gothamchess be like

titsay
AnasAbdin
Cosmic Funnies
Mike Driver
Sweet Seals For You, Always
d e v o n

★

roma★

izzy's playlists!
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
i don't do bad sauce passes
NASA
almost home
art blog(derogatory)
we're not kids anymore.
todays bird
Monterey Bay Aquarium

Kiana Khansmith

@theartofmadeline
$LAYYYTER
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@ionlybleedbubbles
gothamchess be like
High school notebook labels: 'Physics', 'English', 'Math'
College notebook labels: 'Chemistry extra #8', 'pain and suffering', 'Chemistry extra #something', 'IDK ANYMORE'
Hairy legs
She got dem hairy legs
I only know 'cause i got them too
'Cause i'm hairy just like you.
'I want to relive my childhood, but in a younger state of mind." Naw, with the disregard for social convention I had when I was a kid, and the absolute disrespect for danger I have now, I would be unstoppable.
guys please give yourselves a hug and listen to the Regina Spektor version of 'While my guitar gently weeps' by The Beatles.
Inside out 2 concept
Now that pixar has announced inside out 2, I have an idea. I think it would be really cool if one of the new emotions turns out to be a 'disguised emotion'. Like sensibility could actually be disguised paranoia. Or pride would suddenly shed her cover and turn out to be insecurity.
I think we aren't perfect as children, and that our emotions aren't really identified and set by ourselves, but by other people. Once we've grown a bit, and collected a bit of data, we've got to figure out for ourselves what to do with all this information, tweak the controls, set our emotions and moral compasses to the right amount each. Identify what they actually are, and what each emotion's intention is. Sure, not everybody gets it right. But we all have to try.
I think one important part of growing up is figuring out that you can learn things wrongly, and that's okay. What's important is fixing those emotions and beliefs and making them right.
Washing your hair with a pretty shampoo fr feels like washing off all your sins and the sins of your ancestors
I'm a feminist. I love women. And as a feminist and a woman, I'd like to say, stop blaming men for everything. Sure, men are to blame for a lot of things, and men like to blame women for a lot of things. But I also see a lot of women blaming all their problems on their husbands, fathers and the most unrelated issues on the patriarchy. Sure, it's tough to be a woman. But not everything tough is because you are a woman.
I can’t think of any type of person that is more widely and unanimously hated than The Pedophile and yet 1 in 4 girls is sexually abused before her 18th birthday. Perceived societal tolerance of an issue often means very little in terms of how much it happens
Vin: Into the SpiderVerse
A concept art I made some days ago. I couldn’t get it done as I wanted but I decided to leave it like that.
The concept was that the Allomantic lines come out of the metals and she would use them as spider webs.
I often hear people say fiction is much better than reality. But is it, though? Life is just one big poem, stretched across years and years. The difference is...its your poem. That means you live out the boring bits a little longer. But it also means that there will be ends when you ride your bicycle toward the setting sun and feel... such a complicated rush of powerful emotion, such a tangled fabric of thought that though you may ache or cry, you will not be able to write out on paper.
Life is one big movie, just without the background music.
Fuck you spotify.
Common teenage male character traits and habits:
(Please note, these do not apply to all men and may apply to some women. This is just a vast generalization to help female authors figure some teen male mannerisms.)
Fist bumps
Tackling each other on meeting
Calling by surnames
Talking of peeing in public
Crude jokes
Discussing women (not necessarily in the sexual sense)
Punching (or bits of knowledge on punching)
Cars (or bits of knowledge on cars)
Common topics that are often explained boringly in novels (imo) :
Electricity supply
Machinery
Character powers
Dreams
Administration and royal gossip
Geography of places and locations
Writing tips deep in my heaps of cringe, that are actually good (imo) :
When writing in third person, don't say what a character cannot do while talking from their perspective. Frame the idea by telling us what they can do, or through the opinion of other characters. For eg. Instead of saying "Mattie was bad at flying planes", say "Mattie preferred cars to planes, and would much rather his brother do the plane-flying." See? Now you've even managed to drop in a nod about his brother. You could also say, "Kevin felt safer when Mattie's brother flew the plane than when Mattie did." Put the blame on Kevin - don't judge Mattie yourself. As a narrator you must pretend to always be on your MCs' side. Ofc, this would vary with different styles of narration, but this is a general rule.
Show how important a character is by how much time you take to talk about them. You would describe your MCs well, and bring up their hobbies and interests. You wouldn't describe a background character as much. You can use this to humanize or dehumanize characters. You may initially talk very little about the main villain yourself, and rely on dialogue among the other characters. This makes the villain feel like a force rather than a person. As the story progresses though, and you decide you want to drop in a *hairflips dramatically* sad back story, you can humanize the villain, and make them more understandable as a person.
Learn from art. Try describing different sceneries or portraits as practice. Also practice writing comic books or manga as stories. Visualizing your story as comic or manga panels can really help you understand pacing and paragraphs. Take note of their vibrance and positioning.
Learn from people's mannerisms and how they are received by other people. For eg, when we ask my dad a question, he pauses to gather his thoughts before speaking. Out of respect, we wait silently during this pause. This shows how confident and charismatic my dad is. A friend of mine only verbally roasts people within our friend group, and apologizes profusely after. This shows she is both empathetic and extremely quick-witted. I could create well rounded characters based on just examples as simple as these.
This tip is what I like to call 'the fake solution' and is employed by many famous authors. For this, you force readers to make assumptions. Maybe about how the magic system works, or about who the villain is. Make it seem like the characters have come to a conclusion and that conclusion is the final solution to conflict. Then tear down those assumptions and create a whole other ending. Similar to the red herring, except this time it's all in the characters' heads and dialogue. Brandon Sanderson's Mistborn trilogy is a good example of playing with assumptions forced upon readers by the writer.
In your first chapter, focus on creating potential. You don't have to jump into the heart of the action right away, but you have to make sure your readers understand the potential for this action. For example the opening chapter of Maggie Stiefvater's Raven Boys is relatively low paced, but it leaves you with questions. It makes you wonder who the boy who talked to Blue is, and how Blue will deal with life after such a strange prophecy. This makes you need to continue reading, to find answers.
For good worldbuilding, study at least a little bit of history. Wars and military tricks make for good free prompts. If your world contains vibrant races, make sure you research and incorporate the history and implications of racism, social hierarchy and trade. Understand how this will impact travellers and mercenaries (audiences love those). Make up your own old wives' tales and coping mechanisms.
Understand that the best stories are written around an idea rather than a character. Your protagonist is simply the face of your story. The weather of the world reflects on the protagonist's choices and health. Suzanne Collins' The Hunger Games focuses on the dark side of media and politics and how they are used to control a people. Notice that by the third book, Katniss, our protagonist, is doing very little herself, though her few moments are loud and powerful. Katniss could achieve nothing alone. It takes a whole bunch of people to fuel the revolution. Note that it is completely okay to write a character based story, if that's what you like. But there are tons of those. If you really want to make an impact, make an idea-based story.
Respect all your characters equally. You may love some characters more than others, but remember all your characters are representatives of people. Make sure each of them has a voice and a chance to prove themselves.
Use prose to your advantage. Let the length of your sentence define whether the sequence is fast paced or slow. For example, if your want to show surprise, your sentences must be short. Instead of saying "She snatched the last dagger and stared at it, observing each engraving", say " She snatched up the last dagger. Each engraving was sick, gnarled. "
That was a heck of a long post, but that's all from me. Feel free to add your own or contradict anything I've written.