When I first started searching serious feedback for my writing, I thought it was awesome. Because the first handful of people who read it gave me some fantastic input. And by fantastic, I mean they told me I ruled and so did my stories.

Not super helpful, but amazing for the newbie writer’s ego. And then someone didn’t like it. Not only that, but they didn’t get it. You’ve seen the feedback before. “I don’t understand what you’re trying to say here.”

And I sputtered, and I gasped, and I said “but how could you not get it?”

Over time, I learned there’s a line to be walked. If no one gets it, something probably needs to be clarified. If everyone except one person gets it, there may not be anything you can do.

The trick is, figuring out the difference between the two. It’s been a difficult thing for me, but I’m actually learning the lessons from my blog posts, instead of from my writing.

If a bunch of you respond, and your responses have nothing to do with what I was thinking when I wrote the post, I realize I’ve missed something. That’s when it’s a good chance to go back and see what I said that could be interpreted differently, and learn from that. On the other hand, when everyone who responds understands my point, except for maybe one person, I have to step back and ask myself if I miscommunicated, or if we’re just speaking a different dialect from each other.

I guess this is kind of a muddled thought. One of those that I’ll look back on and wonder why I thought it was supposed to convey my meaning. But I think my overall point is, you can’t make sense to all the people all the time.

So if you’ve tried and tried and tried to make yourself clear, and almost everyone gets it, but there’s just one person who doesn’t see eye-to-eye with you, maybe it’s not your fault. It’s not theirs either. No one is to blame. The two of you just communicate differently/have different views/different experiences about the topic at hand.

Don’t beat yourself up over it, and don’t blame them. Walk away, agree to disagree (even if it’s just a silent concession in your head), and move on.

Any suggestions on how to approach misunderstandings from a new perspective to help straighten them out?