sometimes the only thing keeping me writing is the threat of forgetting the imaginary people i made up
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@writinginthestars
sometimes the only thing keeping me writing is the threat of forgetting the imaginary people i made up
Everyone looking up to see something super interesting that could possibly take them back to the Alpha Quadrant. Chakotay:
- I remember my last visit there. I was given my general orders for Voyager's first mission: Proceed to the Badlands, and find the Maquis. - The orders that brought us together.
Janeway is still incredible representation
As a young woman, Iâm obsessed with Janeway. I imagine her being amazing representation back then, but I think that sheâs still incredible representation now. Here are some things that I think still make her unique 30+ years later:
Sheâs âmotherlyâ and she wants to have children, but sheâs never made to feel bad or less than about not having children.
Sheâs so naturally commanding. There are no conversations about her being a woman in charge, she just is.
She has a mixture of stereotypically masculine and feminine interests and traits. As a starfleet captain, she gets to work a lot with science and engineering but in her spare time she plays gothic holonovels and knits.
She sacrifices her personal happiness with great stoicism. This feels like a trope I see used for male heroes, intended to show their strength of character, but I rarely see it used for female characters
She often argues for the pragmatic stance without being an emotionally closed off person. This is so refreshing since many female characters often argue for the moral and/or emotional stance. Female characters who argue for the pragmatic stance will often be shown as emotionless, cruel etc.
She has very realistic mental health problems and regrets, but she presents herself with incredible confidence. She has the same touch of overconfidence that Kirk has, but seeing a female character possess this trait (without being a villain) is still unusual.
Sheâs a middle aged woman who gets to be seen as beautiful and desirable without that being the focus of her character. The respect she gets from others is earned by her actions, but her beauty is also acknowledged.
Janeway is good at almost everything, but she isnât always right and sheâs no Mary Sue. Sheâs so aspirational because sheâs so realistic, she is never âchosenâ, special or superhuman in any way. She feels like a woman I could know, and itâs inspiring to see an âordinaryâ woman lead and do extraordinary things with knowledge and determination.
Oh my gosh. I just found this website that walks you though creating a believable society. It breaks each facet down into individual questions and makes it so simple! It seems really helpful for worldbuilding!
It really bothers me so much of the caraval fandom ignores (or perhaps misunderstands) the actual storyline in order to take digs at Dante and Tella.
When Julian says things like âmy brother canât loveâ or âheâs never been there for me in the way I have been for himâ, thatâs only Julianâs POV, not a fact of the caraval universe. This entire book leans on the idea of multiple POVs and multiple truths, and to toss it away is to throw away key points of the storyline.
I have blogged about this before but I see it so often I feel the need to say it again:
Julian believes these things about his brother because he suffers from the same younger sibling syndrome that Tella does re Scarlett. He believes those things because Dante shuts him out emotionally the same way he did to Tella in finale, and we can get into why on a different post. But under no circumstance does that make it a hard fact.
The narrative of Finale itself makes sure to challenge Julianâs assumptions. Why?
âą Dante takes Julianâs feelings into consideration and listens to him re letting Tella go (for reasons we can get into on a separate post as well).
(Julian is hinting at himself and his brother in that highlighted line. Just FYI.)
âą Because we see Dante absolutely refusing to allow Julian to get in harmâs way. Even to save Scarlett.
âą Because we see how desperate Dante is when Julian is captured.
Straight up spelled out for you all in that last sentence.
âą When Dante actively goes out there and sacrifices himself to save Julian, which is the exact moment in the narrative Julian realizes he was wrong about his brother.
âą When everyone realizes how much Dante was actually willing to sacrifice for his brother.
So please. For the love of god. Read and understand the stories before making posts on them. Thank you.
my fave writing reminder
honestly, this phrase has been on my mind more times than i can count. i've kidnapped it, taken it as a hostage with no ransom money because i need it to live permanently in my head.
youâre not âbehindâ on your story. youâre building something. and sometimes building requires standing in the ruins for a bit.
Okay, I'm going to say it. I think Laia giving up her soul light and choosing a human life with Ezel was my favourite happy epilogue. (Even if the way she dumped poor Leo on my messy play through was absolutely brutal đŹ)
Ezel and Laia seem genuinely happy and really well suited for each other, creating an art book together? I mean đ„č
Also they got a dog đđđ
Wish we'd had an 'I love you' but I guess you can't have it all. It was obvious they adored each other.
maybe you only wrote 100 words today. but they were your words. no one else couldâve written them.
