I took the article somewhat differently than most of you seem to be. I took it less as "all thought verbs are bad" and more as "here is a simple and straightforward way to turn telling into showing". Personally, I get annoyed when people say things like "show don't tell" and then fail to give any practical advice on how to do so. In that sense, his method is tremendously helpful.
Maybe this is a good thing, maybe not, but I've gotten so that when I read or hear advice (of any kind, really, but particularly when it's about writing) I kind of tune out words like "never" and "always". My natural tendency is to want to argue with people who use universal statements. (This is partly a result of such peoples' tendency to 'splain things: for example, I once had a conversation with a guy about religion and morality and how they can get compartmentalized from everyday life, and I started trying to make a point about how that tendency can vary between cultures, only to be cut off with, "No sweetie, it's universal." >.< Mostly, though, it's because universal statements are nearly always false.) However, I've found that I tend to miss the point when I do that because I'm so focused on disagreeing with their phrasing that I don't even bother to pay attention to what they're actually saying. It's much easier for me to just try to find whatever help I can regardless of how stupidly it's worded.
...usually, that is. Sometimes the content is even more retarded than the phrasing, like with sweetie-it's-universal.
Re: showing vs. telling,
Limyaael has a rant that I think explains pretty much what Var and L were saying about balance. I
think I agree with all of it, though there are a couple of things in there that I'm a bit unsure about. Anyway. Discuss, please.
Oh also, Mum, do you have the link handy for Lim's rant on Darlings? I was looking for it when I ran across this one and it made me think of this discussion, but I wasn't actually intending to post here when I started out.
Edit: Never mind, I found it.
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A word is not the same with one writer as with another. One tears it from his guts. The other pulls it out of his overcoat pocket.
~Charles Peguy
Edited 1 times. Last edit at 08/09/11 07:15AM by ocean cat.