I always wondered this question. Now, Im so glad my villains weren't stupid.
https://youtube.com/shorts/HE-4sjiQqxU?si=AfUol4GVGVKjx3BV
Claire Keane
Jules of Nature
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
occasionally subtle

tannertan36
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JVL

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Origami Around

titsay
Peter Solarz
Game of Thrones Daily
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AnasAbdin

Love Begins
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@verdantseaflaring
I always wondered this question. Now, Im so glad my villains weren't stupid.
https://youtube.com/shorts/HE-4sjiQqxU?si=AfUol4GVGVKjx3BV
Heatstroke Dialogue
“Hey… wait up… I feel dizzy.”
“You don't look very well. When did you last drink water?”
“Come on, let’s get you in the shade…”
“Let’s take a break before you have to take a permanent break.”
“How long have you been out here in the sun?”
“We’re almost out of water…”
“Whoa, your skin is really warm. Are you feeling okay?”
“Easy there. Sorry, didn’t mean to startle you, but I found you passed out on the trail and dragged you in the shade. Help is on the way. You okay?”
“Shut up and let me help you.”
“We need some help over there! Someone collapsed!”
[Prompt Calender: May 29th, National Heat Awareness Day]
Fast Food Worker Dialogue
“Sir, that coupon expired during the Obama administration.”
“We close in two minutes, which is a fascinating time to order fourteen burgers.”
“I asked for two things today: no bus tours and no school classes. And yet, there it is: two busses of school classes pulling into the lot.”
“Did you make the wrong order on purpose just so you could eat it instead?” “Yeah, that was the plan. He didn’t notice though and drove off with my dinner, so we can expect another angry review.”
“Ma’am, I just work here. I’m not involved in corporate decisions, such as changing the menu.”
“Of course, you can absolutely speak to the manager. He’s back there, hiding from customers.”
“If the card reader declines one more payment today, I might just walk into traffic.”
“That’s gotta be a health code violation.” “Surprisingly, it actually isn’t.”
(mumbling under their breath) “Who the fuck orders that before 8am.”
“Sorry for the wait. The kitchen entered a state of civil unrest.”
“I used to have dreams, you know? I went to college. Got a degree and all. I dreamed of changing the world, but then it all changed when I got hit by that bus—” “You know what, I don’t think I actually need the fries with the burger, so I’ll just… I’ll just go.”
[Prompt Calender: May 28th, National Hamburger Day]
Chaotic gremlin best friends!!
⟢ "I need an alibi for Tuesday." - "What time." - "You didn't ask what I did." - "What time."
⟢ "Hypothetically." - "No." - "You didn't hear the question." - "Hypothetically no."
⟢ "I did something." - "Scale of one to ten." - "Depends who's asking." "Me." - "Seven." - "Police." - "Four." - "God." - "Thirteen."
⟢ "We need to leave."- "Why." - "I'll explain in the car." - "Why." - "I'll explain in a different country."
⟢ "This is your fault." - "You literally came up with the idea." - "I have bad ideas all the time, you're not supposed to DO them."
⟢ "Okay hear me out." - "My lawyer has advised me not to hear you out." - "You don't have a lawyer." - "I'm getting one specifically for conversations with you."
⟢ "Nobody got hurt." - "Physically." . "Nobody got physically hurt." - "Yet." - "Nobody has gotten physically hurt yet, which is a win."
⟢ "I have a type." - "Yeah?" - "People who are bad for me and you specifically." - "That's not a type that's a pattern." - "Same thing."
⟢ "What's the worst that could happen." - "I have a list. It's laminated. I made it specifically for when you say that."
⟢ "Rate my decision making." - "Historically or right now." - "Both." - "Zero. Consistent zero across the board."
⟢ "You're the only person I trust." - "I dropped your birthday cake last year and told you it arrived like that." - "Yeah but you still got me a cake."
⟢ "I need your honest opinion." - "It's bad." - "You didn't see it yet." - "I've met you. It's bad."
⟢ "Why do you even keep me around." - "Honestly? Entertainment. And you're warm in winter."