What are chapters 39-41 of Legendary and why are they the best out of Stephanie Garberâs writing? They are the payoff to everything sheâs been building up from the start of the book.
First, we properly meet Dante and we get to know him. From his tragic backstory of a bastard boy no one wanted, not even his first love, who he became magical for. What did he do? Shut down emotionally and build a fake identity who was much cooler and far more beloved than his real self ever was.
And then we have Tella and her equally large fear to love. Because she felt cursed and unwanted after being supposedly abandoned by her own mother, and being raised by a father who only loved himself. So she convinces herself love is for the poor stupid people who are willing to give their hearts to others (knowing they can be broken).
Dante wasnât meant to fall for Tella. But he did. He let her past the mask of Legend and allowed her to truly know him, and himself to harbor feelings for her. By the end there he doesnât care about getting the cards and the powers within them. He wants her love, and is even willing to make death pacts with powerful strangers to ensure sheâs safe.
And Tella, who refused to fall even for the stories she was told of this fantastic magician, finds herself unable to match the image of the villain she made up in her mind with that of the guy she fell for. And she embraces him, and embraces that love, no longer being afraid of having her heart broken.
And then it all falls apart.
Because while Tella is not willing to give Dante up, she is still the little girl that wants her mother back. And so the love she just embraced within herself is used to sacrifice herself, and get trapped in one of the cards to save her mother.
Dante of course canât deal with that. So he saves Tella and starts the apocalypse, but this is the second time loving so deeply had devastating results. So he shuts down again. Snaps the mask of Legend back into place and leaves Tella on those stairs because he is fucking terrified of being hurt again by someone he loves so deeply. And so fulfilling Tellaâs own fear of having her own heart broken.
Literally all of their actions match the characters we saw this far to perfection. Stephanie is amazing and this series deserves to be in filmed media at some point.
writerâs block is just your brain running a 200-tab browser in the background while you're trying to open a word doc. itâs all in there. good luck finding it.
you might feel like a bad writer today. but youâre a writer. and thatâs the part that matters.
The most human thing a character can do is contradict themselves.
The cynic who still carries a childhood stuffed animal.
The liar who craves honesty.
The overthinker who makes reckless decisions.
The heartbreaker who believes in soulmates.
The pacifist who holds lifelong grudges.
The tough guy who cries during old movies.
The thrill-seeker who's terrified of commitment.
The grump whoâs unfailingly polite to waitstaff.
People arenât consistent. Your characters shouldnât be either.
Emotional Walls Your Character Has Built (And What Might Finally Break Them)
(How your character defends their soft core and what could shatter it) Because protection becomes prison real fast.
â¶ Sarcasm as armor. (Break it with someone who laughs gently, not mockingly.) â¶ Hyper-independence. (Break it with someone who shows up even when theyâre told not to.) â¶ Stoicism. (Break it with a safe space to fall apart.) â¶ Flirting to avoid intimacy. (Break it with real vulnerability they didnât see coming.) â¶ Ghosting everyone. (Break it with someone who wonât take silence as an answer.) â¶ Lying for convenience. (Break it with someone who sees through them but stays anyway.) â¶ Avoiding touch. (Break it with accidental, gentle contact that feels like home.) â¶ Oversharing meaningless things to hide real depth. (Break it with someone who asks the second question.) â¶ Overworking. (Break it with forced stillness and the terrifying sound of their own thoughts.) â¶ Pretending not to care. (Break it with a loss they canât fake their way through.) â¶ Avoiding mirrors. (Break it with a quiet compliment that hits too hard.) â¶ Turning every conversation into a joke. (Break it with someone who doesnât laugh.) â¶ Being everyoneâs helper. (Break it when someone asks what they need, and waits for an answer.) â¶ Constantly saying âIâm fine.â (Break it when they finally scream that theyâre not.) â¶ Running. Always running. (Break it with someone who doesnât chase, but doesnât leave, either.) â¶ Intellectualizing every feeling. (Break it with raw, messy emotion they canât logic away.) â¶ Trying to be the strong one. (Break it when someone sees the weight theyâre carrying, and offers to help.) â¶ Hiding behind success. (Break it when they succeed and still feel empty.) â¶ Avoiding conflict at all costs. (Break it when silence causes more pain than the truth.) â¶ Focusing on everyone elseâs healing but their own. (Break it when they hit emotional burnout.)
a writing competition i was going to participate in again this year has announced that they now allow AI generated content to be submitted
their reasoning being that "we couldn't ban it even if we wanted to, every writer already uses it anyway"
"Every writer"?
come on
Reblog if you're a writer who doesn't use AI.