iam93percentstardust:

It’s not just the commodification of fandom. It’s not just the disinterest in wips in favor of completed stories. It’s not just the unwillingness to take chances on new writers.

It’s the demand for instant gratification too.

I’m posting a “wip” right now. It’s actually a fully completed story, and I stated that in the A/N when I started posting it a few weeks ago. I finished writing it early in December. It’s not going to be abandoned and discontinued. Short of a tragic accident, it will 100% be posted in its entirety before the end of January.

It’s also almost 60k words long. Each chapter is approximately 14k words. That’s a lot to expect people to read quickly, so I made the decision to post weekly instead of dumping it all at once. I don’t normally do that for wips. I normally post bimonthly to give myself time to write the next chapter. But in concession to the fact that this one is already finished, I decided to post once a week. Could I have posted it all at once or even once a day? Sure, but again, I have more than a few close friends who are slow readers, and I thought it was better to give people the time to read each chapter and let it digest before dumping another one on them instead of making them feel like they have to read it immediately so they don’t miss the next update.

This, apparently, was a mistake.

I’ve been very open about working on this fic since I started it in September. People told me they were excited to get the chance to read it every time I posted an update about where I was in the writing process. When I announced that I was posting it, they told me that they couldn’t wait to read it. It’s not like I was expecting massive numbers of kudos and comments; this fandom has shrunk in size and engagement, I’m not the most popular writer in it, and I try not to feel entitled to engagement, but considering all the people telling me they were excited for it, I was expecting something.

Instead it was crickets. All those people who were so excited and told me they couldn’t wait to get home to read it? That was the last I heard from them, unless it was to express outright incredulity that I expected them to read a work in progress. “It’s not a work in progress!” I protested. “I’m just taking a little longer to post it!” Yeah, but it’s not posted all in one go, so why should we bother to read it? We’ll just wait until the end of January once it’s finished. “Will I hear from you then? Will I get any indication at all that you liked it?” Eh, maybe. If we feel like it. But it’ll only be one comment at the very end. If that.

This keeps happening. If it’s not an already completed chaptered fic that I’m posting over time instead of immediately, then it’s an idea that I had first talked about a while ago but took a couple months to write only to be met with silence once I start posting because everyone moved on and forgot about it. If it’s not ready to go right now in all its fully finished glory and all 60k words posted immediately after I first spoke about it, then why am I talking about it at all? Why should I expect people to be waiting in anticipatory eagerness?

I remember when I posted my first Christmas event fic in 2020. It was already finished too when I started posting it. I’d been talking about it all year. People had seemed really excited for it when I first mentioned it, but then interest seemed to die out somewhere around August. By the time I started posting it in late November, I was fully convinced that no one was going to read it. I actually posted the first chapter and then immediately turned my computer off and didn’t let myself turn it back on until the next day.

I was shocked by the number of readers I had. The number of comments. The sheer amount of people telling me they’d been waiting on tenterhooks for me to post that first chapter. And it kept coming. People were talking and theorizing and marking their conversations with spoiler bars for anyone who hadn’t read the latest chapter. People timed when I posted the first few chapters so they could be waiting by their computer for when I dropped the next one. I was randomly gifted art. It was really an event, and I’ll always be grateful for the support and community I was given for that month.

I never believed I’d ever be able to capture that kind of readership again, and I was right, and that’s okay. But when I posted last year’s Christmas event fic, for the first time since I started doing this in 2020, someone asked me why I bothered to space it out over a month instead of just posting the entire thing in one go on Christmas Day and how could I possibly expect them to be that invested for an entire month instead of just waiting until it was finished. I didn’t know how to tell them that only three years prior, that’s not only exactly what people did but they were excited for it to be like that.

If I’m not going to post my already completed fic in one lump sum right now, then the audience for it is nonexistent. And the audience won’t grow once it’s finished. It’s like I have one opportunity to capture the readers and if they weren’t willing to take the chance on the first chapter, then they’ll never come back. It’s disheartening, to say the least. Only six months ago, I was telling a friend that I thought this was my forever pairing, that I’d still be writing for this ship when I was old and grey. And now I’m going through my ideas folder, wondering what can be repurposed for other ships, because I increasingly feel not just that I’m shouting into a void but that the void is actively ignoring me.

I can’t post wips because what if I abandon them or take too long to update? I can’t post a chaptered fic in one go because that’s too many words to expect people to read. But I can’t space out posting completed chaptered fics either because everyone wants the instant gratification of the full fic right now. So what am I supposed to do?

I miss December 2020, but it’s not the random art that I miss or the kudos or the number of comments. It was the community that built up around this fic. It was knowing that it was okay to space out the chapters because everyone was still right there with me, talking and theorizing and using their spoiler bars. It was my audience trusting me enough to come along with me for the ride instead of waiting for me to be done. I was so scared back then that the full year between me first talking about the idea and posting the first chapter had lost me my audience, scared that they’d all forgotten about me and moved on to other authors who were quicker to post, but I wish I’d known that three years later, it would only take four months for people to lose interest in an idea.

I’d have treated December 2020 like it was way more special than I did.