Here is your card for Bad Things Happen Bingo. Happy writing!

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Not today Justin
styofa doing anything
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Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
I'd rather be in outer space đ¸
Sade Olutola
wallacepolsom
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

tannertan36
Aqua Utopiaď˝ćľˇăŽĺşă§č¨ćśăç´Ąă

Janaina Medeiros
DEAR READER

titsay
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
Sweet Seals For You, Always
Mike Driver
Monterey Bay Aquarium
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@donthateme01
Here is your card for Bad Things Happen Bingo. Happy writing!
speaking of Ao3 not being a social medium:
it will always need money. Itâs an archive. Even if they meet their yearly donation aim now without any problem doesnât mean it will be like this in 5 years, in 10 years, in 80 years. Yeah you read that right. Ao3 is an Archive. It intends to be available forever. Like a library. Because Ao3 *is* a library. If you want to keep your library, you wouldnât cut its budget just because it did well last year. Maintaining a library creates running expenses. The purpose of an archive is to preserve data indefinitely, and this costs money.
#AO3 #Keep on reading #Protect what we love #Protect our creations
hey here's your any fandom angst bingo card, if you need any changes please let me know. we also have a discord if you'd like to join just shoot me a message and i will send you the link
Thank you so much for the card! I would love to join the discord server if you don't mind me merely lurking about. :-)
exactly
The fact that the quote is from Lev Grossman makes this 100 times better omg
#This is why we write #Fan fiction #Perfect quote #Lev Grossman
âCompliment people. If you think a good thing about someone, thereâs no harm in saying it aloud.â
â Unknown
#Be kind #It's the small things that matter
#pride month #everone is loved
Me sittinâ here, seriously concerned for all the young kids who are gonnaâ grow up in this fandom environment thinking theyâre secretly evil monsters because their sex fantasies arenât strictly pure or vanilla or because they ship something with an unhealthy dynamic. Soooooo many people must hate/be terrified of themselves.
HeyâŚâŚ.hey kidsâŚâŚ.
Youâre fuckinâ fine.
The human brain is weird. Sex fantasies â actual desires. If you ask yourself, âwould I want to act out this thing in real lifeâ and the answer is âfuck no,â then youâre fine. Shipping is also not an indicator of what you would condone in real life. You are not secretly a monster. You are a human being. Human beings are complicated. Please calm down and treat yourself to a smoothie or something.
âWhat you want to read aboutâ is not the same as âwhat you want to happen in your real life.âÂ
The murder mystery industry has no problem understanding this.Â
The entire âhorrorâ genre is built on this. Ditto âthrillersâ, and indeed most other genres. In fact, possibly the only genre which isnât inherently built on this assumption is âromanceâ, and even there⌠well, thereâs a lot of romance stories which are basically about âI want to experience catharsisâ rather than âI want this to happen to meâ (consider Wuthering Heights, for example - Heathcliff and Catherine are great to read about, but they would each be hell to live with).Â
This also means if youâre asexual but you still like reading stories where people fuck? Youâre still asexual. If youâre aromantic and enjoy reading romances, youâre still aromantic. If youâre non-heterosexual and enjoy reading heterosexual porn (because hey, thereâs more of it and itâs easier to find than anything else, right?) then youâre still not heterosexual.Â
The only thing your taste in reading says anything about is your taste in reading.Â
#reading stays reading #you are normal #don't ever doubt yourself
Writing Reminders
Create whole new worlds every day
Write that trope you want to write
Give your WIPs a rest, you can always come back to them
Drop a WIP if it just doesn't feel right
Write as slow or as fast as you need to
Ignore that writing advice if it doesn't work for you
Create characters that are a mix of all your own insecurities and personality traits
Create characters that are nothing like you
Don't get discouraged by other people's writing
Seek inspiration from every place you can get it
Write that imperfect first draft, you'll make it beautiful later
Writing is a wonderful thing to do, so do what makes you happy
#writing advice #be your own writer # be your own biggest critic #be your own biggest fan #creative writing #creativepromptsforwriting
Awesome Sites and Links for Writers
Just about every writer out there has several go-to websites that they use when it comes to their writing. Be it for creativity, writerâs block, to put you in the mood or general writing help. These are mine and I listed them in hopes that youâll find something that youâll like or find something useful. Iâve also included some websites that sounded interesting, but I havenât tried out yet.
