oh ok
Just to remind myself. The first one hits hard for me.
One Nice Bug Per Day

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣

Love Begins

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Sweet Seals For You, Always
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hello vonnie

Kiana Khansmith
Three Goblin Art
we're not kids anymore.
AnasAbdin
Mike Driver
Cosimo Galluzzi

⁂

blake kathryn

JVL

Discoholic 🪩

祝日 / Permanent Vacation

Kaledo Art
todays bird
seen from Philippines

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@joannverostko
oh ok
Just to remind myself. The first one hits hard for me.
kissing you on the forehead
with tongue?
with tongue. 🥰
so much love.
Spread this video
briefly taking my phone out at work and looking at images of my favourite character like im a soldier in the trenches looking at a picture of their loved one back home
Me briefly checking Tumblr at work.
“When you are present, you recognize yourself in all forms of life.”
Eckhart Tolle
this sounds right
“never kill yourself” is such a funny phrase to me that i think it’s accidently started working. its like an affrimation. say ‘never kill yourself’ enough times as a joke and maybe you won’t try to kill yourself over minor inconviences anymore
i made this image for the express purpose of this
The Scholastic Book order poster I never had.
it's katharine hepburn's birthday, for all who celebrate!
worth celebrating!
the rubber duck
For anyone curious what they mean by the rubber duck, rubber duck debugging is a tactic used by programmers to figure out bugs in the code. To do it, they explain the code, verbally, line by line, to the rubber duck until they find it.
It’s also very useful for writers, and I’ve used it multiple times with rubber ducks, stuffed animals, and my friends.
“when i say it out loud i realize where the stupid was”
I literally cannot count the number of times I’ve gone to someone and told them ‘I can’t figure out what’s wrong with my story, please let me explain it to you’ and that was all it took. Sometimes they ask helpful questions like ‘did you remember to feed them’ or ‘so is this all on the same day’ but other times I don’t even need that, it just figures itself out as soon as I try to explain it to someone else.
It’s one of my go-to pieces of writing advice. You’re stuck on your story? sit down and tell me/someone all about it.
So my beta reader for the Big Fics is an astrophysicist, right. Who is currently also writing a hard sci-fi novel about the exploration of Phobos (more power to them, I cannot with the physics required for that, best I can do is soft sci-fi/fantasy and that reminds me I should finish that story).
Anyway I was bitching about how hard it is to come up with feasible planets in Star Wars because sometimes you need a new planet from scratch and sometimes you need to know more about a planet than the 'has jungles, is probably a moon technically' than Wookieepedia will give you, and they're like 'oh yeah I can do something about that'.
So they've written (in Matlab but they swear it will run as a .exe as well and I may be conscripted to embed it as a web tool at some point) a star system generator.
You input what you know about the planet (ecosystem, population, sun colour, does it have liquid water, does it have a moon or moons, is it a moon or moons, temperature averages, atmosphere, you get me) and it will give you the... everything else about the star system, in obedience to real-universe physics. And if you input nothing you get a randomly generated star system.
And I’m like oh I know people who will be into this with a vengeance, and they're not on Tumblr, so this is me seeing who exactly would be keen on, and I cannot stress this enough, a real-physics comprehensive star system generator.
It's still in the debugging phase (last error fixed: every planet wants to have a population of exactly 5000 regardless of other factors, turned out to be a missing equals sign somewhere), but I'm psyched for this and trying to gauge interest for how high a priority 'make this an accessible web tool' needs to be.
@bucketofdeltav says the URL is here: http://tumblr.com/star-system-generator
Follow @star-system-generator and get more of the good stuff by joining Tumblr today. Dive in!
Write it badly or it'll never be written
Write it badly or it'll never be written
Write it badly or it'll never be written
Write it badly or it'll never be written
Write it badly or it'll never be written
Please keep interacting with this post because when I come to tumblr to procrastinate, this shows up again in my notifications and guilts me into writing again
I suppose I can’t argue with this so…,
Yet another new study debunked the basis for the anti-trans sports bans. It was never about sports but for creating legal avenues for exclusion and abjection. This is one of the largest analyses ever conducted, involving 52 studies and 6,485 trans people. Read the study here.
post so nice had to reblog it twice and force it down everyone's throats
At minimum about 4.5 thousand people liked this without reblogging it.
We gotta fix that.
This is what hozier meant when he says he falls a little bit in love everyday with someone new
I once watched a girl in the produce aisle pick up a bushel of bananas that were precariously perched on the edge and move them farther back and under her breath she said “there you go sweeties - that will be more comfortable” before shuffling off and… I think about her often.
« Silent lovers » is such a sweet way to put it.
I was driving on the highway and passed a dude absolutely JAMMING alone in his car, doing those little half dance moves you do when you’re stuck sitting down in a small space, bellowing unheard lyrics at the top of his lungs, and my instant reaction was to think “I love you.” And then to pray he had a good day, or whatever, because those fleeting moments of connection are so incredible.
To choose to be gentle in a world that demands you hate ~ is the greatest rebellion of all.
©️beccawise7💜🖤
At the risk of sounding anti-intellectual, I think that college should be free and also not a requirement for employment outside of highly specialized career fields
At the risk of sounding like an effete intellectual, I do actually think you should be allowed to just take college courses indefinitely
technically you can, if you don't care about degrees.
Free Harvard courses. Free Courses from Stanford. Free Courses from MIT. Free courses from Yale. Free courses from Princeton.
Free courses on Coursera.
Free Courses on EDx Free Courses on Alison
For paid, there's The Great Courses+/Wonderium. 20$ a month for unlimited courses.
When searching, the phrases you're looking for are Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs), or you can do a general search of say, "free online college courses." Oh, and so you don't get surprised like I did, have an avoid: Hillsdale College is a conservative Christian site and not a valid MOOC place. Sign up with them and you will get things like THIS IS WHY THE LEFT IS TURNING YOUR KIDS TRANS AND GAY in your inbox.
