"it's just stress" oh thank god, it's just the silent killer that slowly kills you, perfectly harmless, no need to worry
noise dept.
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"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

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hello vonnie

oozey mess
TVSTRANGERTHINGS

izzy's playlists!
Misplaced Lens Cap
NASA
One Nice Bug Per Day

blake kathryn
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Discoholic 🪩
AnasAbdin

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
$LAYYYTER
taylor price

pixel skylines
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seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia

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@hauntedsnake
"it's just stress" oh thank god, it's just the silent killer that slowly kills you, perfectly harmless, no need to worry
constantly trying to see the inherent good in people is a humiliation ritual that i continue to willingly participate in
very soon the entirety of the tumblr dashboard will be consumed by insane people being insufferable over AMC's interview with the vampire. fortunately i am one of those insane people
beautiful day to think about what you had and can no longer have
pnw.
*goes limp and passive but in a way that feels more dangerous somehow*
*doesn't protest or react but you can't help but feel like i'm doing it on purpose*
a concerning number of you are tagging this as the vampire armand
messy creep, he's still very friendly tho, thinking abt those movies again.
click for better quality blabla
you can’t even move to a brand new city and teach yourself how to die in this economy
I hate ruminating on what could have been. Out here thinking "if only I locked in when I was 13" are we serious
on “the blond,” “the older man,” and other crimes against third-person limited
You know that thing where a story is written in tight third person limited — we’re meant to be inside someone’s head, seeing the world through their thoughts — and then suddenly the narration says “the blond frowned” or “the shorter woman sighed” about a person the POV character knows really well?
That’s called antonomasia — using a descriptive label instead of a name. And it’s fine when we’re talking about strangers: “the cashier handed her the receipt,” “the tall guy blocked the door.” The POV character doesn’t know their names, and we just need a quick way to tell people apart.
But the moment it’s used for someone the POV character already knows, it breaks immersion. Because that’s not how our minds work. We don’t think “the older man smiled at me.” We think “Mark smiled.” Or maybe “my boss” if that relationship matters in the moment.
Third person limited means the narration sits inside someone’s perception. Their inner monologue is the story’s voice. So when you switch from “Mark smiled” to “the blond smiled,” you’ve pulled the camera away from their mind and turned it into an outside shot.
If you want to create distance or irritation, you can do it on purpose —
“The idiot from accounting emailed again.”
That’s character voice. That’s judgment. That works.
But otherwise?
As soon as your POV character knows someone’s name, use it. While we do tend to worry about repetitions, names rarely register as such to the readers.
If you need variety for rhythm, use relational or emotional identifiers that make sense in their head: her friend, his partner, their teacher, the person they loved.
Because inside someone’s thoughts, there are no “blonds” or “brunettes.”
There are only people they know.
Really good explanation of the fundamental problem with this type of writing.
(and why it's one of my huge pet peeves)
tweets i think about regularly
Girl whose most frequent mistake is inaction voice: wow I keep making mistakes I better not do anything
Albert Camus, from a letter to María Casares featured in Correspondance, 1944-1959
bury your gays and replace them with emotionally unsatisfying lobotomised but still gay replicas
Jenny Slate, Stage Fright (2019)
Ugly, Bitter, and True by Suzanne Rivecca
John Mulaney on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert (2020)
“Robin Williams and Why Funny People Kill Themselves” by David Wong
letters from Medea, salma deera
whatever happens it’s so important that we’re funny about it. Above all else commit to the bit
top 5 horror movies
-having a job
-not having a job
-applying for jobs
-the job market
-the concept of working my whole life