Spelling & Grammar
Grammar Girl â Grammar Girlâs famous Quick and Dirty Tips (delivered via blog or podcast) will help you keep your creative writing error free.
The Owl â is Purdue Universityâs Online Writing Lab (OWL), an academic source from Purdue University (which is in West Lafayette, Indiana, U.S.). Itâs contains plenty of grammar guides, style tips and other information that can help with your writing, itâs especially great for academics.
Tip of My Tongue â have you ever had trouble of thinking of a specific word that you canât remember what it is? Well, this site will help you narrow down your thoughts and find that word youâve been looking for. It can be extremely frustrating when you have to stop writing because you get a stuck on a word, so this should help cut that down.Â
Free Rice â is a great way to test your vocabulary knowledge. Whatâs even better about this site is that with every correct answer, they donate 10 grains of rice to the United Nations World Food Program. So, please disable your adblock since they use the ads on the site to generate the money to buy the rice.
HyperGrammar â is from the University of Ottawa (a bilingual public research university in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada) that offers up a one-stop guide for proper spelling, structure, and punctuation. Being that this comes from a Canadian university, that means that they use standard Oxford English Dictionary spelling. Basically that means youâll get British English, which differs slightly from formal American English.
AutoCrit â the AutoCrit Editing Wizard analyzes your manuscript to identify areas for improvement, including pacing and momentum, dialogue, strong writing, word choice and repetition. It also provides a number of other writing resources as well. Itâs not free, but they do offer 200 characters for analysis at no charge. Itâs $29.97 per month or $359.64 for an annual membership.Â
Virtual Writing Tutor â is a free online grammar check website that helps writers count words, check spelling, check grammar and punctuation, check paraphrasing, and improve word choice. This website is free to use, and membership is also completely free. Non-members are only able to check 500 words though.
ProWritingAid â is another automatic editing tool that analyzes your writing and produces reports on areas such as overused words, writing style, sentence length, grammar and repeated words and phrases. They offer a free sample, but you have to make an account to try it out. Itâs $3.33 per month ($40 annually, or less if you purchase a longer license).
Scribens â is a free English spelling and grammar checker. It also detects stylistic elements such as repetitions, run-on sentences, redundancies, and more. And it even suggests synonyms for every word.
Writerâs Digest â learn how to improve your writing, find an agent, and even get published with the help of the varied blogs on this site.
Paper Rater â uses Artificial Intelligence to improve your writing. It includes grammar, plagiarism, and spelling check, along with word choice analysis. The basic version is completely free, but they do offer premium subscription for people seeking more advanced features. If youâre interested itâs $14.95 per month or $95.40 per year if you decide to get it.
Syntaxis â it allows you to test your knowledge of grammar with a ten-question quiz. The questions change every time you take the quiz so users are sure to be challenged each time around. It definitely helps writers know if thereâs something that they need to brush up on.
Word Frequency Counter â this counter allows you to count the frequency usage of each word in your text. This is especially good when you have a bad habit of using certain words like âreallyâ, âveryâ or âa lotâ in your writing.
GrammarCheck â is a free, easy, and secure online tool to proofread any English text.
EditMinion â is a free robotic copy editor that helps you to refine your writing by finding common mistakes.
Proofreading for Common Errors â this is a simple tutorial on proofreading your writing by Indiana University.
BBC â has a section for helping you with your skills, especially in writing, from grammar to spelling, to reading, to listening and to speaking.
Tools
Copyscape â is a free service that you can use to learn if anyone has plagiarized your work. Itâs pretty useful for those that want to check for fanfiction plagiarism.