⟢ "I wasn't thinking." - "First time for everything." - "I resent that." - "Statistically valid though."
⟢ "On a scale of fine to not fine." - "Remember that time in Prague." - "We don't talk about Prague." - "That fine."
⟢ "Nobody panic but." - "I'm already panicking." - "I haven't said anything yet." - "I know you. I'm getting ahead of it."
⟢ "Promise you won't be mad." - "Absolutely not, that's a trap and I won't fall for it."
⟢ "I have good news and bad news." - "Good news first." - "The car is fine." - "And the bad." - "Define car."
⟢ "You're my emergency contact." - "I know." - "You're listed as my next of kin." - "I know." - "You're also listed as my therapist, my lawyer, and my spiritual advisor." - "I know." - "Do you want to talk about that." - "Nope." - "Cool."
⟢ "I'm a responsible adult."- "You once called me crying because you got your sleeve caught in a door and didn't know what to do." - "I was panicking." - "For forty minutes." - "It was really stuck."
⟢ "I regret everything." - "No you don't." - "No I don't but I feel like I should." - "Same honestly."
hero x villain moments
a smitten villain getting caught on purpose just to get scolded by hero
freezing when the other doesn't immediately get up after being slammed into a wall, instead laying motionless for a second too long
nervousness before facing the other, like you would before a date
in fact, their fights start being like a date. a very intense date, with not a lot of sweet talking, but... a date of sorts still
realising when the other is having a rough time and using a bad excuse to not beat them into the ground
sending the other a slightly mocking, slightly flirty care package after beating their ass
getting knocked out in a fight and not waking up in a cell but in their bed with a sticky note on their forehead with "get well soon, idiot" scribbled on it
Unsaid Things writing ideas
⭒ Two characters sit in the same room, both fully aware that if either of them speaks honestly, the relationship will never be the same again.
⭒ One character practices a confession over and over in their head, then says something completely meaningless out loud instead.
⭒ A character overhears a conversation that confirms their worst fear, and chooses to pretend they never heard it.
⭒ Someone writes a letter they never intend to send, then hides it somewhere the other character almost finds.
⭒ A character asks a harmless question, already knowing the answer, just to see if the other person will lie.
⭒ One character is desperately waiting for an apology that will never come, while the other assumes enough time has passed to forget it.
⭒ A character realizes the other one has been protecting them from the truth, and can’t decide whether to feel grateful or betrayed.
⭒ Two characters share a private joke in public, using humor to avoid acknowledging the fracture underneath.
⭒ Someone almost says “I need you,” but replaces it with something safer, smaller, and far more dishonest.
⭒ A character chooses to leave the room instead of finishing the sentence they started.
⭒ One character knows exactly when things started going wrong, but refuses to admit it because that would mean admitting they stayed too long.
15 Emotional Truths Readers Crave in Fiction
Readers don’t come to stories just for plot. They come to feel seen. No matter the genre (fantasy, romance, sci-fi, or fan fiction), stories resonate when they reflect emotional truths readers recognize from real life, even in unreal worlds.
These aren’t clichés or morals. They’re emotional realities that make readers think: Yes. That’s exactly how it feels.
Below are 15 emotional truths readers crave, plus notes on how you can bring them to life on the page.
1. Love is often messy, not pure
Readers crave love that includes fear, jealousy, uncertainty, and mistakes. Perfect devotion is less relatable than love that struggles.
Writing tip: Let affection coexist with resentment, doubt, or exhaustion.
2. Wanting something doesn’t mean you’ll get it
One of the most painful (and powerful) truths: desire isn’t a guarantee.
Writing tip: Let characters want deeply even when the outcome is uncertain or tragic.
3. People hurt each other without meaning to
Most emotional wounds aren’t caused by villains. They’re caused by misunderstandings, timing, and fear.
Writing tip: Replace malice with misalignment. It feels more real.
4. Growth is uncomfortable and uneven
Change rarely happens in a straight line. Readers recognize setbacks, relapses, and resistance.
Writing tip: Let characters regress before they improve.
5. Silence can hurt more than words
What goes unsaid often carries more emotional weight than dialogue.
