Anyone else completely butcher a sentence while speaking then awkwardly end it with “I’m a writer, I know how words work.” ????
Cause I do that shit all the time

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Anyone else completely butcher a sentence while speaking then awkwardly end it with “I’m a writer, I know how words work.” ????
Cause I do that shit all the time
One of the most important things you can take from fanfiction is that actions have consequences. A lot of fanfiction, whether it’s episode tags or AUs, centers around the idea that what happened has consequences and the characters not only need to deal with those consequences but are affected by them. This is one of the biggest issues with a lot of original fiction: because there is a relatively limited time to tell a specific story, people tend to only focus on the consequences that help move their story along. The problem with that is that it can feel unnatural or contrived because major events have little to no consequences or the characters move on from them remarkably quickly.
There is a balance between having your characters react/respond to/deal with things that happened and telling the story you want to be telling, and you need to make sure that the entire story doesn’t get derailed by something that you have happen, but if you are going to have particularly something major happen to your character, make sure you consider the consequences for that event or action beyond just the next chapter or so of the story. How does it impact how they act? What does it do to their mental healthy? Their physical health? The people around them?
Writing Prompt #72
“He had this look in his eyes that made you wonder just how many people he’s killed. And that grin made you realize he’s probably lost count.”
Writing Prompt #76
(Use these by the zodiac signs of your characters)
The signs lost together:
Aries: "maybe we should split up. Me and Gemini will go-" *points at map at random* "here."
Taurus: "Nah. I think I'll stay here. Text me some updates."
Gemini: *sitting in the corner with an attitude*
Cancer: *crying* "what are you guys DOING? We'll never find our way!"
Leo: "Everyone just chill. I'll use the map to find the way."
Virgo: "No need, I'll use the GPS on my phone." *looks down* "Welp. My phone's dead."
Libra: "I love our teamwork! This is going great!"
Scorpio: "Shut up, Libra.We're in the middle of nowhere.I hate all of you."
Sagittarius: "Just enjoy the circumstances for right now. We'll make it out alive, probably."
Capricorn: "This is all of your fault! If you'd have listened to me we wouldn't be in this mess!"
Aquarius: "We should start planning ahead, we're going to get hungry at some point. We should all take a vote of who we'll eat. I vote Pisces."
Pisces: *Rocking back and forth and sobbing*
spicy™ dialogue™ prompts™
“At least you’ll die doing what you love; Walking into danger.”
“Here’s some cookies and some very bad news!”
“I have forgotten everything I’ve ever learned.”
“Let me keep that promise.”
“The most beautiful thing we can experience is the mysterious.”
“Why am I always the funniest when no one is around to hear it?”
“Can you stay still for the next 20 minutes? No, I’m not drawing you.”
“Oh no, I feel bad- SYKE, no I don’t.”
“Next problem… we might die.”
“Wow, that was a great comeback.”
“Who is running this thing?!”
“You are aware that walls aren’t people, right?”
“Hey, go fill up your human needs.”
“Yeah, keep making jokes. That’ll win the war.”
“Yeah, I can see how hiding behind a rock is a much better strategy.”
“I think… everyone deserves a chance to prove themselves.”
“I can’t help that I’m curious.”
“I know you. You’re a terrible person. But as the judge here, I will look at you in the unbiased way you don’t deserve.”
“The mountains are calling and I must skedaddle.
“Who says ‘nincompoop’?!”
“Things fascinate me. Why wouldn’t they, when you stop to give them thought?”
“Are you always so easily convinced?”
“Look, it’s difficult for me to isolate what I hate about you the most because there is so much to hate.”
“That’s an order. Obey.”
“Look, I don’t want to swear but; What. The frick!”
“As the most amazing person in the room, I’ll gladly accept that.”
“Now power down, sass robot.”
“The art of not being an idiot is extremely challenging for me.”
“That’s troubling.”
“Tell your story. Become words, become ideas… you never know what or who it’ll affect.”
NaNoWriMo Encouragement
You’re nearing the end of week two! A few more days and the month is half over! It doesn’t matter if you’re behind schedule or ahead of schedule or right on pace. If you hadn’t started this journey, you’d have that many fewer words written out for your work. The fact that you have anything at all is still an impressive feat! Whether or not you feel adequate, I’m proud of you for what you’ve accomplished.
Writing with your playlist going:
Falling victim to word count over substance:
Every first draft is perfect, because all a first draft has to do is exist.”
Jane Smiley (via inspired-to-write)
Somehow this is the most inspiring thing I’ve read in a long time. I’m going to go write now.
(via joleebindo)
Male Protagonists to Avoid in your Writing: An Illustrated Guide.