@yourunderwaterskies I wanted to say thank you so much for adding these links, seriously, they've been life-changingly helpful to me-
And I also wanted to mention that humanitarian organisations have free courses too, like the Red Cross on international humanitarian law.
Learn more about the Red Cross International Humanitarian Law (IHL) Program to train policy professionals, government officials, academics,
Kaya is a free humanitarian learning platform which offers hundreds of training opportunities across a range of key topics, including the hu
Your local library may also have copies of Great Courses materials on the shelves in the audiobook/books on disc section! I know mine does. They used to release them as physical box sets with discs.
A lot of public libraries also have a lot of free online resources including classes, trainings, practice tests, language courses and ebooks and audiobooks
Or finishing a good book.
How do you know when it’s a novel not a short story? I’ve turned this idea every which way i can think of. Come at it from different directions. It won’t coalesce the way my stories usually do. I’m beginning to think i’m trying to fit an elephant into a shoebox.
This can often be a difficult call, so don't be annoyed to have come up against a rough side of it. Most of us do eventually. (And for the moment I'm going to avoid the "Define a short story" end of things.)
First of all, if I was in a difficult mood, I'd just say, "Why are you sitting here wasting time talking to me? Start writing. If you cross over 50K words, it's a novel." (Though in this neck of the woods, both @petermorwood and I would have been embarrassed to call anything shorter than 70-80K a novel. Granted, we both would have come of the time when dinosaurs walked the earth. [And possibly wrote novels.]) 😏
...But I'm not in a difficult mood, and anyway, that wouldn't be helpful.
Let me offer you a small spread of (theoretically) more useful possible diagnostic strategies... because the one I routinely use, the "weighing the story in the hand of the mind" technique, relies on solving for the interactions of a large sheaf of possible qualities against one another—not to mention needing many years of experience—and there's no way it can be relied on to be of any use to you.
(a) One of my editors said to me once that a novel, even if it's one in a series, should routinely describe "the most important thing yet to happen in [the main character’s] life (or should at least be a good candidate-event to be described that way)."
That's... not a terrible place to start constructing an answer backwards from. Does what happens to your main character(s) in the work you're considering fit that description? Then you may indeed have a novel there. Look into that.
(b) Another set of criteria to consider: do you have a lot of characters who're all interacting to drive your plot, but in ways that can't be boiled down to (and explained to one another) in just a paragraph or so?
And, sort of (b1), do your characters have individual motivational or "crisis" arcs running that are going to inevitably pit them against one another? Maybe even repeatedly? (Not that inter-character drama isn't vital even at what might seem quite low levels. But here I mean big personal drama, or crisis-dependent payoffs that would routinely bid fair to derail the forward thrust of the plot until they're successfully handled.) ...A situation like that argues that you're going to need the room a novel allows you to get everybody adequately sorted out.
(c) Anybody('s character) got an archenemy? Like, an actual one? Those routinely need longish arcs to be properly perceived, engaged with, and defeated. (Especially if they're actually worth anything.) Heinlein uses what may well be someone else's line on this subject, and says "To every cat, a fine rat." Your archenemy must realistically and engagingly challenge your main character: otherwise their defeat will be hollow. For a Holmes, you need a genuinely threatening Moriarty. For a Superman, you need (as I see it) a properly dark Darkseid. (Whom I've always been oddly fond of. When correctly written, Darkseid has dignity to him, and a sense of nasty evil gravity.) But to build that relationship, and its destruction? You want a novel's length, and time to explain what happens and exploit the results.
(d) The opposite pole of that diagnostic: anybody got a Mission? I mean, a BIG one? To my mind, that's one of the easiest novel "tells" there is. The kind of Mission that makes you suck your breath in à la the Impressed Dishwasher Repairman and go "Yeah, wow, this is going to cost you..."? That's a novel. Or so it seems to me. Problem with no quick and simple solution, and one that'll make your reader sit still and keep turning page after page (for hours or days) as they wonder how you're going to pull this off? Novel.
And one more to be going on with. (e) Got a love story? ...And I don't necessarily mean a romance. ...Might be a novel there, because it's hard to do that kind of thing well in a short story. (Unless you're Ted Sturgeon, who [alas] seems not to be writing at the moment.)
...Seriously, and with deep respect for a genre that dominates publishing at the moment: the gravity associated with the modern Romance genre is so powerful that it's too easy, when faced with characters in love, to be tempted to sink into the genre's depths and its tropes when there are so many other roads to walk.
You can have a strong work about all kinds of other subjects that has a love story at its heart, and therefore nonetheless needs to be a novel because that's the only way the love story at its core can be given the attention it's due. Forgive me if I have a well-known soft spot for this kind of thing. But have a look at your story and see if inter-character business of this kind might be lurking at its heart. If so: novel.
Anyway: try examining your prospective project in these lights, and see if you can find an answer that makes sense.
HTH!
I'm glad you weren't in a difficult mood. I suppose the fact that I've written way more than 50k words trying to tell this story should have clued me in maybe. But most of that was just different versions of the story I was trying to tell, so the amount of words didn't seem to be significant. I've always been a short story person. Novels require organizational fortitude that I've always found too intimidating for my disorganized and lazy writer's brain. Ironic that I've just about written a novel's worth of words trying to avoid writing a novel? But a novel's worth of words is obviously not the same thing as a novel. Anywhoooo....
I think i definitely have an (a) situation here. Maybe with some (b1) and (e) elements. You gave me a lot to think about and I really, truly, sincerely, appreciate it. Thank you.