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Post by Guillotine (QDT) on Jul 2, 2019 14:21:02 GMT -5
One of the things that has most struck me in AW is the supportiveness of the community. However, some of us are a bit more on the fringes socially and it can be harder to find people to bounce ideas off. For instance, some of the fed aren't in the FB chat because they aren't into social media. Some have only just joined, of course, and don't necessarily know where to turn. There's many generous people here who are happy to give feedback but sometimes it can be too much if open offers are put out for everyone (Odin = work rate BEAST LOL).
I struggle bigtime with self doubt and get stuck in my head easily. I'm often too swayed by likes or lack thereof which don't always correlate closely to engagement or actual enjoyment. I also work better when in a creative process with others.
I've reached out to someone more experienced and higher quality who I trust to act as an occasional mentor or sounding board. He's already being really helpful. Honest but encouraging with it.
I want to complete the chain. Is there anyone here who maybe feels a bit alone and would like some support? I am offering to 1) discuss ideas with you, 2) give feedback on RPs/segments (I will read them extremely carefully) and 3) provide general encouragement/accountability/whatever. I promise to be honest but hopefully considerate and uplifting. Always constructive.
For what it's worth, my credentials aren't yet much to write home about but I have at least 6 years of experience in e-wrestling across 5 feds over various spells since 1998. Please read my stuff if you haven't already and see if you think I might have anything to offer you personally. There's no point in you contacting me if you don't think we'll vibe or you don't connect with my work. It's nothing personal - it's important you be the best you as opposed to the best someone else. Compatibility is key in any sort of mentoring.
I'll only do this for ONE person at the moment because I want to give that person my best. It might help if you're a newbie but you don't have to be. I'm busy with a 2 year old son but I'll do my utmost to help you as time permits. Please PM me with why you want the support. I'll consider all those who reach out (if anyone) and choose 1 on Friday.
Also, everyone, feel free to use this thread to ask for OTHER people to help or offer support yourself to others.
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Sahara
Professional Wrestler
Posts: 121
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Post by Sahara on Jul 2, 2019 14:29:33 GMT -5
I think this is a really amazing thing for you to do -- and while I'm new here, I've been doing this (and other various forms of role-playing) for many many ... many many years. In past feds I've been known as a good person to bounce ideas off of, and can often improve upon them, so despite being new, I'm always open to anyone that wants to discuss ideas or story lines. I would, however, be interested in any sort of feedback anyone could offer me, because while I consider myself quite experienced in this game, every fed has it's own culture and style, and sometimes my writing style can clash with what's expected. I've only posted a few things, but if anything sticks out or clashes, I'd love to know before I continue making a fool of myself.
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Post by Guillotine (QDT) on Jul 2, 2019 14:36:02 GMT -5
I think this is a really amazing thing for you to do -- and while I'm new here, I've been doing this (and other various forms of role-playing) for many many ... many many years. In past feds I've been known as a good person to bounce ideas off of, and can often improve upon them, so despite being new, I'm always open to anyone that wants to discuss ideas or story lines. I would, however, be interested in any sort of feedback anyone could offer me, because while I consider myself quite experienced in this game, every fed has it's own culture and style, and sometimes my writing style can clash with what's expected. I've only posted a few things, but if anything sticks out or clashes, I'd love to know before I continue making a fool of myself. Welcome to AW. You're kicking ass so far. I'll try to give comprehensive feedback in the next couple of days (could be a taster for anyone considering taking up my offer). Deep in my RP for Glory tonight. I hope someone takes up your offer too as it seems you'll be able to help a lot based on what I've seen so far.
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Post by Corey Bull on Jul 2, 2019 19:50:26 GMT -5
I use to wrestle in the indies many many moons ago. And I did booking on the actual show. I kind of like booking. I ask a lot of people here for help, because I get this whole personal doubt thing from time to time and I love the feedback of others. After all, I write for them to read and enjoy. I enjoy the writing, the idea of becoming something different.
So if anyone wants to bounce ideas off of me, I am always game for it. Just send me a message and I'll do my best to get back to you.
If you want feedback on a roleplay....my opinion...ask the All Father himself Odin...cause that man knows his roleplays. I mean, I'll give it too, but I just think he has a better eye then me.
