^ this leads me to a question!
When you are writing and you become conflicted about a direction you want your story to go in, do you tend to go with your gut? Do you refuse to change your mind and stick with what you had originally planned or do you let your readers influence your decisions? Any or all of the above?
Good question! When that happens, I tend to stop writing and go write something else instead (*cough*GuiltyRoads*cough*).
LOL Honestly, that's a tough question. I try to go with my gut, and I'm not afraid to alter my original idea slightly if it will make it more realistic to the characters and situations I've created in the story. Where I struggle is when my gut is saying, "Your whole idea is flawed." I haven't figured out the trick to completely retooling an idea once the story is started. That's when writer's block happens for me.
As far as letting readers influence my decisions, yes and no. I have let readers influence my decisions in a negative way before, but I think I've learned my lesson about that. When I wrote You'll Never Walk Alone like 10 years ago, the readers guessed who the real killer was early on... and it was supposed to be a mystery, so I stole the Scream twist and added a second killer... which didn't make much sense because her motive was weak and weird. I should have just stuck to the original killer only and let my readers feel good that they cracked the case because I suck at writing mysteries LOL. I learned my lesson and didn't change anything in Secrets of the Heart.
That said, I do value my readers' opinions; if I didn't, I wouldn't post stories while they were in progress. Sometimes their feedback does influence the rest of the story. It doesn't change the whole direction of the story, but it does help me decide what to emphasize, de-emphasize, or clarify in future chapters. Sometimes I will even let my readers vote on things in the story, as long as I'm willing to go with whatever choice they make. I did that with BMS, and I knew either path would be "fun" to write and ultimately lead to the same destination, but I let the readers choose which route to go because I couldn't decide. I just don't let them change my mind on things I've already decided, like whether characters will end up together or apart, whether they'll live or die, etc. Those major decisions are mine to make, and I make them based on what fits the characters and the story the best.