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You didn't bother to pm and have no qualms about criticising people in public, so why can't we do the same?nwatts said:Justin: PM function is there for a reason mmkay.
You didn't bother to pm and have no qualms about criticising people in public, so why can't we do the same?nwatts said:Justin: PM function is there for a reason mmkay.
You're a moderator honey. Lead by example.glitterfairy said:You didn't bother to pm and have no qualms about criticising people in public, so why can't we do the same?
However I'm also a BOSmember, and entitled to all the rights of free speech as you are. May I remind you that among other things, you were the one to hit low with a "your advice isn't worth listening to" line? There's a difference between arguing a point, and resorting to pettiness.nwatts said:You're a moderator honey. Lead by example.
I think it's important to certainly take advice on board, however it's really up to the writer as to whether it's used or not. Writing is such a personal thing - what one person thinks will be the 'cure' to a problem might be the writer's worst nightmare because it doesn't reflect a key theme of the work, etc. I had a few of these in my first full working draft because I didn't make it clear exactly why I was doing certain things - after a tight rework my critic understood with one of those "ahhhhh!" cliche-type momentsfleepbasding said:It's sometimes hard to accept advice. But you'd be a fool not to take it. Your teacher may just be right- it is important to make an impact if your aiming for the highmark range. I guess it comes down to aims...