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Post by Wade Moor on Jul 2, 2019 20:20:27 GMT -5
My PM box is always open to anyone! Or message me on FB if you’re there, I’ll more than likely see that first!
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Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
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Post by Deleted on Jul 3, 2019 6:08:48 GMT -5
I think this is a really amazing thing for you to do -- and while I'm new here, I've been doing this (and other various forms of role-playing) for many many ... many many years. In past feds I've been known as a good person to bounce ideas off of, and can often improve upon them, so despite being new, I'm always open to anyone that wants to discuss ideas or story lines. I would, however, be interested in any sort of feedback anyone could offer me, because while I consider myself quite experienced in this game, every fed has it's own culture and style, and sometimes my writing style can clash with what's expected. I've only posted a few things, but if anything sticks out or clashes, I'd love to know before I continue making a fool of myself. Just like QDT said: You're killing it right off the bat. The more you stay involved with the group, the more you'll learn and advance with your player/character. It's to no surprise that most of the top performers are socially involved within the group, and the fact you already made a huge entrance on every platform deserves a big high five (Hippo high even). I'm sold on Sahara's brand already. Just keep killing it - no matter the outcome, win/loss, or place on the card - dat damn Hippo
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Sam Kidsgrove
Professional Wrestler
International Champion
Posts: 476
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Post by Sam Kidsgrove on Jul 3, 2019 13:09:56 GMT -5
I love you QDT. This is why I have my braintrust FB group so a few of us bounce ideas off each other and try to improve to the max.
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Post by Kennedy Matthews on Jul 4, 2019 9:25:33 GMT -5
I have been doing this for 16 years. I am always here to bounce ideas off of.
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Post by W A L T E R on Jul 4, 2019 10:05:28 GMT -5
One of the things that has most struck me in AW is the supportiveness of the community. However, some of us are a bit more on the fringes socially and it can be harder to find people to bounce ideas off. For instance, some of the fed aren't in the FB chat because they aren't into social media. Some have only just joined, of course, and don't necessarily know where to turn. There's many generous people here who are happy to give feedback but sometimes it can be too much if open offers are put out for everyone (Odin = work rate BEAST LOL). I struggle bigtime with self doubt and get stuck in my head easily. I'm often too swayed by likes or lack thereof which don't always correlate closely to engagement or actual enjoyment. I also work better when in a creative process with others. I've reached out to someone more experienced and higher quality who I trust to act as an occasional mentor or sounding board. He's already being really helpful. Honest but encouraging with it. I want to complete the chain. Is there anyone here who maybe feels a bit alone and would like some support? I am offering to 1) discuss ideas with you, 2) give feedback on RPs/segments (I will read them extremely carefully) and 3) provide general encouragement/accountability/whatever. I promise to be honest but hopefully considerate and uplifting. Always constructive. For what it's worth, my credentials aren't yet much to write home about but I have at least 6 years of experience in e-wrestling across 5 feds over various spells since 1998. Please read my stuff if you haven't already and see if you think I might have anything to offer you personally. There's no point in you contacting me if you don't think we'll vibe or you don't connect with my work. It's nothing personal - it's important you be the best you as opposed to the best someone else. Compatibility is key in any sort of mentoring. I'll only do this for ONE person at the moment because I want to give that person my best. It might help if you're a newbie but you don't have to be. I'm busy with a 2 year old son but I'll do my utmost to help you as time permits. Please PM me with why you want the support. I'll consider all those who reach out (if anyone) and choose 1 on Friday. Also, everyone, feel free to use this thread to ask for OTHER people to help or offer support yourself to others. Full disclosure I don't read that much every week. I binge on an opponent when I face them but don't get to 50% of the RPs otherwise. BUT speaking in generalities, you might want to reach out to Teo regarding that self doubt and putting too much emphasis on views or likes or etc. He's struggled with that too and I really feel like in the last year or so of WCF he overcame it mightily and was more consistent and better for it.
