Your work is so beautiful and inspiring. Do you have any tips for people when it comes to writing??? Ive been interested in making comics for a long time, but I feel like I struggle to put together a proper storyline without it falling apart.
Thank you! That's kind to say and I'm glad you dig my stuff. Making things is hard! I'll pass along what has helped me, but:
Caveat #1: I don't know you or your writing goals so any advice I offer will necessarily be either general or specific to what works for me.
Caveat #2: Comics writing and comics drawing are, to me, the same process. Drawing is the final step in the writing process. I do not conceive of the steps separately, so I cannot speak to making comics without drawing them (others can). All of this advice is given with the idea that "writing comics" means one person doing the entirety of the artistic task.
Above all, you've got to enjoy the process and have fun with it. As the creator, the project is yours only when you are making it. Once it's out in the world, it takes on its own life in the minds of readers. It's out of your hands. That's the magic of creation. Learn how you enjoy to create and exist within your project to find validation from the creative process itself. Don't expect or require validation to come once the project is out of your hands.
So: make comics for the sake of making comics. Even if only a few friends read them; even if you don't share them at all.
Narrative structure varies incredibly across time and culture--and even within a time and a culture. Naked Lunch and Star Wars share very little structure in common despite both being science fiction created by white American men in the 20th Century. What type of story are you trying to tell? That will greatly guide your approach to writing. Whole artistic movements are based around the idea of automatic writing, writing from the id, or writing without conforming to traditional structure or notions of character, or continuity, etc. Others conform strictly to established structures and can be taught and learned through existing structures (books, classes, workshops, etc.).
So: figure out what sort of writing you want to do, and study that type of writing across media to learn theory and practice for how it's created.
Not all writing has to be commercial writing. Not all commercial writing is the same. But because generally writing commercially requires many people involved at many steps, it requires you to front-load the structure of a project. For example: editors will need a summary of your story (beginning, middle, end) to sell it to the publisher.All that has to be thought of up front instead of as you go along.
This is a wholly different step from actually writing a project, but one that is helpful to develop even if you aren't aiming for commercial publication. It's like learning to do thumbnail sketches before drawing a finished piece: learn to problem solve composition quickly at a basic shape level, and you'll spend less time fiddling around rendering final touches wondering why the piece isn't coming together.
My mom writes for fun, and showed me Randy Ingermanson's Snowflake Method. I'd recommend reading that article (it's not long). His method is first writing your story in one sentence, then expanding that one sentence into one paragraph, then that paragraph into one page. Essentially, you're starting with the constituent parts of a commercial pitch (logline, summary, outline, etc.). You're front-loading all the hard work of constructing your plot and character arcs. Like creating a road map for your story: once you know your final destination and the important stops along the way, the rest of the details can be aligned to or arranged within that structure.
You may still be writing exploratively. Learning what you like, how to build tension, what a story means to you, etc. Keep at it. Exploration is essential to finding your voice. But if you're frustrated with where writing intuitively has gotten you, try that method of writing intentionally. It may be hard, but it can be another tool to use. If anything, it'll at least be some helpful mental calisthenics.
Good luck & happy writing