styofa doing anything

if i look back, i am lost
ojovivo
$LAYYYTER

izzy's playlists!
will byers stan first human second
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
NASA

roma★
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TVSTRANGERTHINGS

Origami Around
Show & Tell

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
noise dept.
Misplaced Lens Cap

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祝日 / Permanent Vacation
trying on a metaphor

seen from United Kingdom
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seen from Türkiye
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seen from United States
seen from Chile
seen from Morocco
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@heretherebewriters
Congratulations to the July-August Prompt Challenge Winner--Nocturn13!
Challenge Prompt:: Write a 250-500 word description of a HTBW member as though they were a character in a story you are writing. However, they must be a mythical creature in disguise. As we know very little about our friends appearances, these will be completely fake descriptions. Have fun with it. Word Count:: 274
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The thing about being online is the anonymity of it all. Through text or chat, no appearances have to be made. No one has to know. For Al, this meant that that the “Here There Be Writers” online community was one of the few places where the long drawn out days of maintaining the human illusion was unnecessary. The leaves used for conjuring the human skin could be left for use at another time, as a red fox stood on its hind legs and moved about the house.
The username was something of an inside joke. A fox spirit with three-tails was young, possibly inexperienced but hardly mediocre. Fur-recoiled and paws became human hands for a moment to switch on the speech to text feature. Human speech drifted through the mic on the table from fox lips as tall pointed ears twitched intently.
The fox wondered how many others there were in the online community if any. How many other creatures of story were masquerading and mixing with the humans of HTBW? How many of them were there not just to create but to consume story. Surely, there was a pooka or two among them?
Yet, Al didn’t ask. The tails swished back and forth as the fox thought about it. To ask would mean breaking that sense of anonymity and sense of safety. As a fox, Al craved the mischief such questions would bring but for now the hint and word play of the username would have to be enough. Just a hint of mischief from a fox speaking at a computer to sea of unknown voices. Surely there was magic in that.
On Writing for Yourself and Not for Notes
AKA How to Enjoy Writing for the Sake of it
Get off social media! I know it’s tempting to blabber on about a WIP to get those hella cool notes, but doing so only reinforces that writing’s only fun if it gets you attention. We all need that boost now and again, but too much of it will whittle away your self-reliance. Close your laptop, leave your phone in a different room, and sit down with a notebook if possible and if you need to. You’ll get to know what enthralls you personally about your story.
Don’t write for an audience for now. Tumblr likes to do this thing where it says “blah blah blah X is problematic in media” and while it’s well-intentioned, internalizing too much of this can make you feel like you’re trying to write through a maze and constantly failing at it. Forget about your audience–you can flag and catch problematic stuff in edits after tossing it to the betas.
Remember what made thirteen-year-old you lose their mind? Yeah, write that. Once you’ve let go of writing for an audience, you won’t worry about being “cringey” anymore, and that’s when things start to get real good and real fun. You don’t have to show your writing to anyone, or even tell them you wrote it, so just go buckwild! Trust me, it’s so liberating.
Your inner critic is useful–but not now. Shut that bitch up! Your job when drafting is to make something. If you did that, you win, so your critic’s opinion is worth squat here. However, if you try to fight her {I always envision mine as some bitchy middle-aged woman lol} she’s just gonna get louder. So tell yourself you can be as critical of your writing as you want during edits. You’re not working for perfect, or even good right now. You’re working for existing.
Remember that this is a process. Companies like tumblr are investing a BUNCH of cash into getting you to stay glued to their platforms, and if you’re a creator this might manifest in your feeling like you need to live your creative life online. You don’t. But retraining your brain isn’t easy. Remember that divorcing yourself from the validation of online noise takes work and time and a lot of discomfort and redirecting, especially for folks like me who thrive on routine. And don’t discipline. Redirect. Negativity has no right to be in your creative space ♥️
Writing advice #?: Have your characters wash the dishes while they talk.
This is one of my favorite tricks, picked up from E.M. Forester and filtered through my own domestic-homebody lens. Forester says that you should never ever tell us how a character feels; instead, show us what those emotions are doing to a character’s posture and tone and expression. This makes “I felt sadness” into “my shoulders hunched and I sighed heavily, staring at the ground as my eyes filled with tears.” Those emotions-as-motions are called objective correlatives. Honestly, fic writers have gotten the memo on objective correlatives, but sometimes struggle with how to use them.
