“This is just a simple scene,” you think.
Two hours later you’re still adjusting
a single line of dialogue
because the tone is slightly off.
It was never a simple scene...
seen from United States
seen from Japan

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Netherlands

seen from Denmark
seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from Australia
seen from Japan
seen from Germany
seen from Iraq
seen from Brazil
seen from Türkiye
seen from Kazakhstan
seen from Canada

seen from Denmark
“This is just a simple scene,” you think.
Two hours later you’re still adjusting
a single line of dialogue
because the tone is slightly off.
It was never a simple scene...
I've just released something new for writers… ✍️
Introducing my brand new novel planner!
It is a 60-page, fully structured writing system designed to help you plan, organize, and actually finish your story.
It’s built for real writers whether you’re starting your first book or your hundredth.
Now, you can:
• Organize your ideas into clear, usable sections • Build fully developed characters (not just surface-level traits) • Plan your story chapter-by-chapter • Track your word count and progress 📊 • Structure your plot with guided outlines and story beats • Develop your world, setting, and details in depth 🌍 • Brainstorm freely without losing your ideas
What’s inside?
— 60 pages — Fully printable PDF — 7 organized sections — Character development templates — Chapter-by-chapter planning pages — Freewrite sections — Word-count tracker — Plot outline + story beats — Worldbuilding + setting guides — Detailed protagonist sheets (everything from weapons → favorite foods → outfits → home layout) — Notes, brainstorming, and idea trackers
(It's lagging because the file is so large lol)
If you’ve ever: • started a story and lost direction • struggled to organize your ideas • had characters feel boring • or felt overwhelmed halfway through writing…
this planner is designed to fix that while still giving you creative freedom!
Made differently.
This planner is 100% created by me—no AI involved.
Every page is built from real writing experience, with the goal of helping you actually finish your story, not just plan it.
Get your hands on it here!
some of you already know (because I never shut up about it) - I’m writing a novel. I’m 300+ pages in, and honestly, dying for any kind of feedback at this point 😭
so, since I consider most of you my friends (or at least my emotional support mutuals), here’s the first sentence. because let’s be real - if this doesn’t hook you, what’s even the point?
My hands were shaking as I hovered over the mouse — was it nerves, or something else? I laughed at myself and clicked “Send” anyway.
do we like it?? hate it?? feel mild curiosity?? help a girl out pls 💀
Mediocre writing is what's killing writers, not AI.
Everyone’s scared AI will replace writers. It won’t, I promise you.
It’ll replace generic writing. AI is amazing at average. Templates, SEO sludge, safe, beige paragraphs. It’s terrible at being human. It can’t pour its whole existence onto the page. It can’t write from trauma or obsession or 2 a.m. overthinking.
The future belongs to the unmistakable writers. Voice can’t be automated.
Why Your Story Feels “Off” (Even When You Can’t Explain It)
Sometimes it’s not the plot. Not the grammar. Not even the characters.
It’s that quiet feeling that something isn’t landing the way you hoped.
You reread a scene five times. You tweak a sentence, then another. You start wondering if you’ve lost the spark that made you start writing in the first place.
You haven’t.
Most writers hit that point where they’re too close to their own work to see it clearly anymore. It’s like trying to spot a typo in a word you’ve stared at for hours; it just blends in.
And that’s frustrating. Not because the story is bad, but because you care about getting it right.
Sometimes, what you really need isn’t more rewriting. It’s a fresh pair of eyes that can gently point out what’s already working… and what’s quietly holding the story back.
If you’re stuck in that space right now, you’re not alone.
She’s here. 🕷️
The official cover for RAPTORAEM: Book I has arrived, and @BromleynBones perfectly understood the assignment.
I’m always a sucker for diegetic art and a cover that’s quietly snitching on the story, and each of Raptoraem's books has one, with little spoilers baked in if you know where to look 👀
🖤🕷🕸
Begin your descent:
RaptoraemOfficial.com
Join the Contraband Network:
The Ferryman
Pre-order Book I:
Amazon Kindle
Join the Instagram:
SibleyK @ IG
New chapters of my Wattpad romance are out 📖
New chapters of my Wattpad romance are out 📖
Hi everyone! I’ve just posted more chapters of my first Wattpad story, and I’m really grateful to everyone who has checked it out so far.
The story follows James, a confident millionaire music producer who lives by one rule: never see the same girl twice.
But everything starts to change after he meets Arabella in a grocery store while she’s comparing oranges in the fruit aisle.
What begins as a simple meet-cute slowly turns into something deeper as they both start revealing parts of their pasts they usually keep hidden.
It’s still a work in progress, and I’m always open to feedback or thoughts from other readers and writers.
📖 Read it here:
A Good Time James Walker lives by one rule: never fall in love. Rich, confident, and connected to the world of fame, he's used to getting ex
Thank you to anyone who gives it a chance!
On Writing Endings ✍️
There is something terrifying about writing the end of a story.
Because everything has already passed. The battles are over. The confessions have been made—or have not been made. The wounds have been inflicted and are either healed or not. The dead are dead. And yet, somehow, it feels like there is still so much left to say.
An ending isn’t just a final scene. It’s the moment when every thread you’ve been holding—every promise, every wound, every look exchanged across a room—comes to rest in your hands. And you realize the weight of it. The weight of expectations, your own and the readers’. The weight of all the quiet details you planted chapters ago, trusting that one day they would bloom.
And, of course, you have to decide where to let go.
That’s the hardest part. Not the climax. Not the plot twists. Not even the love and the heartbreak. It’s choosing the last line. It’s looking at characters who have lived inside your head for months—sometimes years—and saying: this is where your journey ends.
Because when you write the ending, you’re not just finishing a story. You’re saying goodbye.
Goodbye to the routines you built with them. To their voices interrupting your thoughts. To the longing to wake up early to have your moment with them, writing about their lives, their problems, their failures and their victories. Goodbye to the version of yourself who started writing them, who needed this particular story told in this particular way.
It’s strange how fictional people can feel like companions. How their growth mirrors your own. How the conflicts you resolve for them sometimes help untangle knots within yourself. Writing a story—especially a long one—isn’t just creation. It’s a way of living.
But endings aren’t really about loss, although a very similar feeling overwhelms me (when the pressure of expectations finally fades). I think they’re proof. Proof that you stayed. That you carried the story all the way through. That you brought something to its end and reached the finish line. And that you took everyone—characters, story, and readers—with you.
And maybe, once the goodbye stops hurting so sharply, what remains for me is gratitude.
For the journey. For the characters. For the version of me who needed to tell this story. And, above all, for you, who have accompanied me.