Lately, I’ve been thinking about how writing feels different now — not because words changed, but because the world did. Everywhere you look, there’s an algorithm whispering, “make it shorter, make it clickable, make it viral.”
But what about writing that breathes? Writing that doesn’t chase trends, but chases truth — the kind that lets you slow down, linger in a sentence, or wrestle with a thought that doesn’t have an easy conclusion.
When I write these days, I try to forget the audience for a while. No outlines, no “perfect hook,” no pressure to post. Just words forming their own rhythm — messy, maybe meaningless at first, but honest. I’ve been reading a few essays on CollegeEssay.org and articles on Forbes.com, and both reminded me that good writing still thrives on clarity and authenticity — whether it’s an academic piece or a thought shared with the world.
Maybe writing isn’t about being heard anymore — maybe it’s about learning to listen again: to language, to silence, to yourself.