NinaWeiss
New member
- Joined
- Feb 19, 2026
- Messages
- 13
I just got a paper back from my favorite professor, and instead of just giving me a grade, she wrote me a whole paragraph of feedback. It wasn't even about grammar or spelling—it was about ideas. She wrote, "You make interesting points, but you don't trust your reader. You over-explain everything. Let your ideas breathe." Wow. That cut deep but in a good way.
It made me realize that I've been so focused on "sounding smart" that I've been cluttering my writing with unnecessary explanations. I've been thinking a lot about how to improve writing skills in terms of clarity and trust. I think my new goal is to write with more confidence—to state my idea clearly and then get out of the way, instead of beating the reader over the head with it. Has anyone else gotten a piece of feedback that completely shifted their perspective on writing?
Sometimes the best lessons aren't about rules, but about philosophy. I'd love to hear your stories!
It made me realize that I've been so focused on "sounding smart" that I've been cluttering my writing with unnecessary explanations. I've been thinking a lot about how to improve writing skills in terms of clarity and trust. I think my new goal is to write with more confidence—to state my idea clearly and then get out of the way, instead of beating the reader over the head with it. Has anyone else gotten a piece of feedback that completely shifted their perspective on writing?
Sometimes the best lessons aren't about rules, but about philosophy. I'd love to hear your stories!