Writing tip: Use pauses, avoidance, and unfinished sentences strategically.
6. Love doesn’t always fix the damage
Affection can coexist with trauma, grief, or broken trust.
Writing tip: Allow love to support healing without magically curing it.
7. People lie to themselves first
Readers connect to characters who rationalize, justify, or deny uncomfortable truths.
Writing tip: Show the gap between what a character says and what they do.
8. Fear often masquerades as anger
Anger is usually the surface emotion; fear is the engine underneath.
Writing tip: Ask what your character is protecting themselves from.
9. Being chosen matters
Whether it’s love, loyalty, or friendship, readers crave the moment a character is actively chosen.
Writing tip: Make choices explicit, not assumed. Moments where a character is deliberately chosen tend to land harder than declarations.
10. Closure is rarely perfect
Real life doesn’t always offer clean endings, and readers know that.
Writing tip: Aim for emotional resolution, not total neatness.
11. Grief comes in waves
Loss doesn’t fade, it resurfaces unexpectedly.
Writing tip: Let grief appear in mundane moments, not just dramatic ones.
12. People change… but not all at once
Readers crave realism: habits linger, flaws persist, even after revelations.
Writing tip: Let improvement be partial and ongoing.
13. Wanting independence can clash with wanting love
The tension between autonomy and connection is deeply relatable.
Writing tip: Force characters to choose, or believe they must.
14. Regret can be quiet
Not all regret looks like breakdowns. Sometimes it’s a glance, a pause, a “what if.”
Writing tip: Use small, restrained reactions to show lasting regret.
15. Being understood is as powerful as being loved
Readers ache for characters who are truly seen, flaws and all.
Writing tip: Give characters moments where someone understands them without explanation.
Arguments That Are Actually Foreplay
❃ Arguing over who started it when both of them know exactly when it turned personal.
❃ Standing far too close just to prove a point.
❃ Crossing arms, uncrossing them, then using the table for balance.
❃ Storming off with the expectation of being followed
❃ Disagreeing just to keep the conversation going.
❃ “Say that again.”
❃ “Don’t look at me like that.”
❃ “You’re not listening to me.” “I am. You’re just wrong.”
❃ “Don’t touch me.” “I didn’t.” “You were about to.”
❃ “You're so annoying.”
❃ “You're enjoying this.”
❃“You love pushing my buttons.” “You love that I know where they are.”
❃“You’re playing a dangerous game.” “You’re the one who taught me how.”
Most Common Types of Plot Holes
1. Logic Plot Holes
Events contradict basic logic or common sense. Example: A character survives something that should clearly kill them with no explanation.
2. Character Motivation Plot Holes
A character acts in a way that doesn’t match their established goals, fears, or values. Example: A cautious character suddenly takes a reckless risk for no clear reason.
3. Timeline Plot Holes
The sequence of events doesn’t add up. Example: A journey takes two days in one chapter and two weeks in another with no explanation.
4. Knowledge Plot Holes
A character knows something they should have no way of knowing. Example: They name a villain they’ve never met or heard of.
5. Cause-and-Effect Plot Holes
Events happen without being caused by anything meaningful. Example: The villain is defeated by coincidence instead of character action.
6. Worldbuilding Plot Holes
The rules of the world are broken or ignored. Example: Magic is established as rare, then suddenly everyone uses it.
7. Stakes Plot Holes
The story claims something is important, but nothing changes when it’s lost or fails. Example: A “dangerous” artifact is destroyed and nothing bad happens.
8. Emotional Plot Holes
Characters don’t emotionally react to major events in believable ways. Example: A character loses a loved one and is fine in the next scene.
9. Ability Plot Holes
A character’s skills change to fit the plot. Example: A character who can’t fight suddenly defeats a trained warrior.
10. Convenience Plot Holes (Deus Ex Machina)
The story solves a problem with a random or unearned solution. Example: A new power appears at the last second to save the hero.
11. Forgotten Consequences
Actions have no lasting impact when they realistically should. Example: A character commits a crime and is never pursued or affected by it again.
12. Setting Inconsistencies
Physical locations change or behave inconsistently. Example: A room is described as windowless, then later a character looks out the window.
