Critique is never about the artist: it's just an assessment of certain points regarding a work of art, made for the benefit of all.
Further, critique is really not about the piece at hand, although that is what is discussed. It's really about how to improve one's work going forward.
If we didn't critique at university, we'd have had nothing to do.
Caredoe, there are two URL's in my post above. The first leads to a page at Amazon offering two used copies of my chapbook. The second shows the back cover of another chapbook.
To see the back cover please click on the "REFRESH" button on your browser: this should bring up the image.
Regarding automatic writing, it is known to be the most effective exercise one can practice to:
1. Abolish writer's block forever.
2. Become a better writer.
I was fortunate to enjoy about 6 years at university as a playwriting student, and this was when I did most of my automatic writing -- generally between the hours of 10 pm - 2 am. (We drama students sleep in late.)
I wrote just about every night in the following manner and it made me into a real writer. I called my work produced in this way "Wall Poetry," because I framed some of these pieces and sold them at my readings.
PLEASE REFRESH YOUR BROWSER TO VIEW...

Here is the exercise. Students who have actually done this have thanked me.
-- Typewriter Version --
1. Set your margins to their widest width and your line spacing to single-space.
2. Position a piece of typing paper at the very top edge.
3. Begin typing WITHOUT ANY THOUGHT and continue until the page flies out of the typewriter. (You must begin and cannot stop until the page flies out.)
4. DO NOT ALLOW YOURSELF TO THINK WHILE YOU TYPE. No thinking allowed during this exercise. That comes later, during editing.
5. The result will be something like you see above.
What causes writer's block is self-censorship. The brain is basically saying, "I'm not good enough to write: who do I think I am?"
Automatic writing (in my case, "Wall Poetry") when practiced on a daily basis for a period of at least several months eliminates this inner censor completely.
One must understand that WRITING MEANS PUTTING WORDS ON PAPER -- NOTHING MORE.
If you are not putting words on paper (in our case, out into cyberspace), then...clearly...you are not writing.
The key to this exercise is to learn how to suspend your inner editor and just type without any thought whatsoever. Shrinks call it "free association"...we do it through our fingers.
If you practice the exercise for a reasonable period of time, soon you will find there is no such thing as writer's block: it's all in your mind. You'll be able to type as freely and as effortlessly as I do, which is sans pain, sans interruption, sans self-censor.
Then you'll be a writer and create what you wish to create at will, because your censor will no longer be looking over your shoulder. Just type and worry later about what you said.
It's a great adventure, Caredoe: give it a try.
-Skeeter
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