Why is it so hard to evaluate one’s own writing?
I think the answer may be found in something I’ve often said, “Writers don’t write writing, they write reading.” The stranger who comes to your writing responds solely to the text because there are no hints, prompts, or suggestions about that text. Such readers only see what is there, and will respond accordingly. The writer of the text, however, brings an array of added information and emotion to the text.
I was recently reading the memoir of a prominent writer, who wrote about using the particular eccentric character traits of a close relation to express the thoughts of a long gone queen of England. Writers do this sort of thing all the time.
But if the passage is written in such a way that a reader cannot grasp the moment, what remains is a passage which only moves the writer, for his words are infused with his memory. For the reader, who does not have that memory, the emotion is not there. In other words, it’s not the emotion in the writer that matters. It is the skill of the writer in conveying that emotion to the reader which is vital.You write a passage about some real emotion, and when you read it over it evokes the same emotion—but it’s not in the text. It is in you. In short, it’s hard to critique your own work, not because of what you have written, but because of what you have not written.
What you feel is helpful. But what matters is your skill in communicating the feeling to readers.