Objective correlatives can quickly become a) repetitive or b) melodramatic. On the repetitive end, long scenes of dialogue can quickly turn into “he sighed” and “she nodded” so many times that he starts to feel like a window fan and she like a bobblehead. On the melodramatic end, a debate about where to eat dinner can start to feel like an episode of Jerry Springer because “he shrieked” while “she clenched her fists” and they both “ground their teeth.” If you leave the objective correlatives out entirely, then you have what’s known as “floating” dialogue — we get the words themselves but no idea how they’re being said, and feel completely disconnected from the scene. If you try to get meaning across by telling us the characters’ thoughts instead, this quickly drifts into purple prose.
Instead, have them wash the dishes while they talk.
To be clear: it doesn’t have to be dishes. They could be folding laundry or sweeping the floor or cooking a meal or making a bed or changing a lightbulb. The point is to engage your characters in some meaningless, everyday household task that does not directly relate to the subject of the conversation.
This trick gives you a whole wealth of objective correlatives. If your character is angry, then the way they scrub a bowl will be very different from how they’ll be scrubbing while happy. If your character is taking a moment to think, then they might splash suds around for a few seconds. A character who is not that invested in the conversation will be looking at the sink not paying much attention. A character moderately invested will be looking at the speaker while continuing to scrub a pot. If the character is suddenly very invested in the conversation, you can convey this by having them set the pot down entirely and give their full attention to the speaker.
A demonstration:
1
“I’m leaving,” Anastasia said.
“What?” Drizella continued dropping forks into the dishwasher.
2
“I’m leaving,” Anastasia said.
Drizella paused midway through slotting a fork into the dishwasher. “What?”
3
“I’m leaving,” Anastasia said.
Drizella laughed, not looking up from where she was arranging forks in the dishwasher. “What?”
4
“I’m leaving,” Anastasia said.
The forks slipped out of Drizella’s hand and clattered onto the floor of the dishwasher. “What?”
5
“I’m leaving,” Anastasia said.
“What?” Drizella shoved several forks into the dishwasher with unnecessary force, not seeming to notice when several bounced back out of the silverware rack.
See how cheaply and easily we can get across Drizella’s five different emotions about Anastasia leaving, all by telling the reader how she’s doing the dishes? And all the while no heads were nodded, no teeth were clenched.
The reason I recommend having it be one of these boring domestic chores instead of, say, scaling a building or picking a lock, is that chores add a sense of realism and are low-stakes enough not to be distracting. If you add a concurrent task that’s high-stakes, then potentially your readers are going to be so focused on the question of whether your characters will pick the lock in time that they don’t catch the dialogue. But no one’s going to be on the edge of their seat wondering whether Drizella’s going to have enough clean forks for tomorrow.
And chores are a cheap-n-easy way to add a lot of realism to your story. So much of the appeal of contemporary superhero stories comes from Spider-Man having to wash his costume in a Queens laundromat or Green Arrow cheating at darts, because those details are fun and interesting and make a story feel “real.” Actually ask the question of what dishes or clothing or furniture your character owns and how often that stuff gets washed. That’s how you avoid reality-breaking continuity errors like stating in Chapter 3 that all of your character’s worldly possessions fit in a single backpack and in Chapter 7 having your character find a pair of pants he forgot he owns. You don’t have to tell the reader what dishes your character owns (please don’t; it’s already bad enough when Tolkien does it) but you should ideally know for yourself.
Anyway: objective correlatives are your friends. They get emotion across, but for low-energy scenes can become repetitive and for high-energy scenes can become melodramatic. The solution is to give your characters something relatively mundane to do while the conversation is going on, and domestic chores are not a bad starting place.
I think, the most important thing I’ve learned, while watching all these posts float around about what to do or not do for writing, is to take all advice with a pinch of salt, try not do go to the extreme, and most of all, trust your gut, because at the end of the day, it’s your story, and you need to tell it like you and your story need, not what a generalized post of advice says. Listen, think on it, and do your best.
Never let someone tell you what you shouldnt do in writing. The rules are just past observations of what has or has not worked. But people have been writing the exception for years.
Do you, have fun!
oh i see, we’re at this point in the writing session
Hey kids, take it from an old forest hag: it's totally okay to half-ass your hobbies
