h-hey yâalllâŠ.

Janaina Medeiros
hello vonnie
TVSTRANGERTHINGS

blake kathryn
đȘŒ
Today's Document
sheepfilms
we're not kids anymore.
Jules of Nature
Cosmic Funnies

ellievsbear

oozey mess
Aqua Utopiaïœæ”·ăźćșă§èšæ¶ă玥ă
No title available

â
YOU ARE THE REASON

titsay
d e v o n

Andulka
will byers stan first human second

seen from United Kingdom
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seen from United Kingdom

seen from Spain
seen from United Kingdom

seen from South Africa
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Spain
seen from United States

seen from T1

seen from South Korea
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@skelemos
h-hey yâalllâŠ.
Kind of feeling bad I didnât do anything here over the weekend. Got distracted.
a daily reminder that your blog is yours and you can do whatever the hell you want with it. if you want to post ooc or yell about your muses all day without writing, you can. having fun outside of replying to threads and asks isn't something you have to earn. if people unfollow you for it well, they're boring and can't appreciate your very cool personality. the moment we start treating a hobby like a job is the moment people start to loose their spark.
Hello lovelies ! I have things I need to tend to, but I will attempt some form of activity here as best I can.
PSAÂ Â Â UÂ SWEETÂ BABIES
listen. we love you. you arent going to become irrelevant if you dont write replies everyday. you arent going to be forgotten about if you dont write  every  starter. no one cares if you have graphics or icons. its ok. you dont have to impress everyone, because if someone has followed you that means they are already impressed by your work. Â
please do not feel pressured to fill a quota in. this isnt a job! its fun! Â
Just imagine... another set of Ăscar and Felipe existing ... quadruple trouble .
Icon and header change !
Cleaned out drafts I had for months, possibly over a year .
Thatâs p much it , I will be lurking / on Discord !
met doing laundry at 2am college au
accidentally knocked on the wrong dorm room college au
picked up the wrong book when we bumped into each other college au
hey exchange student why donât you can come to mine for thanksgiving?? college au
did i mention college au
walked in on you in the shower college au
drunkenly hooked up but youâre dating my roommate who already hates me college au
the always-partying kid falls for the always-studying kid college au
heard a scream and thought you were getting killed but it was just a spider college au
i really hate you but you have the highest grades in class and i need help college au
(ââżââż) cOLLEGE AU (ââżââż)
I am once again thinking about the customers who actually tried on Ăscar and Felipeâs failed shoe inventions.
IâŠ.. loâŠ.ve the twinsâŠâŠ I fucking love them. Thatâs it.
I need to talk to Seb at some point but, it can wait
2x10
My return here is definitely will be slow going. I will try to rewatch Coco over the weekend / re read the novel.
Hi yâall Iâm not dead. I miss this blog.
Hello. :)
Alright RPC â We Gotta Talk About Passive Replies.
This is one of my worst pet peeves in Role playing or doing any collaborative writing with other people. Itâs something I myself have been guilty of, especially if my muse is running low and I am forcing out replies. Itâs something I see a lot of even from very good writers. Itâs a widespread problem, that is exhausting for an RP partner to deal with in threads especially if itâs every reply.
And just like any problem â the first step in resolving it is looking out for it and realizing itâs there to begin with. Being conscious about this I personally believe separates a good RP partner from a great one.
Iâm talking about passive replies.
Passive replies come in various forms. They can be anything from a novella sized reply â to a one-liner but they all share a similar trait. They do not contribute to pushing the action of a thread forward. They tend to be a summary of the reply preceding it through their characterâs eyes with a small verbal or nonverbal reaction to the character they are interacting with. They do not add any new information for the other character to react to because the reply is pure reaction without any proactive elements.
This means your thread basically becomes the equivalent of a conversation like this:
Hey, you! Oh, Hey! How are you? Oh, Iâm good. What are you up to? Nothing much, really. Have any plans? No. Not really.
Itâs a functional conversation â sure, but itâs one-sided and relies on one person driving the action while the other simply responds. It is exhausting for one mun to constantly be the one driving the action of a scene forward. It makes things harder to respond to because youâre giving your RP partner fairly little to work with. The example above is obviously an extremely simplified example - but I hope you can get the gist of what I am getting at. Â
Even if your character is shy, or anti-social, or maladjusted in someway â your replies can still play and active role in the situation. Being an active participant in a thread doesnât meant that your muse has to be crazy and outgoing. It means that you have to do more than simply react to what is happening. Every reply should add at least one new thing for your partner to react to.
This can be anything from adding to the conversation â not just reacting to what was said prior. This can be your character doing some non verbal action. This could be and NPC or outside situation or the weather doing something to react to. No matter what the situation is â there are things your muse can do to be an active part of the scene, and not just a reactionary prop.
If your replies or even your starters are one of these two things:
1) Expecting someone to find or stumble upon your muse in someway. Or relies on your partner to initiate some action between your characters. 2) Is just a summary of what happened in their reply through your characterâs eyes without adding anything new.
Itâs a passive reply â and by nature harder to respond to. It means you should consider looking over your reply and tweaking it to give the other character something more to work with to take the pressure off and your partners should be doing the same for you. After all a conversation like this:
Hey, havenât seen you in forever! I know right? What have you been up to? Honestly â nothing much. Workâs been murder. What about you? Ah thatâs unfortunate. Iâm the same, but Iâm going out for drinks later want to come? I canât tonight, have to wake up early tomorrow. Maybe we can catch up later?
Is a much more interesting conversation because both parties are doing their part to drive the action forward.
Itâs easy to say that passive replies are spawned from laziness or poor writing. But theyâre not (the vast majority of the time anyway). Even good writers who make beautiful replies do it. I personally think it spawns from equal parts insecurity and good intentions. People donât want to rock the boat, or take risks with their writing in case they accidentally step on any toes. Not realizing of course that they are putting strain on the writer they are working with by letting them drive all the action.
It can be exhausting.
Roleplaying is a collaborative writing experience. A great RP partner is someone who works with you as a team to tell the story of both your characters. Each person should be putting forth new things to react to and being an active part in building something awesome. It makes for a more interesting read and more dynamic plots and quite frankly more chances for characters to build genuine chemistry.
Otherwise, you end up with a lopsided plot and a burnt out RP partner. No one wants that.
The person I reblogged this from is someone I enjoy seeing on my dashboard.
Too tired to do anything for the twins's birthday.