1. The Edward Cullen (i.e. the glorified stalker)
How to spot him:
He’s gorgeous. Brooding. Bejeweled with countless sequins. He stresses over and over again that he and the female protagonist have a “connection,” are “soulmates,” or something else that you’d generally expect to hear from that one creepy kid who used to stare at you in class. Similarly, in true creep fashion, he uses their supposed connection as an excuse to blatantly stalk her, and is narratively treated as nothing short of a romantic in spite of it because he’s attractive (and sparkly) enough to pull it off.
Examples:
In the Twilight Saga, Edward is canonically over one hundred years old, making it extra creepy that he’s A) hanging around a high school for no particular reason, and B) dating a seventeen-year-old girl. He uses derogatory terms about past lovers, attempts suicide when Bella tries to break up with him, and shows up at her home uninvited to watch her sleep. Moreover, his systematic isolation of Bella from her friends and family is all-too reminiscent of real life abusive dynamics.
How to avoid him:
Read up on signs of abuse in a relationship. This is a good thing to do anyway as a means of self-education, but it’s also important for writers who plan to include romantic subplots. A good one to start with can be found here, at least in terms of emotional abuse: https://psychcentral.com/blog/archives/2014/10/13/21-warning-signs-of-an-emotionally-abusive-relationship/.
Try to avoid a blatant power imbalance. Edward is stressed to be older, stronger, more experienced, and more intelligent than Bella. Sometimes power imbalances are unavoidable due to species differences, but this can be countermanded by giving the human love interest qualities that make them valuable in other ways.
Overall, if you’re attempting to portray a healthy relationship, try to base it on an equal exchange of power and mutual respect.
2. The Christian Grey (i.e. the glorified rapist)
How to spot him:
When I first found out that the 50 Shades of Grey franchise was originally Twilight fanfiction, I initially (incorrectly) presumed it to be a joke. After I’d come to terms with the fact that it was not, my next thought was that it made perfect sense, because Christian is literally Edward Junior on steroids: the same abusive brand of stalker who gets off on a blatant power imbalance, with the added unpleasantries of excessive wealth and bad BDSM etiquette. Oh, yeah. And he’s a rapist.
Examples:
Christian disregards Ana’s request for a condom, stating “her body belongs to him,” threatens punishment when she refutes his attempts to discretely grope her in public, and at one point, ignores her safe word. Throughout the book, Ana is pressured into sex she feels uncomfortable with.
How to avoid him:
If you’re going to write about BDSM, actually study BDSM etiquette.
Healthy BDSM relationships are forged on mutual trust and a consensual, mutually beneficial exchange of power. Even if you are writing about BDSM, if you intend to write about a healthy relationship, be sure to base it off of these values.
Just because a character is dominant doesn’t mean they need to be emotionally callous; Christian completely neglects Ana’s emotional needs, such as her aftercare (i.e. the period of tenderness recommended after BDSM sessions to compensate for the emotional and physically taxing task of surrendering one’s power.)
In short, don’t use kink as a means of excusing emotionally unhealthy and abusive dynamics.
3. The Ross Geller (i.e. the entitled “nice guy”)
How to spot him:
He thinks his hot female friends (and only the hot ones, mind you) are owed to him because he’s “nice,” romantic, and intelligent. However, upon closer scrutiny he really isn’t a particularly nice guy (i.e. he bullied his sister Monica and benefits from enjoys her emotionally abusive parents’ favoritism), is self-centered, and consistently places his needs ahead of her own.
Examples:
The minute Rachel begins to find self-fulfillment in her career, Ross becomes jealous and hounds her at work, accuses her of “not having enough time for (him),” and generally tries to make her feel guilty for being successful and having priorities other than him.
How to avoid him:
Again, I cannot stress this enough: mutual respect. This is literally the foundation of all successful relationships, fictitious or otherwise.
Have your male characters support their significant other’s decisions and allow them to be happy for their success.
Your male character’s significant other is allowed to do things that don’t necessarily involve him. Make sure he understands that.
Intelligence in and of itself does not make a character a better person than his fellows, and intelligence does not have to equate the superiority with which Ross appears to associate himself.
Just look to the healthier couples Friends churned out in its time: Monica and Chandler, for example, love and respect one another’s goals, and are no the less interesting and hilarious because of it.
4. The Sheldon Cooper (i.e. the annoying autism stereotype)
How to spot him:
He’s a bloated paragon of autism stereotypes. He’s got zero regard for the feelings of his friends, considers himself superior to everyone, and is incapable of talking about anything but his own interests. As someone who’s on the spectrum myself, he’s basically my personal pet peeve.
