Space, click, right arrow or send a message in a bottle asking to see the next slide. Please read the notes and credits first if you're in the fan studio! 3-in-1 combo episode for the ultimate conclusion! Yeah, I know the writing style is a bit different for this episode, but two years of being a writing major does that to you. I hope I at least managed to give you some closure on the characters, but if you're unsatisfied with this ending, I encourage you to go out and make your own ending. The story isn't over until you say it's over.
Hey guys! Welcome to the very last episode of HIDDEN! It's been an eventful ride, but now it's over (Finally). I felt like I owed you guys a word of explanation regarding this piece, in particular, about why I dropped off the face of the earth and why I came back to this. The dropping off the earth is the easy part to explain. I went to college and simply didn't have time to keep up with this anymore. Why I came back is going to take a sec. I could say something about how I increased the speed at which I can write (Now I can compose and type almost 100 words per minute) so that I managed to find time to write in my schedule, but that would only be telling you how I finished this and you really deserve to know why. You see, I am now an english and writing major in college, and I have yet to take a writing class that I have not loved! One thing people tell me a lot is that I am a great workshopper, and that there are few things I am better at than encouraging other writers. And I owe a lot of that to you guys! See, before I made HIDDEN, believe it or not, I didn't think of myself as a good writer. I've always loved writing, but I always saw it as a hobby more than a career. I'd written some novels, but the best I could think of them was that they might earn me a little pocket money when I went out and got a real job. I just couldn't convince myself that people would actually want to read what I'd written. Then, when I wrote HIDDEN, I received such a great outpouring of love and support, and that's when I realized that people actually enjoyed reading what I wrote! Your encouragement helped me to realize that I really want to make a career out of writing. So I switched my majors and now I'm in it for the long-haul! So this ending really is a thank-you to all of you for all your help and support. Now whenever people ask me for workshopping advice, I give them a simple lesson that I learned on Scratch all those years ago: It costs you nothing to encourage a writer, but it might mean everything to the writer.