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Post by Guillotine (QDT) on Jul 4, 2019 10:11:13 GMT -5
One of the things that has most struck me in AW is the supportiveness of the community. However, some of us are a bit more on the fringes socially and it can be harder to find people to bounce ideas off. For instance, some of the fed aren't in the FB chat because they aren't into social media. Some have only just joined, of course, and don't necessarily know where to turn. There's many generous people here who are happy to give feedback but sometimes it can be too much if open offers are put out for everyone (Odin = work rate BEAST LOL). I struggle bigtime with self doubt and get stuck in my head easily. I'm often too swayed by likes or lack thereof which don't always correlate closely to engagement or actual enjoyment. I also work better when in a creative process with others. I've reached out to someone more experienced and higher quality who I trust to act as an occasional mentor or sounding board. He's already being really helpful. Honest but encouraging with it. I want to complete the chain. Is there anyone here who maybe feels a bit alone and would like some support? I am offering to 1) discuss ideas with you, 2) give feedback on RPs/segments (I will read them extremely carefully) and 3) provide general encouragement/accountability/whatever. I promise to be honest but hopefully considerate and uplifting. Always constructive. For what it's worth, my credentials aren't yet much to write home about but I have at least 6 years of experience in e-wrestling across 5 feds over various spells since 1998. Please read my stuff if you haven't already and see if you think I might have anything to offer you personally. There's no point in you contacting me if you don't think we'll vibe or you don't connect with my work. It's nothing personal - it's important you be the best you as opposed to the best someone else. Compatibility is key in any sort of mentoring. I'll only do this for ONE person at the moment because I want to give that person my best. It might help if you're a newbie but you don't have to be. I'm busy with a 2 year old son but I'll do my utmost to help you as time permits. Please PM me with why you want the support. I'll consider all those who reach out (if anyone) and choose 1 on Friday. Also, everyone, feel free to use this thread to ask for OTHER people to help or offer support yourself to others. Full disclosure I don't read that much every week. I binge on an opponent when I face them but don't get to 50% of the RPs otherwise. BUT speaking in generalities, you might want to reach out to Teo regarding that self doubt and putting too much emphasis on views or likes or etc. He's struggled with that too and I really feel like in the last year or so of WCF he overcame it mightily and was more consistent and better for it. That's a good point, thanks man. I noticed a very similar tendency in Teo when I was going through some of his WCF posts this week in preparation for Glory. I could feel his pain at certain points. Teo Blaze - anything you can share that helped/helps for you regarding self doubt please?
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Teo Blaze
Professional Wrestler
Buy Gentburgercoin!
Posts: 331
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Post by Teo Blaze on Jul 4, 2019 10:29:24 GMT -5
Happy to!
Okay, so here's the thing, and I will try not to make this tooo long. But this is something that I think affects anybody who runs a character for a very long time, at least on some level because of sunk cost fallacy. There is nothing in the WORLD that stings worse than putting everything you have into a huge match, pouring heart, soul, losing sleep, and even if people applaud you, being the guy eating that pinfall on the main event of a pay-per-view.
Especially when you have real world obligations, even more so if you put aside something ("I missed my brother's birthday party to get this roleplay done") in real life that was important to you.
Because the thing I notice is that people tend to save things (and this is a good practice) for the big matches. Imagine for example that you've been saving a moment where your character's father is in a car accident, and on their deathbed, as your character is holding their dying parent's hand, the father slowly croaks out his last breath "I believe in you". Powerful stuff, but also something that you have been building up to for a long time, something you've been saving, something that you've been wanting to use as a payoff. You get done with that Roleplay and you look at yourself in the mirror and you know, you KNOW that you nailed it.
...And then you lose.
It's not just that you lost the match, it's not just that you know you could have done better, it's that feeling you get when you had a good idea, you put in the legwork, you lost the sleep, and you still couldn't break through that ceiling, you couldn't win your first world title, you just went up against that guy that always had your number (for me it was Dune lol).
To me, those are the moments of self-doubt when you just feel like you can't go on. NOT because you lost this match, although that's part of it, but because you lost THE match when you know, you KNOW you were at your best.
That is the mindset I tell people to watch out for. I can own up to the fact that around early 2018 I was very very burned out, and it finding motivation was harder and harder because it felt like there was nowhere to take the Teo character. At that point I'd been playing him since 2015 essentially non-stop. It felt like I had hit his ceiling and I was just spinning my wheels from that point forward.
But here's the thing, and if I could tell anyone who is feeling these exact same things just one piece of advice, this is what I would say, because this is what I learned from going to that bad place and staying there for way too long.
You don't know what your ceiling is.