Plagium â is another a copy detection system, that provides a very similar service to Copyscape and uses Yahoo! rather than Google to perform its searches. Just keep in mind that searches for simple text up to 25,000 characters remains free of charge, but any larger requires credits to be purchase.
Plagiarism Detector â is a free software that can be used to check for plagiarism in documents and URL links. It offers only a limit of 800 words for free. This also supports 12 languages, including English, Malay, Arabic, Indonesian and more.Â
DupliChecker â is a free and accurate online tool to check plagiarism. Just Copy & Paste to detect copied content. However, it offers 1000 words limit per search for free, if you want to check more than that, then you have to create a PRO account which costs $10/monthly for the basic plan.
Write or Die â is an web application for Windows, Mac and Linux which aims to eliminate writerâs block by providing consequences for procrastination. It lets you try it for free, but the desktop version is available for $10. The Write or Die iPad app is $9.99 in the app store. If youâre really old school, the original web app can still be launched with its modest settings.
Written? Kitten! â is similar to Write or Die, but itâs a kinder version and itâs completely free. They use positive reinforcement, so every time you reach a goal they reward you with an adorable picture of a kitten.
Fast Fingers â offers you an easy way to improve your typing skills. Itâs puts you through a quick typing game that tests your typing speed and improves it at the same time. Itâs also a great way for writers to warm up.
Information & Data
RefDesk â it has an enormous collection of reference materials, searchable databases and other great resources that canât be found anywhere else. Itâs great to use when you need to find something and/or check your facts.
Bib Me â it makes it easy to create citations, build bibliographies and acknowledge other peopleâs work. This is definitely something that academics will love. Itâs basically a bibliography generator that automatically fills in a works cited page in MLA, APA, Chicago or Turbian formats.
Internet Public Library â is a non-profit, largely student-run website managed by a consortium, headed by Drexel University. Currently this online library is inactive, but itâs still full of resources that are free for anyone to use, from newspaper and magazine articles to special collections. Just keep in mind that itâs not up to date, since they stopped maintaining it on June 30, 2015.
The Library of Congress â if youâre looking for primary documents and information, the Library of Congress is a great place to start. It has millions of items in its archives, many of which are accessible right from the website.
Social Security Administration: Popular Baby Names â is the most accurate list of popular names from 1879 to the present. If your character is from America and you need a name for them, this gives you a accurate list of names, just pick the state or decade that your character is from.
WebMDÂ â is a handy medical database loaded with information. Itâs not a substitute for a doctor, but can give you a lot of good information on diseases, symptoms, treatments, etc.
MedlinePlus â is the National Institutes of Healthâs web site that contains information about diseases, conditions, and wellness issues in language you can understand. It also offers reliable, up-to-date health information, anytime, anywhere, for free. You can use the site to learn about the latest treatments, look up information on a drug or supplement, find out the meanings of words, or view medical videos or illustrations. You can also get links to the latest medical research on your topic or find out about clinical trials on a disease or condition.
Mayo Clinic â is a nonprofit medical practice and medical research group.
World Health Organization (WHO) â is a specialized agency of the United Nations that is concerned with international public health. Its current priorities include communicable diseases, in particular HIV/AIDS, Ebola, malaria and tuberculosis; the mitigation of the effects of non-communicable diseases; sexual and reproductive health, development, and ageing; nutrition, food security and healthy eating; occupational health; substance abuse; and driving the development of reporting, publications, and networking.
Google Scholar â is an online, freely accessible search engine that lets users look for both physical and digital copies of articles. It searches a wide variety of sources, including academic publishers, universities, and preprint depositories and so on. While Google Scholar does search for print and online scholarly information, it is important to understand that the resource is not a database.
The Old Farmerâs Almanac â this classic almanac offers yearly information on astronomical events, weather conditions and forecasts, recipes, and gardening tips.
