Did you know that Americans buy 7.4 billion greeting cards in a
year? And if you apply your calculator to the task, you will be
one of Americans who buy 235 cards per second! Not to disparage
the greeting card industry or anything, but you can make your
own greeting cards, too.
You can make your cards more personalized, which definitely
beats buying a store-bought card. Just get your reliable Cross
pen and pencils, coloring materials and envelopes, plus a
healthy dose of artistic inclination. As for writing the
messages, here are a few helpful tips for you.
Write For a Specific Person
You have to express yourself - emotions, angst and passion
included - and share yourself with the person you are making the
card for. Though expressing yourself can be harder than most
other activities, you have the advantage of writing and
re-writing your thoughts on paper with your Cross pen.
Unlike the spoken word, the written word can be edited as many
times as you like until you come up with the right words. You
need to aim for the "right words" rather than the "perfect
words" lest you sound too edited and artificial. And do not
depend on your Cross pen to do the writing for you either! You
have to work on it.
Also, you should take the "me to you" approach in writing your
message. For example, writing "I am sorry for hurting you" is
way better than "The situation was not in my control and for
that, I apologize". You are asking for a personal apology, not
giving a business explanation (which is better covered by a
business letter)!
Develop Your Own Writing Style
You can either mimic your favorite greeting card writers'
styles or you can develop your own. The latter is highly
suggested for obvious reasons, originality and personalization
among them.
Since most greeting cards are written in poetry, you can learn
poetry, too. As the movie "Mr. Deeds" showed moviegoers, your
first efforts might be funny to some and horrendous to others.
But if you keep at it and inject real passion into your verses,
you will eventually do it right. Just be sure to keep a
handy-dandy paper and your dependable Cross pen to write your
thoughts whenever inspiration (or Erato or Polyhymnia or
Calliope, all Muses of poetry) strikes.
This begs the question of "to rhyme or not to rhyme?" Depending
on your mood and mode, you can actually do both, so long as the
emotion is there.
Write Tight
If you will look closely, off-the-rack greeting cards are
written tightly. A specific emotion is expressed in a few words
but they still pack in a wallop, which you should aim for. When
you write tight, you are actually writing in a conventional
manner, only very much shorter in content but not in substance.
In short, keep it sweet and short. (And do not include "stupid"
because you have to give yourself slack; you are just starting
out, after all.)
Who knows? Someday, you might be one of the authors of those
7.4 billion greeting cards!
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