Shut up. Just sit there and shut up.
You don't know what you're doing, or why. You're thinking in completely the wrong terms, so just stop it. No -- I said no, you're doing it again -- stop.
Clearer?
Good.
The second person narrative: a dangerous experimental weapon deriving from the earliest days of the English novel. Prior to this, you-forms confined themselves to romantic poetry, where "you" was usually a way of flattering the reader into believing they were the adored "she".
Theoretically designed to encourage reader engagement with a new form, I'm undivided on the question of usage: avoid. About 40% of people in England will be captured by it -- a good result -- but 60% will be repelled: it is an invasive construction. Perhaps less restrained US readers and confirmed narcissists would be more susceptible.
Myself, I'm in the captured camp; I'm pathetically suggestible, but even I have limits. Iain Banks' Song of Stone used a second-person narrative to deadly boring effect. I think its intimacy tricked him into letting his guard down; it ended up as sludge.
Second-person prose: dangerous to readers and writers.
You know what I mean, don't you?
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i do! i'm not gonna say i'm laid back, but i tense up even more when i begin a new story and discover that dreaded 2nd person pov. reading 2nd person is like receiving a long lecture from someone sure they know you but who really don't at all. total stranger. beyond eccentric and tiptoeing into annoying.
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