State Health Facts â Kaiser Family Foundation provides this database, full of health facts on a state-by-state basis that address everything from medicare to womenâs health.
U.S. Census Bureau â you can learn more about the trends and demographics of America with information drawn from the Census Bureauâs online site.
Wikipedia â this shouldnât be used as your sole source, but it can be a great way to get basic information and find out where to look for additional references, which is at the bottom in the citations section.Â
Finding Data on the Internet â a great website that list links that can tell you where you can find the inflation rate, crime statistics, and other data.
Word References
RhymeZone â whether youâre writing poetry, songs, or something else entirely, you can get help rhyming words with this site.
Acronym Finder â with more than 565,000 human-edited entries, Acronym Finder is the worldâs largest and most comprehensive dictionary of acronyms, abbreviations, and initials.
Symbols.com â is a unique online encyclopedia that contains everything about symbols, signs, flags and glyphs arranged by categories such as culture, country, religion, and more.Â
OneLook Reverse Dictionary â is a dictionary that lets you describe a concept and get back a list of words and phrases related to that concept. Your description can be a few words, a sentence, a question, or even just a single word.Â
The Alternative Dictionaries â is a PDF, that contains a list of slang words in all types of languages, such as Arabic, Chinese, Japanese, Norwegian and many, many others. There use to be a website, but itâs not there anymore and this is the next best thing I could find.
Online Etymology Dictionary â it gives you the history and derivation of any word. Etymologies are not definitions; theyâre explanations of what our words meant and how they sounded 600 or 2,000 years ago.
MediLexicon â is a comprehensive dictionary of medical, pharmaceutical, biomedical, and health care abbreviations and acronyms.
Merriam Webster Online â the online version of the classic dictionary also provides a thesaurus and a medical dictionary.
Multilingual Dictionary â it translate whatever you need from 30 different languages with this easy-to-use site.
Collins Online Dictionary â is a free online dictionary and reference resource draw on the wealth of reliable and authoritative information about language, thanks to the extensive use of their vast databases of language; both in English and in other languages.
Writing Software
Open Office â why pay for Microsoft products when you can create free documents with Open Office? This open source software provides similar tools to the Microsoft Office Suite, including spreadsheets, a word processor, the ability to create multimedia presentations, and more.
LibreOffice â is a free and open source office suite. It was forked from OpenOffice.org in 2010, which was an open-sourced version of the earlier StarOffice. The LibreOffice suite comprises programs to do word processing, spreadsheets, slideshows, diagrams and drawings, maintain databases, and compose math formula.
Scrivener â is not a free program, but itâs certainly a very popular one. It's great for organizing research, planning drafts, and writing novels, articles, short stories, and even screenplays.
OmmWriter â is for Mac OS X, a free simple text processor that gives you a distraction free environment. So you can focus only on your writing without being tempted or distracted by other programs on your computer. They are currently working on a Windows version of their software as well, so keep an eye out for that if youâre interested.
FocusWriter â is a completely free full-screen writing application designed to immerse you in your writing. It keeps your writing space simple and clean without sacrificing functionality. It includes a daily goal tracker, work count and time spent writing. Thereâs also spell checking, real-time feedback on variables like word and page count, and tabbed document browsing. It's available for Windows, Mac and Linux.
Q10 â is a free portable distraction-free writing tool for Windows. The interface includes nothing but a tiny bar at the bottom that displays the character, word, and page countâyou can toggle the bar off for a totally distraction free workspace.Â
Evernote â is a free app for your smartphone and computer that stores everything you could possibly imagine losing track of, like a boarding pass, receipt, article you want to read, to do list, or even a simple typed note. The app works brilliantly, keeping everything in sync between your computer, smartphone, or tablet. Itâs definitely a useful app for writers when you have ideas on the go.
ScriptBuddy â is a full-fledged screenplay software program. It handles the proper screenplay format automatically, so you can concentrate on your story. It is easy to use and the basic version is free.
