Monterey Bay Aquarium
Keni

if i look back, i am lost

JVL
hello vonnie
Peter Solarz
𩵠avery cochrane đŠľ

Andulka
Aqua Utopiaď˝ćľˇăŽĺşă§č¨ćśăç´Ąă
NASA

â
KIROKAZE
DEAR READER
untitled

blake kathryn
art blog(derogatory)
sheepfilms

â
Stranger Things
Cosmic Funnies
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Canada
seen from Germany
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Belgium
seen from United States
seen from Azerbaijan
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Brazil
seen from Russia
seen from Russia

seen from Australia

seen from United States
@whileyourestillawake
What is your characterâs favorite restaurant? Do they have a go-to order?
BoJack Horseman Season 6 spoilers with no context
bojack horseman is leagues more intellectual about the complexities of the human experience than anything any crusty dead white political philosopher festering in the black plague ever said like im sorry but âwanting to be a good person is ingrained in us but being a better person is an incredibly difficult uphill journey especially when the factors of mental illness and trauma are added but its always worth the struggle and progress looks different on everyoneâ is objectively better than âhumans are selfish and only wanna slaughter each other so the ends justify the meansâ send tweet
Ways to find a plot when you have characters and a setting
⌠but only characters and a setting.Â
You have a world. A universe. A setting. Good! Describe what happens in it normally - describe your main character(s)âs daily life. Now, what would destabilize this routine completely? If many things could, write them all down. Pick your favourite idea(s). Plots are born from change: everything was going normally⌠until it wasnât.
Make a list with all the goals/motivations of your main characters. Can the plot revolve around your characters going after these goals?Â
Which goals are more important? Focus on those.Â
Are different charactersâ goals in conflict with each other? Conflict is usually what propels a story forward.Â
What could go wrong in your characterâs pursuit of their goal? Make it go wrong.
If you donât know your charactersâ goals, go back to the drawing board; they probably need more development.
If thereâs not enough conflict of different motivations, make a new character who creates conflict!
How do you want your main character to have changed by the end of the story? Do you want them to be less selfish? To have come to terms with a part of themself? To have learned something new? Write down ideas that could accomplish this change.Â
If you canât think of any way your character could be changed (read: improved) by the end of the story, go back to the drawing board. They might be âtoo perfectâ.
Notes:Â
The change that triggers your plot can be anything. It doesnât have to be the start of an epic war that will bring forth the apocalypse, it can be your character meeting a new person who shakes things up in their life, or anything you want!
Motivations can be anything. It doesnât have to be something grand - if your characterâs motivation is to just live a quiet life, you can still come up with a plot that will get in the way of that goal!Â
Character development can be anything, as well - you donât need a clichĂŠ moral to the story; your character doesnât even need to change in a good way, if thatâs not what you want for your story!
This is what Iâve found works for me, but if you try it and it doesnât, or if it sounds way too sententious and strict for you - thatâs okay! Take it with a grain of salt! Maybe you think your characters are just fine and donât need more developing even in the situations in which I recommended you âgo back to the drawing boardâ, or maybe you have better ways of coming up with a plot. Thatâs fine, the writing process can be very personal!
Non-Boring Environments that need Fantasy Representation
Tropical Rainforests
Scrubland/Dry Forests. For extra effect make them the sort that burn very often; some native plants never germinate until after a fire, and some animals not only rely on fire to smoke out prey, but may even start them themselves.
Savannas/Tropical Grasslands
Temperate Rainforests. I almost didnât include this bc New Zealand is covered in them, and thatâs where they filmed Lord of the Rings. But tbh, no one really knows about them, so it belongs here
Taiga Forests
Barren Tundra, perfect for some extreme seasonal dichotomy
Polar Ice Sheets
Desert-Grasslands (arguably the same as Scrubland but Australiaâs good at adding its own twists)
Barren Desert
If you like Cacti, look at American Deserts like the Sonoran
Salt Flats
Soda Lakes and Alkaline Lakes
Madagascarâs Karst Limestone Formations
Madagascarâs Spiny Forests
Madagascarâs Baobab Forests
Madagascarâs Subhumid Forests (Madagascar is cool as hell ok)
Danxia Landforms
Badlands/Mountainous Deserts
Steppes and Highland Prairies
Flood Basalts
Newly-Formed Islands, still rife with Volcanic activity
Now for Underwater Environments, sure Coral Reefs are cool.
But there are SO MANY other kinds of environments for aquatic settings, itâs unbelievable:
Seaside Cliffs
Archipelagos. Not just Tropical Island chains like Polynesia (Moana anyone?) but also Coldwater Archipelagos like the Aleutians.
Tidal Flats
Bayous/Cypress Swamps
Tropical River Basins, AKA Seasonally Flooded Rainforests
Mangrove Swamps/Deltas/Beaches
Kelp Forests
The Open Ocean
Coastal Seabeds
Rocky Beaches with Tidepools
And there are a LOT more I could name but this post is already obscenely long as is, if youâd like to toss in your own go right ahead, but my point is if you limit yourself to European Deciduous Forests youâre a wimp.
Ned: do you want to run around the world bro?
Peter: sure bro
Ned: *runs around peter*