13. Relationship Plot Holes
Relationships shift without development. Example: Two enemies suddenly trust each other with no bridge scene.
14. Rule Exceptions with No Cost
Rules are broken only when convenient, with no price paid. Example: Time travel is dangerous except when the protagonist uses it.
15. Offscreen Solutions
Important problems are solved off-page, robbing the story of tension. Example: “Don’t worry, I handled it,” with no explanation or scene.
Types of Flirting
SUBTLE: giving looks, brushing hands, little comments that could be mistaken for an innocent compliment
PLAYFUL: lighthearted teasing & banter, exaggerated reaction, poking fun at behaviours, playful shoves, feigned offense, "Oh, you think you're funny, do you?"
SUGGESTIVE: straightforward, complimenting looks, casual physical touch, dirty jokes, expressing desire, "We could always sneak out somewhere quieter."
ROMANTIC: head over heals, thoughtful gestures, blushing, classically romantic gestures (holding doors, holding an umbrella, bringing coffee in the morning), "My soul knows yours from another lifetime and calls for yours in this one too."
ANXIOUS: freaking out over every text and interaction, discussing every move with their friends,
BOLD: direct, no subtly, relationships always labelled, "I've really liked being around you. Could I maybe take you on a date sometime?"
SHY: nervous, insecure, showing no interest until they are sure the other is interested, fidgeting, daydreaming about what could be if they had the courage to confess, using excuses to be close to them, "Um... you look really good today."
CARETAKING: acts of service, protectiveness, checking in, bringing snacks, offering jacket, fixing things, walking them home, "Brought you coffee; it's still warm."
CASUAL & INTENSE: platonic flirting with no further intentions, way over the top at times, effortless, fun, teasing, maybe eventually leading to more, "You look great, please break my back and reshape my inner organs."
[Prompt Calender: February 9th, International Flirting Week]
Good vs. Bad Dialogue
Bad dialogue explains everything. Good dialogue trusts the reader to pick things up between the lines.
Bad dialogue sounds the same for every character. Good dialogue reflects personality, background, mood, and power dynamics.
Bad dialogue says exactly what the character feels. Good dialogue circles around the feeling, avoids it, or contradicts it.
Bad dialogue exists only to deliver information. Good dialogue reveals character while moving the plot forward.
Bad dialogue feels too polished or “perfect.” Good dialogue has interruptions, unfinished thoughts, and subtext.
Bad dialogue answers every question immediately. Good dialogue creates new tension, confusion, or curiosity.
Bad dialogue tells us relationships directly. Good dialogue shows relationships through tone, silence, and word choice.
Bad dialogue ignores conflict. Good dialogue lets characters want different things in the same conversation.
Bad dialogue sounds like a script being read. Good dialogue feels like people talking with something to lose.
Bad dialogue stays on the surface. Good dialogue is about what’s not being said.
Ask me about my OTP:
How would a thumb war go?
How do they go about solving arguments and what do they usually argue about?
How do they celebrate their anniversaries?
What acts do the couple do for the other that they absolutely adore? (ex: A knows B hates peeling oranges so A does it)
What matching outfits do you imagine the pair wearing?
How did they become official?
How did they act with one another during the crushing stage?
During the crushing stage, how did they try to get each other's attention?
What did the pair compromise for each other, if they did?
What is an incredibly heartwarming moment between the two?
What do you love about them?
What is their ship name and why?
How would the pair do in an escape room? What kind of room would they choose and would they get out?
How do they work together?
What do they do to make each other laugh? Doesn't have to be on purpose either.
If they're separate and they see something that reminds them of their beloved. What would it most likely be and why?
What do they do that make their partner think, "Damn, that's hot." (Could be an innocent gesture)
Do they have a dirty secret they hide from one another? What is it and why do they hide it?
Do they have a place/object that is specifically theirs? Where/What is it and why? (ex: Odysseus and Penelope's olive tree bed)
What is a secret that only their partner knows?
How did they meet and their first impressions upon meeting each other?
What AUs would you like to explore with them? If you have, what AUs have you done and what happens in them? Do you have a favourite?
