Me, reviewing the half-assed outline I wrote a while ago for my next WIP:
Cosmic Funnies
RMH
Xuebing Du
I'd rather be in outer space šø

Origami Around

shark vs the universe
Mike Driver

Love Begins
Keni
šŖ¼
No title available
almost home
No title available

if i look back, i am lost
KIROKAZE
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
TVSTRANGERTHINGS

No title available
occasionally subtle
Monterey Bay Aquarium

seen from United States
seen from Norway
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Saudi Arabia

seen from Türkiye
seen from United States

seen from Belgium

seen from T1
seen from Malaysia

seen from T1
seen from France
seen from United States
seen from Türkiye

seen from United States

seen from Spain
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Germany
seen from United States
@imagnesnutter
Me, reviewing the half-assed outline I wrote a while ago for my next WIP:
If you're struggling to write sex, write food. if you're struggling to write food, write gore. if you're struggling to write gore, write sex. They're all variations on the same themes.
it's all sensation and consumption and intimacy. it's all violence and beauty and taste. it's all wild and animalistic and elevated by our humanity. it's all deeply cultural and symbolic. it's all enjoyed by every sense the body has to offer.
"copper syrup drenched her tongue as she dug into its flesh" can be the act of eating pussy, biting through skin, or eating a piece of fruit.
My #1 recurring thing as an editor is to guide people away from writing shyly and defensively. If you preempt aggression and try defuse it in your writing itself, you are showing your belly. The audience wants blood.
If you write with the expectation of being hated, you are writing for your haters. This is exactly what they want. So the more you do it, the more of your readers will be haters.
marie howe, in an interview with krista tippett of on being
from marie howeās 2017 collection of poetry, magdalene
āA bad idea written down is far better and far more useful to you than a blank sheet of paper and a mythical piece of brilliance that has been stuck in your head out of fear of failure. Go ahead and fail. Then make it better.ā
ā
My screenwriting prof.
I felt like a lot of people needed to hear this. Including myself.
(via shaelinwrites)
one about writing
(#20) (>NOT/BUT archive)
āEditing fiction is like using your fingers to untangle the hair of someone you love.ā
ā Stephanie Roberts (via writingbox)
The most important writing lesson I ever learned was not in a screenwriting class, but a fiction class.
This was senior year of college.Ā Most of us had already been accepted into grad school of some sort. We felt powerful, we felt talented, and most of all, we felt artistic.
It was the advanced fiction workshop, and we did an entire round of workshops with everyoneās best stories, their most advanced work, their most polished pieces. It was very technical and, most of all, very artistic.
IE: They were boring pieces of pretentious crap.
Now the teacher was either a genius OR was tired of our shit, and decided to give us a challenge.Ā Flash fiction, he said. Write something as quickly as possible.Ā Make it stupid.Ā Make it not mean a thing, just be a quick little blast of words.Ā
And, of course, we all got stupid.Ā Little one and two pages of prose without the barriers that it must be good. Little flashes of characters, little bits of scenarios.
And they were electric.Ā All of them. So interesting, so vivid, not held back by the need to write important things or artistic things.Ā
One sticks in my mind even today.Ā The guys original piece was a thinky, thoughtful piece relating the breaking up of threesomes to volcanoes and uncontrolled eruptions that was just annoying to read. But his flash fiction was this three page bit about a homeless man who stole a truck full of coca cola and had to bribe people to drink the soda so he could return the cans to recycling so he could afford one night with the prostitute he loved.
It was funny, it was heartfelt, and it was so, so, so well written.
And just that one little bit of advice, the write something short and stupid, changed a ton of peopleās writing styles for the better.
It was amazing. So go.Ā Go write something small.Ā Go write something thatās not artistic.Ā Go write something stupid. Go have fun.
āThe way I personally stay true to the story I started down on is to give myself permission to not teach anyone anything. Iām not writing a manual. Iām not delivering bromides. I know that a lot of people do take enormous pleasure and relief in lines or phrases or ideas from stories that ring true to their own lives, but itās important for me that I tell a story and that Iām not writing Chicken Soup for the Necromantic Soul. It is getting harder and harder again, especially for authors from marginalised places or backgrounds, to write works where the takeaway isnāt āthis is to succour all my marginalised peopleā. For anyone on the female-identified axis this is especially hard because it seems to me that most books by anyone female-adjacent have an expectation that they will comfort the uncomfortable and discomfit the comfortable etc., whereas a guy can just tell an adventure story and be done with it. This ties in with an idea that I think nowadays that good art is moral and bad art is immoral: i.e. if a story is bad it actually has to be because the lessons are bad, and if a story is good it must somehow be beautiful on the moral scale. We go looking for why the art we love is moral even if the art we love is a donut. I think this is the pressure of capitalism on time ā that everything has to double or triple up in benefit compared to the time we take on it: if weāre prepared to waste eight hours on a book we had better be able to tot up at the end how that book was also feeding us in some way. Thatās brand time we just used.āĀ (Tamsyn Muir) Holy shit, Ms. Muir, marry me.
Did you know that most plot holes can be fixed by making your characters canonically stupid
"This doesn't make any sense, why would he ever-" my man hasn't stumbled onto a thought in years
Idk idk I think most of us worry about being repetitive and returning to the same themes in our work and I'd like to say "listen to me no one thinks less of Turner for painting a bajillion sunsets or Rothko for a trillion abstract colour paintings" but some people absolutely do think that. Turner is my fave artist my silly little rabbit my sunshine everything etc and sometimes even I look at one of his paintings and think "another seascape? God, Joseph Mallord William!!".
Your art will be repetitive to some people all of the time and repetitive to most people who engage deeply with it at least a bit of the time but that is also zero reason to fight the pull a theme or an idea has on you and zero reason not to revisit it and chew on it and explore it, approach it from different angles and hone your craft. If you engage honestly with this process, you will find out some deeper truth ā maybe about your style or the real idea you have been trying to express all along or yourself ā and chances are, you will also change and evolve along the way. And you will also find some people who are chuffed to bits to come along on that journey with you, compelled to return to the very place that you are.
my bad for assuming everyone has critical thinking skills btw
legend tells of a mysterious being called ānuanceā that allows multiple things to be true at the same time. some say you can still hear its voice whispering in the trees
prepare accordingly
I think a lot of writers might benefit from giving themselves permission to get weird with format.
Use second person, drop classic rising action and climax format, write backwards, just sit in a moment, tell all you want and refuse to show, make an entire book thatās just one run on sentence, reject tropes, use all tropes, cliche yourself to death, produce something thatās completely gibberish. Break all the rules of marketability. Become ungovernable.
Write a story that just takes place inside one pathetic little personās head. Do it. Itās enrichment in your enclosure.
Do the writerās equivalent of playing with finger paints. Do it do it do it do it do it do it do it do it do it do it do it do it
Itās the middle of the night and I should be sleeping but listen. Listen. Just get weird with it. Open your soul up a little bit. Like actually donāt worry about it being palatable. Iām serious. Get weirder. Get weirder right now. Iām demanding that you get weirder right now. Itās not your responsibility to make your reader feel good. Itās your job to make art, goddamnit. Make art. Make weird art. Open up your third eye and eat an entire cheesecake.