Hrm.. I also have that habit, but in my case I often feel I am going back to see if my intention was clear as some distance let’s me see it with relatively fresh eyes. I’m a little confused that you think it serves the opposite purpose for you. What’s you’re frame of mind when re-reading what you have wrote? Do you not notice sources of error after there has been some time separation?
A critical and focused rereading is my goal when I start; however my focus is not long lasting, and the process inevitably devolves into mindless retreading of whatever trail of thought I wish I was communicating, with little effort devoted to verifying that this is how I should realistically expect to be interpreted. It is repetition past this point which I suspect is motivated primarily by a desire to feel self-assured. I was wrong to believe that I could treat this behavior as evidence of ambiguity when its cause is likely unrelated to the specific content of my writing.
Do you not notice sources of error after there has been some time separation?
This is the one thing I’ve found which reliably helps.
By the way, thanks a lot for the work you’ve put into this group!
Hrm.. I also have that habit, but in my case I often feel I am going back to see if my intention was clear as some distance let’s me see it with relatively fresh eyes. I’m a little confused that you think it serves the opposite purpose for you. What’s you’re frame of mind when re-reading what you have wrote? Do you not notice sources of error after there has been some time separation?
A critical and focused rereading is my goal when I start; however my focus is not long lasting, and the process inevitably devolves into mindless retreading of whatever trail of thought I wish I was communicating, with little effort devoted to verifying that this is how I should realistically expect to be interpreted. It is repetition past this point which I suspect is motivated primarily by a desire to feel self-assured. I was wrong to believe that I could treat this behavior as evidence of ambiguity when its cause is likely unrelated to the specific content of my writing.
This is the one thing I’ve found which reliably helps.
By the way, thanks a lot for the work you’ve put into this group!