You think you do, you think that you know what the best roleplay you've ever written is, and you will never top it. Hell, I have two roleplays that I STILL honestly believe are some of the best work I've ever done creatively, and I would be willing to bet that most people don't even remember them (since they're years old at this point).
But to mix a metaphor, a flower can't grow at the top of a mountain. I think we have this imaginary idea of progress, that if I just keep grinding away, just keep telling my story, then I'll be a "main event" writer, then I'll be the one to finally grab the world title. I can say without a doubt that I am blessed that I had the opportunity to win a World Championship before the doors closed. But I will also say that just one year prior, I would have told you point blank to your face that it was impossible to do that with Teo.
Because you don't know what you're capable of. You can't know what you're capable of, because you haven't sat down yet.
No matter what you think, no matter how good your last roleplay was, you CAN do better. You can evolve, you can grow, you can be that person you want to be.
But you gotta be a little zen about it sometimes. If you continue to put in that hard work, if you truly do your best to improve each week, you WILL get what you want.
...just not necessarily the way you thought you would get it.
I thought I would beat John Rabid at WAR and win the world title, but he got me clean.
I thought I would beat Dune at XIII for the world title, but he got me too.
I knew I wanted to win the world title, but I was getting too greedy in HOW I wanted to win it. If you had told me after either of those matches that "Hey, not only will you be World Champion, you're going to be the last f*cking champion of all time" I would have said "Stop trying to make me feel better. THIS IS THE BEST I'LL EVER BE" before going and staring at a wall.
Then one day I just said to myself "I need to stop worrying about things working out the way I want. I need to just be in the moment. Focus on winning every match and switching up Teo a little bit. Maybe the problem isn't my writing skills, maybe I'm drilling a dry well. I need to stop trying to put the mask back on and work with what I have". Always be moving forward, always be looking to evolve.
Kind of got a little ramble-y here, but that is the advice I would give for anyone feeling that. You don't know how good you can be, but I promise it's better than you think.
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Post by W A L T E R on Jul 4, 2019 10:30:19 GMT -5
Happy to! Okay, so here's the thing, and I will try not to make this tooo long. But this is something that I think affects anybody who runs a character for a very long time, at least on some level because of sunk cost fallacy. There is nothing in the WORLD that stings worse than putting everything you have into a huge match, pouring heart, soul, losing sleep, and even if people applaud you, being the guy eating that pinfall on the main event of a pay-per-view. Especially when you have real world obligations, even more so if you put aside something ("I missed my brother's birthday party to get this roleplay done") in real life that was important to you. Because the thing I notice is that people tend to save things (and this is a good practice) for the big matches. Imagine for example that you've been saving a moment where your character's father is in a car accident, and on their deathbed, as your character is holding their dying parent's hand, the father slowly croaks out his last breath "I believe in you". Powerful stuff, but also something that you have been building up to for a long time, something you've been saving, something that you've been wanting to use as a payoff. You get done with that Roleplay and you look at yourself in the mirror and you know, you KNOW that you nailed it. ...And then you lose. It's not just that you lost the match, it's not just that you know you could have done better, it's that feeling you get when you had a good idea, you put in the legwork, you lost the sleep, and you still couldn't break through that ceiling, you couldn't win your first world title, you just went up against that guy that always had your number (for me it was Dune lol). To me, those are the moments of self-doubt when you just feel like you can't go on. NOT because you lost this match, although that's part of it, but because you lost THE match when you know, you KNOW you were at your best. That is the mindset I tell people to watch out for. I can own up to the fact that around early 2018 I was very very burned out, and it finding motivation was harder and harder because it felt like there was nowhere to take the Teo character. At that point I'd been playing him since 2015 essentially non-stop. It felt like I had hit his ceiling and I was just spinning my wheels from that point forward. But here's the thing, and if I could tell anyone who is feeling these exact same things just one piece of advice, this is what I would say, because this is what I learned from going to that bad place and staying there for way too long. You don't know what your ceiling is. You think you do, you think that you know what the best roleplay you've ever written is, and you will never top it. Hell, I have two roleplays that I STILL honestly believe are some of the best work I've ever done creatively, and I would be willing to bet that most people don't even remember them (since they're years old at this point). But to mix