If you start trying to communicate ideas, I think you don't allow the audience to see themselves.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
I don't try to communicate with my 'audience'. I don't bother with that any more. I used to try to have conversations with people, but it's futile.
You can't force an audience to see something they don't want to see, no matter what it is.
I don't have any sense of an audience when I'm writing. I don't consider the audience. Because all I'm interested in is the problem on the page.
I never have an intended audience. I just write, you know.
You have to be aware of who you're talking to in an audience.
I can't imagine working without and audience.
All you have to do is just believe in what's there; then, the audience will, too.
I always like to have faith that an audience will suspend their disbelief, if you present it to them in the right way. I find it peculiar when people scoff at one bold idea, and yet they'll then turn over and watch a man travel through time in a police phone box. I think it's just how you present the idea.
You can make an audience see nearly anything, if you yourself believe in it.
I wrote for so many years in a bubble, the way everyone does, and there were large swaths of time where you think you're doing this for nothing. An audience is crucial, a back and forth with the invisible readers.