TheSage â is a free application, which is a comprehensive English dictionary and thesaurus that provides a number of useful and in some cases unusual search tools.
Sigil â is ideal for e-book authors because it's a free EPUB editor with a stack of essential features.
WriterDuet â is a collaborative screenwriting app for working with writing partners in real-time. It also lets you copy text written in Fountain, or other screenwriting programs (Final Draft, Celtx, etc.) and paste it directly into WriterDuet with the correct formatting most of the time. They offer the basic version for free, WriterDuet Pro ($9.00 monthly, $79 yearly and $199 lifetime) and WriterDuet Premium ($299 yearly). WriterDuet works on Mac, Windows, Linux, Chromebooks, iOS, and Android. It gives identical page counts on all devices, and PDFs.
ZenWriter â is a program that gives you an open, peaceful place for composing your thoughts without any distractions. Itâs a fullscreen text editor that offers customizable backgrounds, music, and a nifty word count at the bottom of the window. Itâs not free, but it does offer a free trial for 15 days. It is available for Windows, and after the 15-day trial period you can choose to purchase it for $17.50 if you want.
WriteMonkey â is a Windows writing application with an extremely stripped down user interface, leaving you alone with your thoughts and your words. It is light, fast and free. Itâs also an portable app, so you can stick it on a USB drive and use in on whatever computer you happen to find yourself at.
YWriter5 â is a free word processor and is designed for Windows XP, Vista and beyond. It's a small but very comprehensive tool which helps you to plan your story. It breaks your novel into chapters and scenes, helping you to keep track of your work while leaving your mind free to create. You can set up deadlines, for instance, and the programâs Work Schedule report will let you know how much youâll have to do, each day, to finish on time. You can even enter your characters, locations and items and freely organize them into scenes. This definitely sounds like itâll be useful for NaNoWriMo writers.
Kingsoft Office (WPS Office) â is an office suite for Microsoft Windows, Linux, iOS and Android OS. The basic version is free to use, but a fully featured professional-grade version is also available. This software allows users to view, create and share office documents that are fully compatible with dozens of document formats, including Microsoft PowerPoint, Word and Excel. In other words, the format is similar to a Microsoft Word document (.DOC or .DOCX file) and supports formatted text, images, and advanced page formatting. Kingsoft Writer documents can be converted to Microsoft Word *.doc files in the software.
Creativity, Fun &Â Miscellaneous
National Novel Writing Month â is one of the most well-known writing challenges in the writing community. National Novel Writing Month pushes you to write 50,000 words in 30 days (for the whole month of November).
WritingFix â a fun site that creates writing prompts on the spot. The site currently has several optionsâprompts for right-brained people, for left-brained people, for kidsâand is working to add prompts on classic literature, music and more.
Creative Writing Prompts â the site is exactly what it says. They have 100+ and more, of prompts that you can choose from.
My Fonts â is the worldâs largest collection of fonts. You can even upload an image containing a font that you like, and this tells you what it is. Just keep in mind that not all of the fonts are free.
DaFont â has lot of fonts as well, most of them are completely free to download. However, some are demo versions or are only free if you used it for personal use and not commercial use.
Story Starters â this website offers over one trillion randomly generated story starters for creative writers.
The Gutenberg Project â this site is perfect for those who like to read and/or have an e-reader. Thereâs over 33,000 ebooks you can download for free.Â
The Imagination Prompt Generator â click through the prompts to generate different ideas in response to questions like âIs there a God?â and âIf your tears could speak to you, what would they say?â
The Phrase Finder â this handy site helps you hunt down famous phrases, along with their origins. It also offers a phrase thesaurus that can help you create headlines, lyrics, and much more.
Storybird â this site allows you to write a picture book. They provided the gorgeous artwork and you create the story for it, or just read the stories that others have created.
Language Is a Virus â the automatic prompt generator on this site can provide writers with an endless number of creative writing prompts. Other resources include writing exercises and information on dozens of different authors.