a metaphor, a flower can't grow at the top of a mountain. I think we have this imaginary idea of progress, that if I just keep grinding away, just keep telling my story, then I'll be a "main event" writer, then I'll be the one to finally grab the world title. I can say without a doubt that I am blessed that I had the opportunity to win a World Championship before the doors closed. But I will also say that just one year prior, I would have told you point blank to your face that it was impossible to do that with Teo. Because you don't know what you're capable of. You can't know what you're capable of, because you haven't sat down yet. No matter what you think, no matter how good your last roleplay was, you CAN do better. You can evolve, you can grow, you can be that person you want to be. But you gotta be a little zen about it sometimes. If you continue to put in that hard work, if you truly do your best to improve each week, you WILL get what you want. ...just not necessarily the way you thought you would get it. I thought I would beat John Rabid at WAR and win the world title, but he got me clean. I thought I would beat Dune at XIII for the world title, but he got me too. I knew I wanted to win the world title, but I was getting too greedy in HOW I wanted to win it. If you had told me after either of those matches that "Hey, not only will you be World Champion, you're going to be the last f*cking champion of all time" I would have said "Stop trying to make me feel better. THIS IS THE BEST I'LL EVER BE" before going and staring at a wall. Then one day I just said to myself "I need to stop worrying about things working out the way I want. I need to just be in the moment. Focus on winning every match and switching up Teo a little bit. Maybe the problem isn't my writing skills, maybe I'm drilling a dry well. I need to stop trying to put the mask back on and work with what I have". Always be moving forward, always be looking to evolve. Kind of got a little ramble-y here, but that is the advice I would give for anyone feeling that. You don't know how good you can be, but I promise it's better than you think. You're the man, Teo.
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Post by Guillotine (QDT) on Jul 4, 2019 10:38:33 GMT -5
Great stuff, thanks for sharing it Teo.
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Post by Roger Payton Jr on Jul 4, 2019 10:40:39 GMT -5
Happy to! Okay, so here's the thing, and I will try not to make this tooo long. But this is something that I think affects anybody who runs a character for a very long time, at least on some level because of sunk cost fallacy. There is nothing in the WORLD that stings worse than putting everything you have into a huge match, pouring heart, soul, losing sleep, and even if people applaud you, being the guy eating that pinfall on the main event of a pay-per-view. Especially when you have real world obligations, even more so if you put aside something ("I missed my brother's birthday party to get this roleplay done") in real life that was important to you. Because the thing I notice is that people tend to save things (and this is a good practice) for the big matches. Imagine for example that you've been saving a moment where your character's father is in a car accident, and on their deathbed, as your character is holding their dying parent's hand, the father slowly croaks out his last breath "I believe in you". Powerful stuff, but also something that you have been building up to for a long time, something you've been saving, something that you've been wanting to use as a payoff. You get done with that Roleplay and you look at yourself in the mirror and you know, you KNOW that you nailed it. ...And then you lose. It's not just that you lost the match, it's not just that you know you could have done better, it's that feeling you get when you had a good idea, you put in the legwork, you lost the sleep, and you still couldn't break through that ceiling, you couldn't win your first world title, you just went up against that guy that always had your number (for me it was Dune lol). To me, those are the moments of self-doubt when you just feel like you can't go on. NOT because you lost this match, although that's part of it, but because you lost THE match when you know, you KNOW you were at your best. That is the mindset I tell people to watch out for. I can own up to the fact that around early 2018 I was very very burned out, and it finding motivation was harder and harder because it felt like there was nowhere to take the Teo character. At that point I'd been playing him since 2015 essentially non-stop. It felt like I had hit his ceiling and I was just spinning my wheels from that point forward. But here's the thing, and if I could tell anyone who is feeling these exact same things just one piece of advice, this is what I would say, because this is what I learned from going to that bad place and staying there for way too long. You don't know what your ceiling is. You think you do, you think that you know what the best roleplay you've ever written is, and you will never top it. Hell, I have two roleplays that I STILL honestly believe are some of the best work I've ever done creatively, and I would be willing to bet that most people don't even remember them (since they're years old at this point). But to mix a metaphor, a flower can't grow at the top of a mountain. I think we have this imaginary idea of progress, that if I just keep grinding away, just keep telling my story, then