Completely disable Copilot in Windows 11
You too can get the satisfaction of maiming or killing a spy embedded in your organization.
noise dept.
wallacepolsom

#extradirty
RMH
đŞź

romaâ
Mike Driver
i don't do bad sauce passes
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
Show & Tell

izzy's playlists!
I'd rather be in outer space đ¸
Jules of Nature

⣠Chile in a Photography âŁ
Cosimo Galluzzi
Sweet Seals For You, Always

pixel skylines

çĽćĽ / Permanent Vacation

seen from United States
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seen from United States
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seen from Japan
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@halfaslee
Completely disable Copilot in Windows 11
You too can get the satisfaction of maiming or killing a spy embedded in your organization.
Most straight dude music: wow girl i love how you have eyes and skin and how you don't think you're pretty please let me hit
Hozier: Let's go into the forest and become crows that feed each other the brightest of red berries also I will eat your pussy so good that the Catholic Church will crumble and fall into dust
Vessel Sleep Token: Tear me apart, drain my blood, then put me back together and set me in your rib cage so I can make a nest next to your heart also I will eat your pussy so good the gods will get jealous and try to kill me for my hubris
Moonrise Phyllis Shafer â 2015 oil on canvas
some of my favorite woven tapestries, by Cecilia Blomberg:
Point Defiance Steps
Mates
Rising Tides
Vashon Steps
im such a slut for water always drinkin it in massive jars and out of pitchers and gasping for air after chugging it all in one go and im gettinn it all over my face and stuff. id moan too but i still live with my parents
I NEED TO READ I NEED TO WRITE I NEED TO CREATE I NEED TO DRAW I NEED TO CLEAN I NEED TO WORK OUT I NEED TO LEARN *watches YouTube for 6 hours*
reflection
girl what's wrong? are you experiencing the sylvia plath fig tree in your head again?
the bond between a girl and their favorite fictional man is both an unstoppable force and an immovable object
why is trying to make a new friend so embarrassing. hi. me again. asking for your attention once more even though i am literally just some random person to you. it's because i want to be not just a random person to you. please understand
âSleep is like the grave, wormeaten with dreams.â
â Sylvia Plath, The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath
You accidentally cross a witch, and she curses you, saying âYou can only speak liesâ. Unfortunately, this makes it so you can only say the word âliesâ, and the witch admits sheâs an apprentice that screwed up the spell. Now youâve teamed up with her to figure out how to undo it.
Did You Know That Thereâs a Tunnel Under Ocean Blvd (2022) Lana Del Rey, 2022.
a dude came into the library stoned out of his mind and was like, âdo I need a library card to look at books?â And I said, âto take books home, yes. To look at them, noâ and he looked so relieved. bro was staring at a fish encyclopedia for like an hour and then just left.
Tips for Writing a Scene
Whether youâve been writing for a long time or want to start, everyone begins in the same placeâwith a scene.
Not an entire chapter.
A scene.
Hereâs how you can make it happen on the page.
Step 1: Have Characters In Mind
Scenes canât happen without characters. Sometimes you might have a place in mind for a scene, but no characters. Sometimes, itâs the opposite.Â
Pick at least two characters if youâll have external conflict (more on that in step 4). One character can carry a scene with internal conflict, but things still have to happen around them to influence their thoughts/emotions.
Step 2: Give Them Goals
Short stories combine mini scenes into one plot with a beginning/middle/end. Longform manuscripts combine chapters to do the same thing, but with more detail and subplots.
You donât need to know which form youâre writing to get started.
All you need are goals.
What should your scene do? What does your character(s) want? It will either use the moment to advance the plot or present a problem that the character solves in the same scene/short story.
Step 3: Include the Senses
If youâre recounting an experience to someone, you donât say, âI had the worst day. My shoes got wet and I couldnât get home for 10 hours.â
Youâd probably say, âI had the worst day. I stepped in a puddle so my shoes got soaked, which made my socks and feet wet all day. Then I had to wait 10 hours to get home. It was miserable! And now my feet smell terrible.â
Okay, you might not use all of those descriptors, but you get the picture. The story is much more engaging if youâre talking about the feeling of wet socks, soaked shoes, and the smell of stinky feet. The other person in your conversation would probably go ugh, thatâs horrible!
Your scene should accomplish the same thing. Use the five senses to make the moment real for the reader.
As a reminder, those senses are: touch, taste, smell, sight, and hearing.
