I wish I could be more like you I wish my legs were as long as yours and my smile as bright the boys look right past me cause you shine so beautiful I don't want to hold it against you everyone's head turns when you enter the room and I just watch recently I found this boy but you want him too I am so caught up in the way I feel for him but his eyes are on you all I can do is stand by and watch as you wrapp him around your little finger
Write that fic
Draw your OC
Redesign that blorbo
Plan that comic how you want
Create the content you want to see
Be cringe
Be free
The only thing that matters is you having fun! Not what others think!
Y/N : Iâll do anything you want
Ghost : anything?
Y/N : anything.
Ghost : drink more water
Y/N : what?
Ghost : go outside, get back on your workout routine, stop procrastinatingâ
Y/N : waitâ
Ghost : continue pursuing education, achieve acclamations, manifest the best version of yourself.
Y/N : WAITâ NOâ PLEASEâ
Speaking thoughts aloud:
I love Cullen. Everything about him. His strengths and his flaws.
I love his story. Every bit of it. As it is written.
I may have wished for more. For him to be a companion so we could dive deeper into his character and arc. To see things handled a bit differently only because his story had the potential to be truly fantastic.
But even so, for me, it was.
He may not be perfect in Inquisition, he may still have some growing to do (and my opinion of what that growth looks like is not the same as others, which is okay), but in truth, that makes me love itâlove himâall the more.
It keeps the theme of his story that has been there from the beginning:
What it means to be human.
To have hopes, dreams, ideals, ambitions. To have preconceived notions and to have them proven wrong. To have your heart and mind at odds. To have doubts, struggles, fears. To have your heroes fail you. To have your friends turn against you. To have your ideals used against you. To be broken. Used. Abandoned. Violated. Manipulated. To have that pain twist and corrupt. To have that pain weaponized. To weaponize it. To lose your wayâŠand yourself. To face your sins. To claw after redemption. To seek atonement. To have faith as your shelter in the storms of life. To want to serve something greater than yourself.
âI have decided to take Seeker Pentaghast's offer. The Circles have fallen. I can give no more to the Templar Order, nor it to me. The Maker has shown me a new path; I must take it.â
Hands bloody, tears streaming down your cheeks, throat raw from prayers and penitence, heart trembling with the fear that youâre too far gone as you dig through the refuse of your own making to find yourselfâwho you truly areâagain.
To persevere.
And against all odds to find life, freedom, purpose, hope and even love in the end.
†Whoâs Tired of Being Talked Over
You ever watch someone hold in a scream behind their teeth? Thatâs her, constantly.
â§ She starts choosing her words like landmines. Each one is sharp, controlled, and timed like a threat. Sheâs learned that being polite wonât get her listened to, but sounding like you might flip a table will. â§ Sheâs mastered the art of the silence that feels loud. Doesnât fill awkward gaps. Just lets the discomfort sit in the air like smoke. â§ She explains things with forced calm, the kind that sounds like a teacher asking a second-grade class why the hamster is missing. â§ Â She notices interruptions like bruises. She doesnât react to them anymore, not out loud. But you can bet she counts them. â§ She repeats herself less. Not because they understood her the first time. Because they never listened anyway. â§ Sheâs learned how to weaponize eye contact. Not in a sexy way. In a âI will set this boardroom on fire with my mindâ way. â§ Her voice only shakes when sheâs deciding if itâs worth the explosion.
†Whoâs Been Called âToo Muchâ Her Whole Life
She isnât too much. Sheâs just tired of shrinking for people who were never going to make room anyway.
â§ She says the thing youâre not supposed to say. Then stares at you to see what youâll do with it. â§ Sheâs loud with her laugh, loud with her grief, loud with her love, because if sheâs going to be punished for being âextra,â she might as well be honest about it. â§ She over-explains. Over-apologizes. Then catches herself and stops halfway through the sentence. â§ Â She tries to âtone it downâ and ends up sounding like a censored version of herself, bland, miserable, unfinished. â§ She edits her texts four times, deletes the paragraph, sends âhaha ok :)â instead. â§ She keeps her hands busy because otherwise theyâd be doing something reckless. â§ Â She overcompensates with sarcasm and then goes home and wonders if everyone hates her. â§ Â Sheâs loved fiercely. Regretted it more fiercely. â§ Â She walks into a room like she owns it, and then spends the entire time wondering if she should have stayed home.