Background Noise/Music
SimplyNoise â a free white noise sounds that you can use to drown out everything around you and help you focus on your writing.
Rainy Mood â from the same founders of Simply Noise, this website offers the pleasant sound of rain and thunderstorms. There's a slide volume control, which you can increase the intensity of the noise (gentle shower to heavy storm), thunder mode (often, few, rare), oscillation button, and a sleep timer.Â
Coffitivity â a site that provides three background noises: Morning Murmur (a gentle hum), Lunchtime Lounge (bustling chatter), and University Undertones (campus cafe). A pause button is provided whenever you need a bladder break, and a sliding volume control to give you the freedom to find the perfect level for your needs and moods. Itâs also available as an android app, iOS app, and for Mac desktop. If you go Premium itâs $9 and youâll get 1 year of unlimited listening to their audio tracks and access to three more sounds: Paris Paradise, Brazil Bistro and Texas Teahouse.
Rainy Cafe â it provides background chatter in coffee shops (similar to Coffitivity) AND the sound of rain (similar to Simply Rain). Thereâs also individual volume and on/off control for each sound category.
Forest Mood â is background noise of the forest.
MyNoise â is a website with multi-purpose noise generator that is completely free. It helps you to focus while working in a noisy environment or to help settle your anxiety and itâs also useful in cases of insomnia or tinnitus. It has so many sounds to choose from: Fish Tank, Clockwork, Gregorian Voices, Traffic Noise, Train and Railroad, Japanese Garden, and so on.
MyNoise: Online Fire Noise Generator â is also from NyNoise, but itâs a short-cut link for those that only want to hear the sound of fire crackling in a fireplace.
Snowy Mood â is a noise generator that plays sounds of boots walking through snow on an endless loop. Itâs simple and straightforward, and perfect for those days when you feel like being snowed in.
Noisli â is a background noise generator that helps you to drown out annoying noises in order to create your perfect environment for working and relaxing. You can mix different sounds together, such as rain and a train or fire and the night sound of crickets or with the waves at a beach.Â
Purrli â is a white noise generator that recreates the sound and the presence of a cat purring next to you. Â
Ambient Mixer â is a free online audio mixing tool in which you can create and edit your own ambient music or background sounds. You can even listen to other peopleâs mixes such as Gryffindor Common Room, Riding with the Winchesters, Mr. Tumnusâ House, A Day in Camp Half-Blood, and so on.
8tracks â is an internet radio website and everyone can listen for free, well it use to be completely free. Unlike other music oriented social network such as Pandora or Spotify, 8tracks doesnât have commercial interruption (thatâs if you get 8tracks Plus). Users can create free accounts and can either browse the site and listen to other user-created mixes for as long as they like, and/or they can create their own mixes. Itâs a perfect place to listen to other writerâs playlist, share yours or find music for specific characters or moods. Note: Joining is still free, however youâre now limited to 1 hour of free listening for each week (or more depending on how much people like your mixes, but Iâve been told the limitation is for those in the US only). If you want unlimited access itâs $30 per year or $5.00 a month.
Playmoss â with 8tracks no longer having free unlimited listening and no commercial interruptions many people looked for an alternative and Playmoss is what 8tracks use to be. Playmoss is free to join and it has all the same basic features that 8tracks has, only with extra goodies like unlimited skips, able to see the entire tracklist before playing, start at any point in the playlist, see how many playlists contain a certain song and even collaborate playlists with other people.
omg the ultimate writing help list thank you so much!!
I havenât seen this mentioned elsewhere, so hereâs a heads-up for anyone thinking of NaNoWriMo. This info is from the newsletter Scrivener sends out to registered users (for instance me and @dduane).
Info on This Page.
Theyâre offering an extended free trial for NaNoWriMo; usually itâs 30 days, but theyâve extended this to run from start of use (like, for instance, today) through to December 7th.
Scrivener is only $49 to start with, but theyâre also offering a 50% discount to winners and a 20% across-the-board discount with a code even if not participating.
