[member="Luminara Rikanati"]
Certainly not. It shows humanity, passion and a connection with your character that speaks volumes. Who says fiction needs to be emotionless and just words?
I've been writing quite a tense story arc with my man Kail Ragnar and his relationship with Matsu Xiangu, at once really close allies but they have fallen apart and find they can't carry on together. And that was a story that was planned to go places, but we as writers didn't dictate this, the characters did.
They seem to take over our writing ability and dictate what they do and what they say regardless of our intentions, and in the process I have welled up a few times with the writing I've done. It may not be Shakespeare or whatever, but it's the connection you have with YOUR creation and you see them take this journey and how it shapes them.
It's a beautiful thing when writing gets you inside and makes you stop for a moment and take into account what you have done from just a spark of imagination and how real it feels. That's the sign of great writing, great passion and a great sense of community here because you feel something so strong for something that has come to be part of a wider family here.
No shame at all in saying it moved you. Keep up the good work.