†Who Wants to Be Soft but Doesnât Feel Safe
She's gentle, but that gentleness lives under twenty layers of armor. And most people never even get past the first. â§ Â Sheâs careful with her compliments, she knows how people weaponize kindness. â§ Â She keeps her vulnerability behind locked doors and guards them with jokes, sarcasm, and âIâm just tired.â â§ Sheâll comfort others like she was born to do it, but flinch if someone offers her the same. â§ She avoids mirrors on bad days. Eye contact on good ones. â§ She cries where no one can see. Car bathrooms. Locked bedrooms. Grocery store parking lots at night. â§ She doesnât ask for help. Not because she doesnât need it, but because the last time she did, it came with a price. â§ Sheâs soft with animals, with children, with strangers, but not herself. Never herself. â§ She daydreams about being taken care of, then immediately gets mad at herself for wanting something so âweak.â â§ She wants love, but sheâs terrified of being known. Because if someone really saw her? What if they didnât stay?
And if youâre sitting there reading all of that thinking, âGod, I donât even know how to write women like thisâŠâ Please know: youâre not alone. Like, really not alone.
Writing female characters in a way that feels true, nuanced, and unapologetically real isnât just about avoiding clichĂ©s. Itâs about unlearning everything you were taught about what women are âsupposedâ to be on the page. Itâs about getting underneath the polish. Past the performative strength. Past the âsheâs not like other girlsâ and the âstrong but brokenâ tropes. Past the idea that softness is weakness and rage is unlikable.
So many people struggle with this, not because they donât care, but because no one ever really taught them how to see women as people first.
A lot of us grew up reading female characters written through a lens that flattened us. Made us background noise, love interests, plot devices, or emotionally bulletproof when we werenât emotionally unstable. Itâs no wonder weâre all trying to figure out how to do better now. I write a Book about How to Write Women that feel Alive... For you.
In the chapters ahead, weâre going to unravel that mess, together (Promise). Weâll talk about...
â„ Tropes â the ones worth reclaiming, and the ones you can toss into the fire. â„ The psychology of a woman â how conditioning, survival, identity, and inner conflict shape her from the inside out. â„ Female vs. male conflict â not in a âboys suckâ way, but in a âour emotional battlegrounds are different and that mattersâ way. â„ Expectations â societyâs, her own, and how characters shrink or shatter under them. â„ Emotions as strength â especially the ones she was taught to hide: fear, grief, longing, joy, rage. â„ Female anger â what happens when she finally stops holding it in. â„ Archetypes â and how to subvert them without erasing the truths they come from. â„ Female friendships â no more cardboard âbestieâ side characters. â„ Romantic relationships â what it means when sheâs finally seen. Chosen. Or rejected. â„Mothers, daughters, and sisters â because female relationships deserve more than being backstory. â„ Dialogue â how she speaks when sheâs safe vs. when sheâs scared. â„ Inner conflict and development â her arc isnât about fixing her. Itâs about letting her evolve. â„ Writing exercises â to help you get past the noise and write from a place that feels real. â„ A full checklist for writing female OCs â layered, powerful, contradictory, alive.
đ Get your Paperback now! (Here On Amazon!)
This isnât a rulebook. Itâs a guide. A toolbox. A comfort blanket. A callout. A reminder that writing women doesnât have to feel impossible, you just have to be willing to look a little deeper.
So if youâve ever felt stuck writing a female character⊠If youâve defaulted to tropes because you didnât know how else to make her âinterestingâ⊠If youâve erased her emotions to make her âstrongâ⊠Or if youâve stared at the page wondering why she still doesnât feel real...This book is for you.
And I promise, by the time you reach the last chapter? Youâll not only know how to write her. Youâll understand her. And maybe even see a little of yourself in the process.
Love u All!!đ€
sluttiest thing a man can do is say your name mid conversation
Oh, going on a painting picnic with the person you love.
nice thighs dude fuck i'm sorry i meant thighs i mean thighs i fuck dude i'm sorry i meant thighs i mean thighs i mean i'm sorry i'm sorry i mean your thighs YOUR THIGHS
MY WRITING MASTERPOST
I just have a lot of writing tips and masterposts and just stuff in my likes and I decided to put them all into this. All rights goes to the people who made them.
