We all have them. However, I've noticed some writers think their strengths are their weaknesses and vice versa. If you read the fine print in red under weakness in the cartoon above, you'll see it says to "work out or remain weak". And that, my friends, is what novelists do. They keep working out their weaknesses in manuscripts that either get shoved in a drawer or taken to the basement and crammed in boxes or doted on until they find favor either with the writer or a publishing professional. What other choice do we have?
So. You want to know my weakness(es)? I'll tell you. In my estimation it's the points after A to F which will lead to X, Y, and Z. I roll into the story and then experience some confusion or meltdown before proceeding on pace to the end. It's filling out the plot. Being a seat-of-the-pantser, I rarely do any kind of external stimulus such as outlining, story boards, notebooks, or whatever highly efficient writers do to keep their stories on track.
Complexity. My life is rarely complex. Yeah, there've been some rough years with lots of confusion, hard times, struggle and strife, but those things are usually accompanied by intense emotional distress, not diverse complexities. So I tend to write for everyday people and invest a great deal of emotional crisis rather than the convoluted plot pieces which must be tightly knit together with the twists nearing the end. I'm not that clever.
Will you share your writing weakness(es)?
Lord, you know all my many weaknesses and yet you love me, you give me stories to tell, you saved my soul. You are the Wonder of all wonders. I'm desperate for you. In the Name of Jesus, Amen.