What is a hobby/habit that one of them is into but the other can't get behind, and vice versa?
Did they have romantic rivals that wanted one (or both) member of the OTP? Who were they?
Did they ever have a disastrous date? What happened?
What tropes does your OTP fall under?
What made you start shipping them?
How do they divide up the chores? Who does what?
What is their home like and how do they decorate it?
What memes do you associate the individual characters/OTP with?
What's their cursed couple Halloween costume?
Do they remind you of another OTP you love? Who and why?
Imagine this OTP on a couple date with another OTP of yours. How does it go?
If they get married, what would their wedding be like? (Location, food, guests, wedding outfits, etc)
Is there a travel destination they wish to go to?
Do they have a couple bucket list?
What did the couple introduce to one another? (Can be a product, hobby, way of doing things, etc.)
What is something they admire about the other?
Before they were dating, did they have supportive friends who tried to set them up? What did they try to do?
What symbols do you associate with your OTP and why?
Stages Of Writing A Love Story
1. The Setup (Separate Worlds)
Each character is introduced in their own emotional world. We see:
Their wounds, needs, and flaws
What they want vs. what they actually need
Why love is currently not working for them
This stage sets up why the romance matters.
2. The Meet Cute or First Collision
They meet in a way that creates friction, curiosity, or disruption. This can be cute, hostile, awkward, or intense — but it must change something for both of them.
3. Attraction and Tension
They feel drawn to each other, but:
There are obstacles (external or internal)
They deny, resist, or misinterpret their feelings
Chemistry builds through proximity, conflict, or emotional glimpses
This is the slow pull stage.
4. Forced Proximity or Emotional Intimacy
Circumstances push them together:
Working together
Traveling together
Being trapped together
Sharing secrets or vulnerability
This is where emotional bonding starts, even if they don’t admit it.
5. The First Shift (Romantic or Emotional Breakthrough)
A moment changes the nature of their relationship:
First kiss
Confession
One saves the other
A moment of deep understanding
After this, the story is no longer “will they notice each other?” but “what does this mean now?”
6. The Honeymoon or Hope Phase
Things feel good. There’s closeness, trust, or passion. The reader is allowed to believe the relationship might actually work.
This makes the coming conflict hurt more.
7. The Break (The Black Moment)
Something shatters the relationship:
A betrayal, lie, misunderstanding, or revelation
A fear or wound resurfaces
External pressure pulls them apart
This is the emotional low point of the romance.
8. The Growth and Choice
Both characters grow:
They confront their flaws or fears
They choose love intentionally, not accidentally
They become capable of sustaining the relationship
This is where love becomes a decision, not just a feeling.
9. The Reunion and Resolution (HEA or HFN)
They reunite with honesty and emotional maturity. The story resolves with:
A Happily Ever After (HEA) or
A Happy For Now (HFN)
The emotional promise of the genre is fulfilled.
✦ Why This Structure Works
Romance isn’t just about attraction — it’s about emotional transformation through love. Each stage:
Builds intimacy
Introduces risk
Forces growth
Rewards vulnerability
That’s why it feels satisfying.
How to Fix Underwriting
1. Slow down at emotionally important moments.
Big emotions need space to land. If a scene feels rushed, pause the plot briefly to show how the moment affects the character.
2. Add reactions, not explanations.
Instead of explaining what a character feels, show it through physical responses, hesitation, or small actions that reveal emotion naturally.
3. Ground every scene in the senses.
If a scene feels thin, add one or two sensory details—sound, texture, smell, or temperature—to make the moment feel lived-in.
4. Let thoughts interrupt action.
A line of internal thought can deepen a scene without slowing it too much. Thoughts show stakes, fear, longing, or conflict beneath the action.
5. Expand consequences, not events.
You don’t need more things to happen—you need to show what matters. Focus on how events change relationships, decisions, or self-perception.
6. Strengthen setting where emotion peaks.
The environment should echo or contrast the emotion of the scene. Setting is not decoration—it’s emotional reinforcement.
7. Add specific details instead of general ones.
Underwriting often relies on vague language. Swap “they argued” for one sharp line of dialogue or a specific breaking point.