To which I can only add this. ;->
Quick note: the preceding may read like an ad (and it is!) but itâs not a paid one, just feedback from a very satisfied customer.
Scrivener is a seriously good program (thatâs âappâ now, isnât it?); DD uses it, Charles (the âLaundryâ series) Stross uses it (he put DD onto it) heck, even I use it, and the Testimonials page is most impressive.
Go on, go on, go on, go on. Give it a try.
âŚGo ON. :)
#writing tools #every writer needs help #fanfiction
That feeling tho when you find that fic writer that just absolutely fucking
understands the characters to their core
writes so well theyâjust soâthey justâtheir writing isâ-THEY WRITE GOOD
shatters your bad mood with a new update
writes a fic that you can read over again and still clutch at your heart like HOLY SHIT I FUCKING LOVEâI LOVE THIS FIC
writes a scene that has you all giddy in public and that one random stranger asks you like âooo you are smiling :) :) is that a boy :) you are talking to :)â and youâre like âno Iâm reading a Everybody Lives/Nobody Dies AU, please leaveâ
understands and portrays the characters better than the people who make MOVIES with those characters
amazing. just amazing. fic writers are awesome
#fanfic writers rock! #writing praise
All alone
I never knew what true loneliness was until the day my mother passed.
Now it fills me completely and I find myself totally lost.
I have no one to share my day with.
I have no one to dry my tears and tell me everything will be okay.
I have no one that tells me that I am strong enough to do whatever I put my mind to.
I have no one, except loneliness.
Resources For Writing Deaf, Mute, or Blind Characters
 Despite the fact that I am not deaf, mute, or blind myself, one of the most common questions I receive is how to portray characters with these disabilities in fiction.
As such, Iâve compiled the resources Iâve accumulated (from real life Deaf, mute, or blind people) into a handy masterlist.
Deaf Characters:
Deaf characters masterpost
Deaf dialogue thread
Dialogue with signing characters (also applies to mute characters.)
A Deaf authorâs advice on deaf characters
Dialogue between Deaf characters
âThe Month I Suddenly Went Deafâ
What Itâs Like Going Deaf In Your Thirties
9 Women Share What It Feels Like To Lose Your Hearing
What Itâs Like Being a Deaf Teenager (video)
Parenting With Sign Language (video)
Deaf Teen Talks About Losing His Hearing To Meningitis (video)
Things Not To Say To A Deaf Person (video)
Deaf Kids Shining in High School (video)
I recently discovered the youtube channel of the amazing Jessica Kellgren-Fozard, a vintage-loving, lesbian, happily married queen, who talks about her deafness in many of her videos. I canât recommend her enough.
Black Deaf Culture Through the Lens of Black Deaf History
Black Deaf History
Video: How to Sign in BASL (Black American Sign Language)
Mute Characters
Life as a Mute
My Silent Summer: Â Life as a Mute
What Itâs Like Being Mute
21 People Reveal What Itâs Really Like To Be Mute
I am a 20 year old Mute, ask me anything at all!
Blind Characters:
Things Not To Say To A Blind Person (video)
What Itâs Like to Go Blind (video)
The 33 Worst Mistakes Writers Make About Blind Characters.
@referenceforwriters masterpost of resources for writing/playing blind characters.
The youtube channel of the wonderful Tommy Edison, a man blind from birth with great insight into the depiction of blind people and their lives.
As does Molly Burke, âa typical sushi and makeup loving millennial girl who just so happens to be blind.â
And Alyssa Irene, who talks about her experience going blind and life as a blind person.
An Absolute Write thread on the depiction of blind characters, with lots of different viewpoints and some great tips.
And finally, this short, handy masterpost of resources for writing blind characters.
Characters Who Are Blind in One Eye
4 Ways Life Looks Shockingly Different With One Eye
Learning to Live With One Eye
Adapting to the Loss of an Eye
Adapting to Eye Loss and Monocular Vision
Monocular Depth Perception
Deaf-Blind Characters
What Is It Like To Be Deafblind?