Examples:
“His spot” on the sofa, his need to knock three times before speaking to the person on the other side of the door, etc. These are stereotypical and inaccurate portrayals of some autistic people’s comfort in routine.
How to avoid him:
Research symptoms of Asperger’s in adults (and for god’s sake, stay away from Autism Speaks.) Similarly, try and learn from actually people with Asperger’s, as anti-autism, “cure”-based sentiment tends to run high in allistic academia.
Study the mannerisms of famous people who may have been on the spectrum, such as Albert Einstein, Allan Turing, Leonardo da Vinci, and Sherlock Holmes’s inspiration, Joseph Bell.
If you’re not ready to depict an autistic character, I’m going to say wait. It’s okay to admit to ignorance, and it’s okay to wait to do more research before depicting a certain subgroup.
Try to avoid inserting autistic symptoms into characters to use as comedic fodder.
Asperger’s coded (and confirmed, by creators and cast) characters like Temperance “Bones” Brennan (Bones) and Spencer Reid (Criminal Minds) have their stereotypical moments, but they’re still successfully presented as lovable, intelligent, and productive characters; look to them to see better representation of intelligent, autistic characters in mainstream television.
5. The John Winchester (i.e. the abusive parent with a redemption arc)
How to spot him:
The John Winchester is a textually abusive or otherwise toxic parent who damages his children’s lives for his own purposes, inflicts emotional or physical harm, and is shown or mentioned to be violent, controlling, and/or neglectful. However, his redeeming/sympathetic qualities or otherwise heroic actions lead him to be narratively treated as a benevolent character and “good” parent.
Examples:
In Supernatural, John leaves his boys for weeks on end in motel rooms, sometimes over important holidays (and keep in mind that this was in the 80s and 90s, when child sexual abuse was at an all-time high.) He often places his eldest son as the soul caregiver of his other child, despite the fact that he was a child too at the time, and left them both alone with loaded firearms. He also uses unfairly harsh punishments, such as leaving his young son alone at a boy’s home for an entire summer because he stole food for himself and his brother. His son literally, unironically realized he was being possessed by a demonic entity when it said it was proud of him.
How to avoid him:
Educate yourself on the different definitions of abuse (emotional, verbal, physical, etc.) and what qualifies as each. Psychology Today is a great resource for this (they have some rudimentary definitions here: https://www.psychologytoday.com/conditions/child-abuse.)
Feel free to endow abusive parents with sympathetic qualities (in fact, please do; 100% evil characters tend to be campy, boring, and/or unintentionally hilarious) but be aware that no sympathetic qualities negate or justify child abuse.
Please, for the love of God, don’t use the “he was doing his best” excuse as a resolution. Many abusive parents legitimately are doing their best, and many abused children are acutely aware of this. It really doesn’t provide much comfort.
Remember that abused children frequently refuse to turn on their parents, often defending them long into their adulthood. The child’s forgiveness does not equate the parent’s redemption.
Similarly, I’d personally recommend staying away from the “I can finally forgive him” trope as well; it’s done to death, and often frustrating to real-life survivors.
Before the Meninsits™ come for me about this, I am going to be writing a list of female character archetypes as well, and then make lists of positive attributes to include in male and female characters, respectively, to provide a counterpoint. I might also make a part two of this post for all the other characters I hate, because I fear it would get too long.
In the meantime, there will be essays like this published at least once every other week, so be sure to follow my blog and stay tuned for future writing advice and observations!
WINNIE JONES AESTHETIC
There was a tall girl standing in the corner- her caramel hair had golden highlights from the lighting, and was covering up her face. She was leaning onto the wall, her arms crossed on her chest. She raised her head, revealing her face.
He held his breath.
He could recognize that face anywhere- that strong jaw line and those freckles, those big chocolate eyes, sparkling with countless ideas, those thin, pale rose lips, those short dark lashes- she smiled and his heart skipped a beat.
“Hi,” said Winnie.
A year from now, you’ll be happy you started today
Japanese folklore and mythology
You can understand a lot about cultural values and perspective through folklore and mythology, it’s also good reading practice and often available in a variety of levels of difficulty, as versions have been written for children of different ages. English resources: New World Encyclopedia on Japanese folklore and mythology PDF book of ‘Japanese Folk Tales’ by Yanagita Kunio from Nanzen University Japanese Fairy Tales by Yei Theodora Ozaki is on Kindle for around $1 Dartmouth University’s resources Japanese Mythology A-Z PDF Big (619 pages!) PDF of Ancient Tales and Folklore of Japan Japanese resources: 366 tales in simple Japanese, audio and translated transcripts included in English and Chinese Original text for ‘Japanese Folk Tales by Yanagita Kunio, suitable for more advanced learners Anime ‘Folktales from Japan’ on Crunchyroll There are hundreds more resources out there- what are your recommendations? Leave a comment if you’ve found something good!