... trace that picture for your journal
... like old cars without knowing how to fix them
... watch the movies without reading the comics
... super glue the part of the model
... learn one (1) way to make a braid
... watch how-to videos for every step of the recipe
... google every second word in that article
... use the automatic setting on your camera
And don't be ashamed. Real life isn't school. The all or nothing mentality is not healthy. Don't gate-keep yourself from stuff that might be fun. Shrug, grin, and hold eye contact with a boomer while you do it. It's good I promise.
yeah!!! good words
Write utter shit for the simple purpose of writing. You do not need to write the perfect sentence on your first try!!
You might think that the worst part of writing a novel is the actual act of writing said novel but it isn’t
The worst part is writing the blurb
Hello! I am here with blurbs and advice about writing them. I agree that it is terrible and awful and nobody likes doing it, but it has to be done or else nobody will read your book.
Fortunately, there are three specific things you need in your blurb, and you only have to imply them (especially the last one): Goal, Motivation, Conflict.
Almost every narrative (Ghibli movies have their own thing going on) includes these three things. Don’t believe me? Katniss has to win the Hunger Games to save her family because they can’t survive without her– but everyone is trying to kill her (and there’s the added hindrance that winning means death to Peeta). Harry Potter (in the long term) has to kill Voldemort to save the world, but… well, dementors, disguises, bad teachers, sacrifice, etc. Bella wants to date Edward because he’s super hot (well, debatable) but he’s also elusive and keeps running away from her.
That said, those aren’t particularly interesting; I just wanted to prove they fit the model. Maybe it’ll be easier to post my own blurbs to explain… with the natural caveat that you may simply not like my books, and if so, I suppose a good blurb won’t help.
First, we try one sentence. This is pretty much what I had in the above, which is great, because you don’t have to make it too interesting! You just want to get to the core of your book, which means only write what is relevant to the above three points.
Thomas attempts to navigate her newfound bisexuality, alongside her family friend Katie’s transition, on her family’s annual summer vacation by the lake.
There we go. We have a main character (Thomas– who is clearly a tomboy of sorts, a bit muddled, and probably somewhat young), a goal (handling both being bisexual and her family), and some conflict (have you ever tried coming out to your parents?). And of course we get to introduce the co-lead!
Now we can try lengthening this– how do we make the conflict clearer? How do we get people to keep reading, and to want to read even more? In my case, I just put on my Bad Jokes hat and see what happens.
Thomasina Anderson (just call her Thomas) wants this year’s awkward family vacation by the lake to be just like it always is, but she knows it won’t be easy to keep the peace while being her (bisexual?! she’s still in shock) self… and trying to befriend Katie, the guest who’s just begun her transition.
I’m still not sure how I feel about this name reveal (good lesson to learn: no true writer has any idea what they’re doing) but otherwise– look, look, look! There’s our nervous heroine with her weird name, distancing herself from her family-given name. So we already know about that, and the fact that she’s chosen a traditionally masculine nickname! Already so much in the first few words; that’s the point of short blurbs.
Then we get into the specific family issues, and we imply conflict and even… a romantic subplot?! Gasp. Once again, there’s that goal (keep the peace), motivation (not dying on the trip), and conflict (family)– but those extra words at the end mean we can even add the secondary goal of befriending Katie with the clear motivation of also being LGBT (+ crush?) and the implied conflict again of Katie trying to transition in the same environment as Thomas hiding her bisexuality.
Hopefully this helped– you can definitely write more or less in your blurb, and oftentimes there are reasons to get more or less into different things (example: Katie probably isn’t the main GMC for Thomas, but since the book is literally titled The Summer of Katie, people are going to want to know who she is– and, after all, she is the main subplot) but overall it’s just that simple!
(and feel free to shoot me an ask anytime, about this or anything else!)
questions to establish a relationship between characters
what did they like about each other when they met?
what do they like about each other now?
what didn’t they like about each other when they met?
what don’t they like about each other now?
what does each wish the other knew?
if someone asked one who the other was, what label would they use? (ex. my friend? my ex? the girl my friends are friends with?)
how would each person describe the other?
if one were to die tomorrow, what regrets would the other have?
is each of them satisfied with their relationship? why or why not?
what is keeping them in this relationship?
if they weren’t already in this relationship, would they choose to be in it now?
sometimes outline is like
things english speakers know, but don’t know we know.
WOAH WHAT?