Going Deaf and Blind in a City of Noise and Lights
Deaf and Blind by 30
Sarita is Blind, Deaf, and Employed (video)
Deaf and Blind:Â Being Me (video)
Born Deaf and Blind, This Eritrean American Graduated Harvard Law School (video)
A Day of a Deaf Blind Person
Lesser Known Things About Being Deafblind
How the Deaf-Blind Communicate
Early Interactions With Children Who Are Deaf-Blind
Raising a DeafBlind Baby
If you have any more resources to add, let me know! Iâll be adding to this post as I find more resources.
I hope this helps, and happy writing! <3
#writing #fanfiction #writingtips
listen. l i s t e n. listen. kudos does not equal quality. popularity does not equal quality. i have read some âfandom classicsâ that i could barely fathom how boring or terrible i - personally - found them, and i have stumbled across some absolute gems that didnât even break 100 kudos.Â
what is good doesnât always get the recognition it deserves. itâs sad, but true. just because you havenât - or possibly never take - off in fandom doesnât mean your work isnât astounding and beautiful, it doesnât mean you should stop writing; it just means that a very select corner of the internet missed the diamond in the rough.Â
fanfiction is flooded with content, there are so many of us out there producing it these days, and having a fic that takes off is almost as much about luck as it is about talent. never let a few artificial numbers on the internet dictate to you what is and isnât worthy writing.Â
additionally, you donât have to read or enjoy fics just bcs theyâre big. i cannot count the amount of times iâve read the first paragraph of something fandom adores and immediatly exited out of it.
just⌠do what makes you happy. write what you wanna write, read what you wanna read. understand that while we all want recognition - and some deserve it more than others - we did not get into fanfiction for that recognition.
recognition is good, but sometimes we get all tangled up chasing it and stop enjoying writing and reading and fandom as a whole along the way. be careful of that, please, or youâll burn yourself out.
#fanfiction #writewhatmakesyouhappy #stopworryingwhatothersthink #writingforfun
Reblog if you're gay, lesbian, bisexual, pansexual, asexual, transgender or a supporter.
This should be reblogged by everyone. Even if youâre straight, you should be a supporter.
#Life #We are all human
âThis is your daily, friendly reminder to use commas instead of periods during the dialogue of your story,â she said with a smile.
âUnless you are following the dialogue with an action and not a dialogue tag.â He took a deep breath and sat back down after making the clarifying statement.Â
âHowever,â she added, shifting in her seat, âitâs appropriate to use a comma if thereâs action in the middle of a sentence.â
âTrue.â She glanced at the others. âYou can also end with a period if you include an action between two separate statements.â
Things I didnât know
âAndââ she waved a pen as though to underline her statementââif youâre interrupting a sentence with an action, you need to type two hyphens to make an en-dash.â
You guys have no idea how many students in my advanced fiction workshop didnât know any of this when writing their stories.
Okay, but someone please explain question marks when followed by a dialogue tag. How do?
âThe speech tag is still part of the previous sentence,â she explained, âso it isnât capitalised.â
âWhat do you mean?â he asked. âBut thereâs a full stop as part of the question mark!â
She nodded gravely. âI know!â she said. âA lot of people find this confusing. But the speech tag belongs to the line of dialogue, itâs still part of the sentence, so itâs wrong to capitalise it.â
She reblogged the post again, because she had recently read far too many potentially enjoyable stories marred by poor dialogue punctuation.
Iâve only seen this post in screenshots till now..
NOICE. Canât wait to use this
âThere are two more ways"âshe pointed to the blackboardââto punctuate interruptions. One is with the em dashes outside the quotations marks to indicate continuous speech. The action occurs at the same time as speech. The otherââ she sipped from a glass of water ââis em dashes within the quotation marks to indicate interrupted speech.â
# writing dialog #writing made easier