To my fellow writers (and anyone else reading this because I don’t even know what I’m saying anymore):
I just wanted to reach out to you all because I’m seeing this really, really sad and disheartening trend and if anyone knows how that feels or is experiencing it too, it would be all of you. And I just... need a moment to vent and see if there’s any solidarity in this and just be a human (even though that tends result in backlash xD)
Do you remember the days when you’d post the final chapter to a multi-chaptered fic? You’d see this influx of comments and you’d be overjoyed; those lurkers had finally finally made an appearance. You’d see those longer comments, thanking you for the story, telling you all they loved about the fic in a beautiful summary. You’d see people.
Does anyone see them anymore?
I see bookmarkers these days showing up for the last chapter. All of these ones came in the last couple days. You know how many of them left a comment, even to say ‘thanks, I really enjoyed it!’? None. And this doesn’t include all of the private bookmarks (about 10 more) that I saw in my stats.
I see kudos. The fic got over 60 new ones (yayyyyyy...) at the time of the last chapter. You know how many of those (signed-in, can’t do anything about guests) kudos-er left a comment? Three.
I see subscriptions. This story alone had before the final chapter uploaded over 160. Those are signed in users who said yup, I want to read this fic. The final chapter got 27 signed-in comments.
Just... where is everyone? Why is it so hard to take a minute after taking at least an hour to read the story to leave a comment saying thank you? To give us a little bit of appreciation?
I’ve been seeing a lot of posts on Tumblr these days thanking fic authors for all of the works while everyone is in quarantine/social distancing; I’ve been generously tagged in a few. Telling them how much having these works to read through means to them.
But what about us? Do we not need a little positive boost too? I know I sure could.
I’ve spent the last week scared shitless as my grandma -- who introduced me to Harry Potter, who spurred my love of puzzles, who I love to make laugh because she has the best one, who has dementia and nowadays doesn’t know who I am but still has the most contagious smile and wheezing laugh -- was found unresponsive in her room and transported to the hospital. Kidney failure. Very bad. Can’t go see her, can’t even talk to her as she’s not responsive. It’s awful. It’s one of the worst feelings in the world. I’m happy to say she’s doing a lot better as of yesterday afternoon, actually awake and with a bit of an appetite and her prognosis is good. But she’s all alone, with dementia, at a hospital and I’m still worried sick.
A friend’s brother, an EMT, committed suicide last week. I’ve been spending hours on the phone with her, texting her (and my texting skills are awful) and just sitting on silent zoom meetings with her and other friends so she knows we’re there with her even if we can’t be there.
I’ve had to talk to worried, elderly residents all week scared to death of going out for garbage stickers, who call because they’re out of milk and can we please help them and all I can do is direct them to our county service because I’m not allowed to interact with them even on my own time due to another coworker’s daughter having pediatric cancer and we can’t risk any extra exposure in the office. She’s terrified too, by the way, but has to keep working because they have so many bills.
My dad lost his job a few weeks ago and my parents have no income, have almost nothing in savings, and no prospective jobs as my dad works in the restaurant industry. It’s hard talking to them, trying to cheer them up, that things will get better, because right now, to them, they’re not.
So yes, authors are people too. We’re dealing with a lot of stuff too. And hearing from readers, who take the time to leave a comment, can literally be the greatest thing in the world. It gives us that little burst of sunshine, of joy, of knowing our works were able to bring that to someone else. To give them maybe hope, maybe entertainment, maybe an escape.
Please. Please don’t forget about your authors. Don’t just brush them aside and run to the next work without taking a moment to say thanks. We’re people too.
And this author could really, really, really use a hug :(