top 3 hobbies for young adults:
1. borrowing misery from future
2. carrying grief of the past
3. agonizing over the present

shark vs the universe
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he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
Jules of Nature

JBB: An Artblog!

blake kathryn
will byers stan first human second
I'd rather be in outer space šø
Aqua Utopiaļ½ęµ·ć®åŗć§čØę¶ćē“”ć
tumblr dot com

if i look back, i am lost
KIROKAZE
YOU ARE THE REASON
taylor price

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Cosmic Funnies

izzy's playlists!
ojovivo

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@leorainbowchild
top 3 hobbies for young adults:
1. borrowing misery from future
2. carrying grief of the past
3. agonizing over the present
june will be good june will be good june will be good june will be good june will be good june will be good june will be good june will be good june will be good june will be
Rules of DIY:
if it's a skill, there's rules you can learn
if it's an art, rules are not your concern
make it fucked up or you won't make it
if it's already broken, you can't break it
anything can be fixed with gorilla glue
except for pleather, and also you
August 22nd, 2025
let me rise
within the swells of you
lost in your sky-bound amplitude
timing breath
my timid heartbeat
to match your wavelength
a mad rhythm
rippling fangs peak
in the pull of a separate gravity
mountains birthing valleys
valleys unbirthing into silent hollows
a bated breath
ready to burst from lung
let me sink
into the lightless space of you
your crushing deep
weightless embrace
of countless atmospheres
unseen creatures
eternal dancing
whispering silk
in liquid obsidian
like bodies entwined
saltwater sweat
turning beneath
a heavy blanket
when i sleep
let me feel you
moving in the dark beside me
form when i am formless
a jewel-eyed dreamcatcher
when i wake
let your voice be
what wakes me
as though the landscape of dawn
was painted by the sound
Copywork and how it makes Better Writers.
What is Copywork? Copywork is the act of copying a paragraph or passage from a novel you like. Isn't that just plagiarism? No, while you are copying what another author wrote, copywork isn't for the purpose of publishing. It's an exercise for improving your understanding of sentence structure, grammar, vocabulary, metaphor usage, and more, while helping you sound like the author you admire.
Who uses Copywork? Originally, copywork was invented by scribes to help preserve knowledge. These scribes would hand write every detail of whatever important texts they wanted to save. But it became more popular by writers like, Scott Fitzgerald who wrote The Great Gatsby, and James Patterson who wrote Along Came a Spider.
Why should I practice Copywork? While it's good for all great writers to read a lot. Reading can only get you so far. If I were to ask you, What author inspires you to write better? Who would you say? Why does this author inspire you? Whatever the case is, I know that for every writer out there, there is always at least one author you've wanted to write like. For me, I really love how Frank Herbert, the author of Dune, writes his books. And at one point in my life, I really wanted to write like he does. So, I sat down and scoured the internet, looking for anything that would help me write like Frank Herbert, but I couldn't find anything. If you've ever been in a situation like this, Copywork is your best friend. Instead of reading article after article or scouring Reddit for anything and only coming up with: this is how they structure their sentences. Or, you can't write like so and so, you should have your own style. Use Copywork.
The Big Question: How Can I Copywork?
If you have your own Frank Herbert, an author whose writing style you love, pick one of their books and find a passage or page that speaks to you the most.
If you don't have an author like that, ask yourself: What about my writing do I want to improve? When you find your answer, look for an author who does the thing you want to work on in a way that you like.
Once you have your passage, get a pen and paper. This is going to help you absorb the information so much better than just typing it out.
Step 1. Set time aside every day, at least 20 minutes, to practice.
Step 2. Copy down the scene you picked out.
Step 3. Go back to the start and break each sentence down into its base structure of, Noun, Verb, Adjective.
Step 4. Rewrite the scene, using the sentence structure and formatting, with your own characters, setting details, and dialogue.
Step 5. Repeat the next day with a new scene.
This is the magic lucky word count. Reblog for creativity juice. It might even work, who knows.
*pretends to be in touch with my emotions but I actually just am in touch with my thoughts and havenāt let myself experience a genuine emotion in six months* :)
"If I don't get elected, it's gonna be a bloodbath. It's going to be a bloodbath for the country"
He's taken a political party and transformed it into a cult of political violence & chaos. The only way to stop the madness is to vote against him in Nov.
Writing isn't just putting words on the page. It's thinking about your character while you're taking a shower, scribbling down a plot idea at 3am, daydreaming about your story world, getting struck by sudden inspiration while listening to a song. Don't get hung up on how many words you've written. If you're making mental space of any kind for your story, you're writing.
āomg youāre so creative. how do you get your ideasā i hallucinate a single scene in the taco bell drive thru and then spend 13 months trying to write it