Why write fiction then? To what point and purpose does non-didactic prose play its part? It is refreshing to read for the sake of reading. As a college student putting between sixty and eighty hours into my studies each week, the last thing I want to do in my free time is further educate my mind. Fiction is an easy and enjoyable way to allow the mind to strengthen different areas other than every day functionality. Fabricated worlds and unique scenarios transport us away from our modern misery. Certainly, this is true when one reads a story, but it is more apparent and fulfilling to stir up words into the shape of your own imagination. I have several fictional story lines floating in my head; each is but a single chapter of my ideas. I apologize that none of them will be written here. Most will probably never be written down at all because of time.
Writing an aggregate between science, history, and sociology rationally stretches the mind as it searches for associations, connections, and links between two seemingly different areas. In conclusion then, writing achieves the same effect in the writer of both fiction and nonfiction: a natural expansion of the mind that strengthens the interrelations of life.
Why am I here? For years I have expanded that mental connection internally and lost much progress in branching out from other areas. Once one of those theories or interpretations is physically, or in this case virtually, recorded, my mind is now liberated to shift focus and expand farther.
Read, enjoy, appreciate, criticize, ignore, apply, retort, quip, or argue. Connections are always springing up where you least expect them, and each one carries a new perspective on that activity or object of the past that can instruct the future.
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Agatha Tyche