Peter: whyâd you do that?
Ned: cause youâre my world bro
Peter: bro
Visual Writing Prompt #166
"You know how you are the emotional equivalent of a rock in a tundra?"
"Yeah?"
"Well he's a typhoon."
Writing Prompt #923
âBut Mom, the neighborâs kid got a dragon for her birthday!â
âWell the neighbors donât have the floor covered in flammable material because their kids actually pick up after themselves.â
Methods of Death and How They Feel
Drowning: When a victim submerges, they hold their breath for as long as possible, typically 30 to 90 seconds. After that, they inhale some water, splutter, cough and inhale more. Survivors have said there is a feeling of tearing and a burning sensation in the chest as water enters the airway. Then that moves into a feeling of calmness and tranquility. The calmness represents the beginnings of the loss of consciousness from oxygen deprivation, which eventually results in the heart stopping and brain death.
Heart Attack: The most common symptom is chest pain: a tightness, pressure, or squeezing often described as an âelephant on the chestâ, which may stay steady or come and go. This is caused by the heart muscle struggling and dying from oxygen deprivation. Pain can radiate to the jaw, throat, back, belly and arms. Other signs and symptoms include shortness of breath, nausea and cold sweats. Women and men have different heart attack symptoms, so be sure to look into those differences.
Bleeding to Death: Â Anyone losing 1.5 liters â either through an external wound or internal bleeding â feel weak, tired, thirsty, nauseous, anxious, and would be breathing quickly. By 2 liters, people experience dizziness, confusion, rapid heartbeat, coldness, and then eventual unconsciousness.
Fire: Burns inflict immediate and intense pain through stimulation of the pain nerves in the skin. Burns also trigger a rapid inflammatory response, which boosts sensitivity to pain in the injured tissues and surrounding areas. As burn intensities progress, some feeling is lost but not much. 3rd degree burns donât hurt as much as 2nd degree burns because 3rd degree burns kill the nerves and pain receptors while 2nd degree burns do not.
Decapitation: Very quick. Consciousness is said to continue for a few seconds after decapitation. Itâs thought to be painless, but the separation of the spinal cord and brain may cause severe pain.
Electrocution: Higher currents can cause near immediate unconsciousness. The electric chair, for example, was designed to produce instant loss of consciousness and painless death, but it is debatable. It has been proposed that prisoners could instead be dying from heating of the brain or perhaps from suffocation due to paralysis of the breathing muscles instead of the electrocution itself because the walls of the skull are a thick and powerful insulator.Â
Falling: Another instantaneous death, depending on the height. Survivors of great falls often report the sensation of time slowing down. The natural reaction is to struggle to maintain a feet-first landing, resulting in fractures to the leg bones, lower spinal column, and pelvis. The impact traveling up through the body can also burst the aorta and heart chambers. From lower heights, damage to the internal organs and brain can often cause death.
Hanging: If the neck is broken, death by hanging can be instantaneous because the force of the rope vs. the weight of the body will sever the brain stem. However, if the rope is incorrectly placed, the brain stem will not be severed and the rope will put pressure on the windpipe/arteries to the brain. This can cause unconsciousness in about 10 seconds, but it can take longer depending on how the rope is placed. Witnesses of public hangings often reported victims âdancingâ in pain at the end of the rope, struggling violently as they asphyxiated.
Lethal injection: First comes the anesthetic called thiopental to drive away any feelings of pain, followed by a paralytic agent called pancuronium to stop breathing. Finally potassium chloride is injected, which stops the heart almost instantly. Eyewitnesses have reported inmates convulsing, heaving and attempting to sit up during the procedure, suggesting itâs not always completely effective or instantaneous.
Vacuum (Such as Outer Space): When the external air pressure suddenly drops, the air in the lungs expands, tearing the fragile gas exchange tissues. This is especially damaging if the victim neglects to exhale prior to decompression or tries to hold their breath. Oxygen begins to escape from the blood and lungs. Human survivors from NASA often report an initial pain, like being hit in the chest, and may remember feeling air escape from their lungs and the inability to inhale. Time to the loss of consciousness is generally less than 15 seconds.
I swear Iâm reblogging this for writing purposesÂ
Quote Prompt
âThe world isnât nearly as dark as it seems, I hope you find someone who helps you realise that.â
What are your characters insecure about? Sometimes the most iconic traits/quirks of a character are their insecurities. You can learn a lot about a character based on how they manage their insecurities or how they respond to another characterâs insecurities.
Write about what makes your character feel insecure and how these insecurities developed.
Write about how your character tries to hide, embrace, or work on their insecurities.
Also, write about how your other characters respond to the personâs insecurityâdo they find it silly and make fun of the person for it, or do they encourage the person and love them even more because of it?
No one:
Tumblr when my WiFi is connected and working perfectly:
Marilyn Manson - Disassociative
Requested by @pleonexiiia â
Hope you like these đ¸đ
hashtag animashun
lol turn on the sound