You donât need to use all of them at once, but include at least two of them to make your stories shine. You also donât have to constantly use environmental or sensory descriptors. Once you establish the scene for your reader, theyâll place your characters and want to keep the plot moving.
Step 4: Identify the Conflict
Speaking of plot, scenes and stories canât move forward without conflict. There are two types:
Internal conflict: happens within a single character (may or may not affect their decisions at any given time; it can also be the reasoning for their goals and dreams)
External conflict: happens outside of a character or between two characters (may or may not have to do with their internal conflict or personal goals; it always advances their character growth, relationship development, or plot development)
A scene could touch on either of these types of conflict or both! It depends on your story/plot/what you want your scene to accomplish.
Step 5: Pick a Point of View (POV)
Sometimes youâll know you want to write a specific POV because youâll have a character/plot in mind that requires it. Other times, you might not know.
Itâs often easier to pick a POV after thinking through the previous steps. Youâll better understand how much time you want to spend in a characterâs head (1st Person) or if you want to touch on multiple charactersâ minds through 3rd Person.
Example of Setting a Scene
Step 1, Have Characters in Mind: Two sisters arrive back home from their first fall semester in different colleges.
Step 2, Give Them Goals: Sister A wants to ask for dating advice, but the sisters have never been that close. Sister B knows that Sister A wants a deeper conversation, but is doing anything to avoid it.
Step 3, Include the Senses: Theyâre in a living room with shag navy carpet and the worn leather couches have butt-shaped shadows on the cushions. The house smells of vanilla bean, the only scent their dads can agree on. Christmas lights hang on a fake tree that sheds plastic fir leaves on the floor. Their family cat purrs from within the metal branches.
Step 4, Identify the Conflict: Sister B will do anything to avoid talking about feelings. That includes trying to get the cat out of the tree (shaking the branches and reaching into them doesnât work), checking to make sure the windows are closed against the winter air, and faking an obviously unreal phone call. This makes Sister A go from passively hoping for advice to chasing her through the house.Â
Step 5, Pick a POV: 3rd Person, so internal thoughts and feelings from both sisters are obvious to the reader and emphasize the sceneâs comedy.
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These are also useful ways to rethink a scene youâve already written. If something about it doesnât seem to be working, consider if itâs missing one or more of these points. You donât need to include all of them all the time, but weaving more sensory details or conflict into a short story/chapter could solve your problem.
Best of luck with your writing, as always đ
Ęá´á´ÉŞÉ´á´ á´Ęęą ę°á´Ę á´ĄĘÉŞá´á´Ęęą <3
it's okay to stray from your story. go write that short fic you can't take your mind off of! give youâand your charactersâa break.
you! won't! always! make! your! word! count! -- you don't need to keep stretching sentences because the scene you finally got right is a hundred words too short. sometimes it's better that way.
the "rules" and "tips" are just ~guidelines~ (especially for people who like to swear by them) -- writing has no laws. especially first drafts. scrap the grammar, scrap the emotional tips, write it because it feels right, not because someone else says so.
every writer procrastinates. it's not easy being a writer.
take time off for yourself. the only thing harder than writing a story is to keep pushing it when you need a break the most. come back to it later. I promise there will be no dumpster fires when you're gone.
all writing is "real" writing. I don't think there's an explanation here?? fiction writers are writers. nonfiction writers are writers. fanfic writers are writers. (like how all reading is real reading!! in every format, too!)
it doesn't need to be perfect. honestly, it might never be. but it can be really close to it. if you're not satisfied with it, move on and come back when you're ready.
you are just as skilled as any bestselling author. remember that everything you read has been heavily edited by teams of people! their first draft could not even be as good as yours is now.
not using clichĂŠs is clichĂŠ. you will find one in any story. no one can bring you down for liking a certain trope. just because it's common doesn't mean it's bad!
no writer is fully well-rounded. dialogue will be easier to write for some, and description for others.
and, finally, no one knows what they're doing. trust me. we're all stumbling around blind here.
âIn my youth,â reminisced the old man, scratching his beard thoughtfully, âI was quite the quirked up white boy. No one in the village could best me at busting it down sexual style.â
âAnd were you goated, sir?â the young boy queried.
âMy dear boy, I most certainly was!â The old man chuckled, a merry twinkle in his eye. âWith the sauce, I daresay.â