8. Let dialogue breathe.
Short dialogue exchanges without pauses can feel flat. Add beats—silence, gestures, interruptions—to give the conversation weight.
9. Show transitions between scenes.
If scenes jump too quickly, readers feel disoriented. A brief transition helps establish time, mood, and emotional continuity.
10. Clarify stakes early in the scene.
If readers don’t know what can be lost, scenes feel empty. Make sure the character wants something specific and fears losing it.
11. Use the “what are they feeling right now?” check.
After each major beat, ask what emotion is dominant in that moment. If it’s missing on the page, the scene is likely underwritten.
12. Expand scenes that feel “too clean.”
If a scene resolves too neatly or quickly, it probably needs more tension. Messy emotions and unresolved feelings add depth.
Domestic Alphabet
For all your sickeningly sweet fluff needs.
Centered around living with someone/long-term relationships. Can be used for ships or singular characters.
°⋆.୨ৎ࿔:・ WHAT IF THIS IS THE BEST VERSION OF ME? ... a collection of roleplay sentence starters ⁽ ⁰⁰¹ ⁾ based on girlhood, coming-of-age, complicated relationship with parents, mundanity. genre: slice of life, coming of age, family, hurt and comfort.
Do you think I look like I'm from [name place]?
Hey, why do not we just sit down with what we heard?
We do not have to be constantly entertained, do we?
All right, yours is the worst of all lives, you win.
Oh, are you angry now? Because I wanted to listen to music?
Nobody asks you to be perfect! You only think of yourself.
I want to go where the culture is, like [name place].
Do not expect everyone to do everything for you!
We are afraid of not being loved, we will not be loved..
Do not worry, I will not win.
They have auditions for the fall musical!
How am I a senior without knowing we have this?
I am in love with this neighborhood.
If I lived here, I would have my wedding in the garden.
Your parents would pay for your tuition?
My mother thinks I can not come in, but she is wrong.
These are vintage leather jacket. They do not support the industry.
Your [brother/sister/sibling] does not love me.
Did you know that Alanis Morisette wrote this song in just ten minutes?
I need your help with the application for financial assistance. But mom can't know.
I do not want to argue before I have to.
See you mom, I love you.
Oh my God. Embarrassing! I use that!
I gave it to myself. It's given. For me, by me.
I do not even know how I was caught for this role.
It's probably my only chance.
It's only three dollars. I have a difficult week.
That's what the rich do. We are not rich.
Do you come here often?
I just wanted to say what's going on and I'll see you in rehearsal.
I am super excited. Do you live in the neighborhood?
Oh, it's her! I have to go, goodbye guys!
You'll have to show me how to use them.
Hey! I just remembered that I dreamed of you!
I do not understand why I'm not good at math, my dad is really good at maths.
Hey! Do you want to Dance?
Oh no, my mother is coming.
Hey, [name]. Have you ever left the country?
I never left the country. It's my dream to go to Paris.
My mother said that French was not useful.
Why do you care what I do to my clothes?
Do you need him to come explain that?
Can we talk about it tomorrow, please?
Have you ever fallen asleep without having tidy up all your clothes?
My mother is still angry. It does not matter if I come home late.
Yeah, she is hard on me but she loves me a lot.
I know … It's just that I respect you too much for that.
Why did not you just say "pick up your feet"?
You were passively aggressive!
Your house is my favorite throughout [place name].
Why does this cigarette look so weird?
Your mother was really sad that you were not in the Thanksgiving.
Wow! You were so good. I could not believe my eyes.
Fucking shit! There's a line in the men's room!
How did you know it was me?
Do you need money for applications?
I have that, the summer jobs take care of it.
Can you drive me to the post office on [street name]?
Hey! I do not pay you to flirt!
Yeah, sex is not a problem, it's just that my mom called during sex!
I do not know why you do that if you're old.
She is with her new best friend. She thinks she's too cool for the theater.
Yeah, I know that one! You want to go there and eat?
We were in a parking lot and we went to another car park.
I hope not, because I will kill your family. .. Sorry, it was an exaggeration.
