When asked this, my first answer is “because I can”, which usually ends the conversation but it’s an escape, not an answer, I’ll admit to that.
I started writing because I wanted to make real and concrete all the stories in my mind. I wanted to write what I wanted to read. And I still keep some of my very early writing amd smile when I go back to them.
After some time, I started focusing on the stories that somehow explored an interest of mine. Then I learned I could explore not only what interested me but write about what I think reality should be like.
I don’t have a favoured genre.
I have romances, sci-fi and fantasy stories in my writings, in several degrees of development. I’ve wet my toes on dystopias, zombie apocalypse, hollow utopias, time travel, war…
But somehow, and this is something I see as a flaw, even when I want to paint a world in broad strokes, make it twisted, gratuitously violent or corrupt, non-sensically irreal, I always fall down to characters and how they act, think and speak. About what they do, what was or what should be.
I criticize reality in my writings. I write to show what should be. What can be. How I see what being human means. The suffering we inflict upon ourselves and others. And often try to be the devil’s advocate, see and tell the story from the other side. I don’t feel the need to picture the world.
If any of what I write ever reaches the hands of readers, I want to gift people with a moment of peace and, hopefully, insert small, rebellious ideas in their minds.
Enough about me.
What is your answer?
I write out of spite.
Valid.
For what?
I enjoy it. I enjoy crafting together the various pieces and then polishing it to make it something I feel good about. Plus, it keeps my mind challenged.
Writing is our mirror. We write to reflect on our true self, to identify what is real and what is just a facade; being truthful and honest and deeply reflective and peeling layer by layer of what being a human is, what the human experience is and so on, because only when you fully understand who you are, will you be able to understand what your problems are and what your solutions might be. It is the underlying desire for (and path to) self-actualization - who are you, what is your purpose, what are your doing, and what you outta be doing. Spreading joy and how to be kind to yourself and to others around you is where I’d say most of that soul-searching takes us.
PS: I don’t write fiction at all, only my thoughts and ideas and reflections of realityStill valid, regardless.