I'll be a "main event" writer, then I'll be the one to finally grab the world title. I can say without a doubt that I am blessed that I had the opportunity to win a World Championship before the doors closed. But I will also say that just one year prior, I would have told you point blank to your face that it was impossible to do that with Teo. Because you don't know what you're capable of. You can't know what you're capable of, because you haven't sat down yet. No matter what you think, no matter how good your last roleplay was, you CAN do better. You can evolve, you can grow, you can be that person you want to be. But you gotta be a little zen about it sometimes. If you continue to put in that hard work, if you truly do your best to improve each week, you WILL get what you want. ...just not necessarily the way you thought you would get it. I thought I would beat John Rabid at WAR and win the world title, but he got me clean. I thought I would beat Dune at XIII for the world title, but he got me too. I knew I wanted to win the world title, but I was getting too greedy in HOW I wanted to win it. If you had told me after either of those matches that "Hey, not only will you be World Champion, you're going to be the last f*cking champion of all time" I would have said "Stop trying to make me feel better. THIS IS THE BEST I'LL EVER BE" before going and staring at a wall. Then one day I just said to myself "I need to stop worrying about things working out the way I want. I need to just be in the moment. Focus on winning every match and switching up Teo a little bit. Maybe the problem isn't my writing skills, maybe I'm drilling a dry well. I need to stop trying to put the mask back on and work with what I have". Always be moving forward, always be looking to evolve. Kind of got a little ramble-y here, but that is the advice I would give for anyone feeling that. You don't know how good you can be, but I promise it's better than you think. The putting your heart and soul into a match and losing thing is fine as heel. Losing to Grime, hilarious. But as a face? Its fucking crushing. You have all the moral high ground, the story arc, the progression, the full circle storytelling crescendo...to lose to someone who murdered a friend of yours or something in the storyline as he memes and fat jokes you to defeat. Such is the competitive nature. It ain't always right, fair or sometimes even make sense but you just keep on truckin'.
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Deleted
Deleted Member
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Post by Deleted on Jul 4, 2019 11:18:58 GMT -5
As we all know, combat sports are only about getting up. I wish those were my words of wisdom: They're not. Just a slurry of every boxer movie, blended with 151 until finely pureed and poured delightful into a fish bowl. The fact remains: You gotta get up to stay in this business - because the second you don't, then why are you here? If you can't keep wanting to break down the walls around you, what more can a string of pronouns, objects and verbal abuse do that a dying heart refuses to do for them. Harden your heart. Steel for the days ahead... and do it not for yourself, side plots or bored use of otherwise valuable creativity - but for world title shots!
*rides off on a horse because wtfn?*
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Post by Derrick Vayden on Jul 4, 2019 19:26:40 GMT -5
Don’t let Q’s modesty fool you. This guy knows what he’s talking about. He’s firm but more than fair. He’ll tell you exactly what you’re doing wrong but then give you suggestions on how to fix it. I think anyone who is able to get guidance from him is a very lucky person.
Hell, I’ll take him on his offer if y’all don’t. Lol!
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Post by Corey Bull on Jul 4, 2019 19:49:24 GMT -5
To something RPJ said, it isn't fine as a heel to lose.
When I play a character, I know I lean heel more then I have ever leaned face. Especially with Bull, as it is very hard to put him in a face position with the way the character is built. Not impossible, just difficult. But regardless, heel, face, tweener, transgender alien....you should always be attempting to put your best foot forward. And I have been in some really big matches where I had that "efed boner" after I wrote my rp. Just...perfect, nailed it....and then got handed a foot to the ass. It can crush you regardless of the characters alignment. I don't think it is truly easy....but you have to look at what happened and just find a way to elevate your game. Maybe it is a new storyline that you want to do or a new feud or maybe even a new direction. But finding a way to elevate your game and eliviate some of your frustration is what I prescribe for big time losses. I do it all the time.
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Post by Guillotine (QDT) on Jul 5, 2019 9:05:55 GMT -5
No one's taken me up on my offer. Still open for BIZNATH. Don't be shy if you are considering it.
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Post by Derrick Vayden on Jul 5, 2019 12:47:18 GMT -5
I wanted to wait for a newer person to sign up but I’ll take up your offer if you don’t mind, my dude
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Post by Guillotine (QDT) on Jul 5, 2019 13:43:47 GMT -5
I wanted to wait for a newer person to sign up but I’ll take up your offer if you don’t mind, my dude Would love to. Vayden = ❤️
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