I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
noise dept.

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DEAR READER
sheepfilms

tannertan36
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
Jules of Nature

★
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
YOU ARE THE REASON
Show & Tell
d e v o n
🪼
AnasAbdin

Discoholic 🪩

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@sun---dogs
Over This
When you enjoy dialogue so much that you end up completely avoiding describing the places properly
V.E. Schwab’s advice on creating memorable characters.
this has changed me character creation entirely
are you even a writer if you don’t leave incoherent annotations on your work that you’ll never understand again
I fixed it
Thank you for showing the truth.
hahahaha
I guarantee you I won’t be looking for “spindrift” when I want “blue but not on the purple side I want it more green but not that green how saturated do we go here should it be whiter or what”
Meanwhile writers are like “BUT WHAT’S THE NAME OF THE SHADE BETWEEN FLORA AND HONEYDEW I NEED IT FOR HER EYES”
I repurposed an older character of mine into another Okami OC! His name is The Poet and he’s a big shy dude. He’s also got a full side-quest!
Poet is remade from this Star Wars OC- (linked here)
( also, here is his quest info in a google doc in case the images are hard to read! )
hey, friendly editor-writer gremlin stopping by to remind you all that in creative writing, every aspect of language is a tool. You can’t throw things out of the toolbox, because you never know what you’ll need for a specific situation or task!
Some tools are general purpose, like grammar, punctuation and sentence structure – you use them all the time, except in very rare circumstances where building a passage without those tools would make a statement, or convey meaning in a certain way. Some, like passive voice or adverbs, only come out every now and again. The trick is knowing how and when to use which tools. (Which is why I vastly prefer to think of various writing techniques and language components as tools instead of rules).
Lots of advice tells you to dispense with words like “wondered”, “thought”, “felt” because they are passive – they put a barrier between the reader and the narration. But! What about when you want to create a barrier? i.e.,
How was that fair, he wondered. \ he wondered how that could be fair.
This feels distant, contemplative. Perhaps a character is pondering the fairness of something, but they’re not quite emotionally invested (yet). Perhaps they don’t want to think too deeply or look too hard at an issue, and so they’re keeping a degree of emotional distance.
How was that fair?
A direct question – the character is asking themself and the reader to consider the implications of something.
It wasn’t fair.
A statement. This is what the character feels; this is, for better or worse, their opinion of the matter at that moment in time.
Another common example is adverbs: “don’t use adverbs! use a stronger verb! say ‘whispered’ instead of ‘said quiety’!” etc etc. But whether you use a “stronger” verb, or add on an adverb, is (again) a matter of picking the correct tool for the job. Sometimes you need to use a mallet instead of a hammer, even though both seem functionally similar; and sometimes either tool will suffice.
“Hey,” she whispered.
The word “whisper” in itself doesn’t have a lot of emotion attached to it. It’s just a thing you do if you need to be quiet for whatever reason.
“Hey,” she said softly.
“softly”, however, does have emotional connotations. There’s tenderness here, or at least gentleness. Using an adverb adds a whole other layer of meaning, which is great when you’re crafting emotionally heavy scenes.
Compare this to:
“Hey,” she whispered softly
which is a tautology. Whispering is soft (usually). You only need to describe how someone whispers if they break convention, and in that case you could also pick a different verb – that’s very much a stylistic choice on your part, as the writer, and depends on what sort of atmosphere or meaning you want to convey. Like this:
“Hey,” she hissed \ “Hey,” she whispered sharply
In this case, “hissed” and “whispered sharply” could be used interchangeably, but they could also be used separately, depending on the writer’s requirements for that scene. Both convey urgency, but there are subtle differences in what sort of urgency it is. “sharply” has connotations of severity, chiding, or a short temper; “hissed” feels slightly more desperate, although it could also be read as angry, based on what else happens in the passage.
I could go on, but I’m low on spoons and still need to hit my word count for today. Basically, the tools you use are very important and you shouldn’t take any of them for granted or dismiss them out of hand, and if someone tells you that you should, don’t let them get to you.
The real writer experience is standing in the shower and coming up with the most authentic dialogue with perfect phrasing and raw emotion in your head, then stepping out and drying your hair, putting on some clean pajamas and opening a word document to write down all your perfect ideas only to realize everything has evaporated.
I FEEL CALLED OUT
Never lose a perfect shower line again.*
*Remember to erase promptly if you share a bathroom with anyone.
I’ve used these to outline term papers. nothing like a bath to get your brain to finally kick into gear and figure out your damn thesis
WHAT
Also these handy little guys if you prefer a notepad:
Are you kidding, shower crayons are the BEST when you share a bathroom with other people. When I was in college, we had them and we would use them to carry on philosophical debates, finish song lyrics, get life/writing advice, etc. It was so much fun and I miss it.
Oh my GOD no one told me these existed
Also
God fucking bless the people who made these
Going back into the shower (you don’t need to turn it on) can be enough to retrieve the memory
Our brains refresh every time we go through a doorway. It packs away the data from the room we left so it can load up the floor plan of the room we’re going into. If you go back to the room where you had the thought your brain will often unpack the memory when it’s loading up the floor plan
are you telling me i can’t remember info bc my brain is rendering???
Me creating a new WIP: *moves all my emotional baggage to a new word doc*
while driving : *constructs brilliant plot lines*
in the shower : *develops complicated and in-depth character backgrounds*
sitting down to write : *stares at empty word doc* …what?
Does anybody else get this thing where they have a new idea for a story except that its not really a whole idea? Just like, a picture or a scene from a movie unfolding in front of you? Only its so clear, so sharp and strong that you know its going to be a story. It burns inside you, making you replay it again and again, from a new angle each time because you want to know, need to know, how this fits in a narrative.
Like, you see the characters and how they look, you know the setting, you know the motivations (but not the context), and every minute detail and nuance of expression or shadows or well, everything.
You even know what sounds the characters can hear, what sensations they are feeling. You know what music would be playing if this was really a movie.
You just… don’t know how it fits into a plot yet.
When you're writing and you suddenly realize you don't know what happens next
When you’re writing and you suddenly realise you DO know what happens next
When you’re writing and you realise you have to write what happens next
My god that last one though
@blackkatmagic
The true writing experience is thinking you can get away with writing a story with far less words than what the total word-count actually ends up being