Include yourself in your storytelling
They incorporated personal and biographical elements into their storytelling.
Goethe incorporated personal elements into "The Sorrows of Young Werther."
Hemingway incorporated his hunting and fishing experiences into his stories.
And the writer of the best series of all egypt telegram screening time ("The Sopranos") - David Chase - brought his experiences with his annoying mother into the series by incorporating a very annoying female character into the series.
But:
This should be done consciously.
If you do this unconsciously, it will read like an unresolved trauma or like an offended person who wants to "process something".
19. Forget the first thought – and the 2nd and the 3rd and the 4th.
I have to puke.
If I have to read "practice makes perfect" again.
Or when an author begins his text with the following passage:
"As we all know, healthy eating is very important."
Age.
Tell me something new.
You see, if you write down the first thing that comes to mind, it is often rubbish.
It is:
1. A truism ("Practice makes perfect")
2. A cliché ("Everything's fine")
3. An empty phrase ("As we already know...")
4. Political speak ("The sustainable development of a value-oriented evaluation system through the coordination of decentralized influencing factors.")