That is profound. I noticed this by accident when asked about adjectives by a Japanese student. She translated something from Japanese like “Brown big cat” and I corrected her. When she asked me why, I bluescreened.
What the fuck, English isn’t even my first language and yet I picked up on that. How the fuck. What the fuck.
Reasoning: It Just Sounds Right
Oooh, don’t like that. Nope, I do not even like that a little bit. That’s parting the veil and looking at some forbidden fucking knowledge there.
How did I even learn this language wtf
I had to read “brown big cat” like three times before my brain stopped interpreting it as “big brown cat”
I’m kinda reading “brown big cat” as “brown (big cat)”, that is, a “big cat” - like a tiger or lion or other felid of similar size - that happens to be brown. “Big brown cat”, on the other hand, sounds more like a brown cat that’s just a bit bigger than a regular housecat - like a bobcat or a maine coon cat or something like that.
yeah, a brown big cat is almost certainly a puma. a big brown cat is probably a maine coon.
yeah, if you put the adjectives out of order you wind up implying a compound noun, which is presumably why we have this rule; we stripped out so much inflection over the centuries word order now dictates a huge amount of our grammar
Just looked up why we do this and one of the first lines in this article is, “Adjectives are where the elves of language both cheat and illumine reality.” so I know it’s a good article.
Things this article has taught me:
This same order of adjectives more or less applies to languages around the world. “It’s possible that these elements of universal grammar clarify our thought in some way,” says Barbara Partee, a professor emeritus of linguistics and philosophy at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst. Yet when the human race tacitly decided that shape words go before color words go before origin words, it left no record of its rationale.
One theory is that the more specific term always falls closer to the noun. But that doesn’t explain everything in adjective order.
Another theory is that as you get closer to the noun, you encounter adjectives that denote more innate properties. In general, nouns pick out the type of thing we’re talking about, and adjectives describe it,” Partee told me. She observes that the modifiers most likely to sit right next to nouns are the ones most inclined to serve as nouns in different contexts: Rubber duck. Stone wall.
Rules are made to be broken. Switching up the order of adjectives allows you to redistribute emphasis. (If you wish to buy the black small purse, not the gray one, for instance, you can communicate your priorities by placing color before size). Scrambling the order of adjectives also helps authors achieve a sense of spontaneity, of improvising as they go. Wolfe discovers such a rhythm, a feeling-his-way quality, when he discusses his childhood recollection of “brown tired autumn earth” and a “flat moist plug of apple tobacco.”
Brain scans have discovered that your brain has to work harder to read adjectives in the “wrong” order.
TL;DR: No one knows why we do this adjective thing but it’s pretty hardwired in.
This is fascinating.
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Tiny shelter for ducks and swans in Sintra, Portugal
Setting prompt
I adore that moment when you’re walking and suddenly you just have ideas. You know how to fix that plot hole. You know how that final battle is gonna play out. You come up with the most perfect line of dialogue. You find a way to link point a to point b. You have fine details to enhance everything.
That moment of sheer inspiration, that absolute spark of brain magic, is simply phenomenal.
man i wish i could be feeling this
I try to glean lessons from being in creative writing workshops so I can share with people who don’t want to pay thousands of dollars for a degree with no hirability, so here’s what I got out of my Nonfiction class this semester:
1. What order events take place in in the story matters, but there’s no one right way. It’s all about how you want to control the tension in your story, when you want to reveal what information.
2. If you write using your intuition people will consistently respond better. Specifically, if you write with your intuition and you’ve spent a lot of time honing that intuition, people respond better. If people don’t respond well to your intuition, just keep making material to hone it.
3. People are biased. If they don’t like what you’re talking about they won’t like your story. These people may or may not actually have anything constructive to say.
4. Worry about how the central threads tie together first and everything else later. Your readers will be more put off by something integrally wrong with the story than they will by bad syntax.
5. People who give critiques have hangups and they’ll usually only critique you based on their own hangups.
6. I say this every time, but it’s almost more important for writers to give critiques than to get them. You learn much more about the art of writing when you’re trying to dissect what’s going wrong and what can improve in a story than you do from someone else telling you what’s wrong with yours. (Again, it’s v hard to find critiquers who can give you feedback that actually helps, rather than just pushing you in different directions.)
So much yes. Every word. This is why writing communities are important.