5 Important Things All Newbie Writers Need to Remember Daily
I’ve only been seriously writing for a little under a year, so I’d still classify myself as one of the many newbie writers out there.
And while writing is something I love and it makes me really, really happy, it’s still really fucking hard. Anyone who doesn’t think writing is hard has clearly never actually done it.
Writers go through a lot, especially when they’re first starting out. Just a few of the things writers endure are:
Insecurity in the writing itself
Self-doubt about their actual stories/plots/characters being interesting
Vulnerability – because writing is raw and real
Fear of people reading your writing
Fear of nobody wanting to read your writing
This could go on and on and on, but I think you get the point. And if you’re a writer, you know how all of this feels. It’s really hard to handle sometimes.
When you first start writing, you’re learning what kind of writer you truly want to be. Just like with any new skill or hobby, it takes some time to work out the kinks. I learned a shit ton of new stuff over the past year and I found a few reoccurring things I repeatedly need to remind myself of.
Because if I don’t, I end up feeling like shit about my writing and about myself, which is obviously not good.
If you’re just starting out in your writing journey, you may be a little scared and a little insecure – as we all are.
Here are a few things newbie writers need to remember daily in order to fight off the debilitating thoughts that stunt your progress.
1. The author who’s “so much better” than you has been doing it for years
First of all, quit comparing your work to someone else’s. That shit is so bad for you not just with writing but with anything in life. You can never be someone else and someone else can never be you.
And comparing your work to an author who has published books and has been writing for years just isn’t fair. They’ve been practicing longer. If you’re a 16-year-old basketball player in high school, do you really sit there and shit on yourself because Stephen Curry is so much better than you? No. So why the hell are you doing that with your writing?
It’s great to look up to amazing authors and appreciate their work, but never compare yourself to them. Not only does that make you feel bad, it’s also not productive and can even stop you from finding your own voice and developing your own style of writing.
2. You’re only going to get better
If there’s one thing and one thing only you take away from this post, it’s this. All newbie writers need to remember that you’re only going to get better. The more you write and the more you practice, the better you’ll be.
That’s the fascinating thing about writing! You learn a lot just by writing (and of course the feedback you get from betas).
Whenever you feel like your writing sucks, just keep writing. I know you may be tempted to shut your laptop and give up for the time being, but that’s actually counterproductive. Writing more will make you better.
3. Your imagination and creativity are literally endless
There’s just no such thing as being “too creative” or having “too much” imagination. If anything, you can never have enough. When you feel like you’re stuck and your imagination has “run out,” just remember that it’s not actually possible to run out.
Just think of something else! Your brain is the reason you have a story at all. You already created complex characters, an entire world, and a story to tie it all together. That’s a lot. That required a shit ton of imagination, which just proves how much creativity you’ve already shown. You can never run out.
So all you newbie writers out there need to remember that the possibilities are endless.
4. Getting constructive criticism is part of the process
And you should welcome it. Getting honest feedback about your writing is something all writers need to face and embrace. I dreaded getting feedback about my writing when I posted it online or sent it to some friends. I really did. But I had to remind myself that it’s part of the process. It’s required.
In order to improve your writing and create something people love, you need to know what works and what doesn’t. Don’t let people’s comments and opinions get you down, especially when they’re only trying to help make you a better writer.
People aren’t just going to shit on your story for fun. Not if they’re actually giving you constructive feedback. Remember that it’s normal and part of the process.
5. You. Have. Time.
What’s the rush? There’s no need to freak out and worry about getting your book done right this second. You don’t even need to worry about getting it finished this year. You have time. You have all the time in the world!
J.K. Rowling didn’t get Harry Potter published until she was 32 years old and you know what? She’s written a hell of a lot more since then. You don’t need to try and be published as a teenager or a very young adult if it means sacrificing the quality of your writing.
And more importantly, when you rush your writing, you’re not taking the time and care to do it right. What’s the point of doing something if you’re going to half-ass it and then spend even more time later trying to fix it?
There’s no clock you have to beat. You can take your time, hone your skills, and produce something amazing. It will get done eventually.
Newbie writers mostly want to be the best writer and get their books published ASAP. I know. I am a newbie writer. We all want that but sometimes it’s more beneficial to slow down and remember these things that can actually help make us better.
Read the original post here.
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