Yeah, I know. I mean, you'll get one eventually. Everyone will have one.
She is not crazy, but she has a big heart. She is very warm.
Kiss my ass. Can not you tell anyone, please?
I'm sorry for everything. I am so ashamed of all that.
It's going to be hard and I just need some time to …find out how I'm going to tell my parents.
Who do you turn to when you feel that?
No, no, do not be sorry. There is no wrong answer.
It's half an hour from here! Less if you drive fast!
You are really evil. What's wrong with you?
My parents are upstairs, but they do not care if you drink.
I do not like money. So, I try to live by bartering alone.
I have not slept with another person yet.
This is the only place where I can have some privacy.
You can not do anything unless you're the center of attention, can you?
Just because something looks ugly does not mean it's morally wrong.
I did not want to.. make [him/her/them] feel horrible ..
You think I do not know, how much are you ashamed of me?
It's like.. you think whatever you have given me, it's never enough.
You give me a number to know how much it costs to raise me, and I will grow old and earn a lot of money and send back what I owe you, so that I never have to talk to you again.
Why did you say it was your house?
I do not even understand why anyone would lie about it.
Are we still friends?
I guess we'll meet again later.
Oh, shit, I have nosebleeds. I'm sorry.
Nothing you say makes sense.
Why do not you keep a list? Are we in high school?
Why are you so moody?
It's stupid. You can not blame me for something I have no control of.
Shut up, shut up. Different things can be sad.
A lot of things have happened for you!
I know, but that's why I think that with me you'll find something else.
What is supposed to happen next?
Of course, I think I'm paying attention.
Do not you think it might be the same? Love and attention?
Why do not I look like girls in magazines?
It's not my boyfriend anymore. He may have never been.
It's too tight. Fucking shit!
Mom! You give me an eating disorder!
Why can not you say I'm pretty?
I thought you did not care what I thought.
I still want you to find me beautiful.
I'm sorry, I told you the truth. Do you want me to lie?
I wish you would like me.
I want you to be the best version of yourself.
And what if this is was the best version of me?
I guess it's my date.
Yeah, okay. No prom.
Ok, yeah, I mean, I do not really want to do that.
What happened? Why are you crying?
Some people are not built happy you know?
I will not be here this summer. Like all summer, basically.
I'm not going anywhere in college, and it seemed like a good opportunity.
I'll miss you, damn.
You went through the scene strangely, but you did it.
Did you discover the waiting list?
I'm not even in it yet, It may not even be a problem.
Sorry, I should not have done that in your back.
You're not a little proud that …I am so close to entering? Just a little bit?
I'm sorry, I know I can lie and not be a good person, but..
I did not want to hurt you. I appreciate everything you did for me, I am thankless and sorry, ..I'm sorry to want more than this life.
I know, I know I'm so bad that I know it, but please, talk to me.
You both have such strong personalities.
She does not know how to help you and that frustrates her.
It's my birthday today. I'm 18 years old.
Thank you for driving me. Do you want to come?
Yes, but I'm going to college.
Excuse me. What day is it?
That's the name you gave me. It's a good name.
I wanted to tell you. I love you. I thank you.
Domestic Writing Prompts
Guess who found an old storage drive and has more prompts to post! This one. So here are some domestic prompts.
1. “But look, this is on sale!”
2. “Why did I let you remodel the bathroom?”
3. “Here’s the grocery list”
4. Trying to buy a new couch
5. I trimmed you a love note into the lawn.
6. Hanging a porch swing together
7. I don’t think s/he noticed my new haircut
8. The CORRECT way to organize the dishes
9. Our first dinner party
10. The in-laws come to visit
11. Celebrating an anniversary
12. Shoveling snow
13. “No, that’s not how you do that”
14. A shrunken sweater
15. Baby’s first steps
16. Rainy day cuddles
17. Painting
18. A new mattress
19. Date night in
20. Thanksgiving
21. Warm sheets
22. The thermostat fight
23. Going through old boxes
24. “You could stand to eat healthier”
25. Our baby going to prom/college
26. Getting older
27. I love yous whispered in the dark