is the point of writing, if the writing itself has no point?

Let me be more specific: writing always should achieve a goal — whether the goal be self-exploration, practise, exposing issues, gaining readership, or sharing of knowledge. Fact is, there should always be an objective behind the writing — otherwise, what is the point of writing?

One might argue that much poetry has no objective value, but I beg to differ — many authors use poetry as a tool to express emotion, to share their feelings with the human collective.

Fiction? Fantasy? Science fiction? Used to identify alternate realities — what could have been, and what could be waiting.

It is self-evident that all writing must have an objective. In fact, as I have discovered just recently, it is impossible for writing to not have an objective — so what is the objective of this piece? The objective was to establish the importance of the objective, but also to set a goal for this new blog called Human Writer. Human Writer blends two aspects of life — humanity and expression, and explores significant issues, techniques, lessons, resources, and aspects of both. I notice that I might’ve used some flowery language, but let me make myself blunt: I will not bend into any pretensity. I am a normal human being — not an elite, intelligent, wealthy scholar, but just another human being. I eat. I drink. I shit. I will make mistakes, but it is with my hope that we can both learn from them. I write for you, but I also write for myself.


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