Cool Other Masterposts:
Writing Specific Characters
Writing References
Writing Masterpost
Character Guides
Writing Help for Writers
Ultimate Writing Resource List
Lots of RP Guides
Online Writing Resources
List of Websites to Help You Focus
Resources for Writing Bioâs
Helpful Links for Writing Help
General Writing Resources
Resources for Biography Writing
Mental Ilnesses/Disorders Guides
8 Words You Should Avoid While Writing
The Ultimate Writing Masterpost
General:
The Official Ten-Step Guide to Becoming the Next Gatsby
The Periodic Table of Storytelling
Joss Whedonâs Top 10 Writing Tips
Getting Out of Your Comfort Zone
34 Writing Tips that will make you a Better Writer
50 Free resources that will improve your writing skills
5 ways to get out of the comfort zone and become a stronger writer
10 ways to avoid Writing Insecurity
The Writerâs Guide to Overcoming Insecurity
The Difference Between Good Writers and Bad Writers
Youâre Not Hemingway - Developing Your Own Style
7 Ways to use Brain Science to Hook Readers and Reel them In
8 Short Story Tips from Kurt Vonnegut
How to Show, Not Tell
5 Essential Story Ingredients
How to Write Fiction that grabs your readers from page one
Why research is important in writing
Make Your Reader Root for Your Main Character
Writing Ergonomics (Staying Comfortable Whilst Writing)
The Importance of Body Language
Fashion Terminology
All About Kissing
Genre Help: Romance
187 Mental Illnesses
Types of Mental Illness
Eye Color List
Spectral Groupings
Do you have trouble creating your titles?
On being a co-writer || Additional tips on effective co-writingÂ
The length of a chapter
How to deal with too many story ideas
On writing two stories simultaneously || a similar ask
When a story stops working
Copyright
Reading critically for writers
The question of outlining
Avoiding publishing scams
Finding story ideas
Tips on building a platform [guest blog]
How much does writing âin genreâ matter?
What a âreal writerâ is
Pennames and aliases
A series of thoughts on series titles
The self-pub miniseries: the why
The self-pub miniseries: the what
Rewriting fanfiction into original fiction
Formatting long quotes and songsÂ
Characters:
10 days of Character Building
Name Generators
Name Playground
Universal Mary Sue Litmus Test
Seven Common Character Types
Handling a Cast of Thousands Part 1 - Getting To Know Your Characters
Web Resources for Developing Characters
Building Fictional Characters
Fiction Writerâs Character Chart
Body Language Cheat
Body Language Reference Cheat
Tips for Writers: Body Language
Types of Crying
Body Language: Mirroring
Character Building Workshop
Tips for Characterization
Character Chart for Fiction Writers
Villains are people too butâŠ
How to Write a Character Bible
Character Development Exercises
All Your Characters Talk the Same - And Theyâre Not A Hivemind!
Medieval Names Archive
Sympathy Without Saintliness
Family Echo (Family Tree Maker)
Behind The Name
100 Character Development Questions for Writers
Aetherâs Character Development Worksheet
The 12 Common Archetypes
Six Types of Courageous Characters
Kazzaâs List of Character Secrets - Part 1, Part 2
Creating Believable Characters With Personality
Angry
Bad Asses
Bitches (2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7)
Childishness
Emotional Detachment
Flirtatious
The Girl Next Door
Introverts (2)
Mean Persons (2)
Psychopaths
Party Girls
Rich (2)Â
Rebels
Sarcasm
Serial Killers (2)
Shyness (2, 3)
Sluts
Villains (2)
Witt
Body Language Cheat Sheet
Creating Fictional Characters Series
Three Ways to Avoid Lazy Character Description
7 Rules for Picking Names for Fictional Characters
Character Development Questionnaire
How to Create Fictional Characters
Character Name Resources
Character Development Template
Character Development Through Hobbies
Character Flaws List
10 Questions for Creating Believable Characters
Ariâs Archetype Series
How to Craft Compelling Characters
List of 200 Character Traits
Writing Characters of the Opposite Sex
Making Your Characters Likable
Do you really know your characters?
Character Development: Virtues
Character Development: Vices
Character Morality Alignment
List of Negative Personality Traits
List of Positive Personality Traits
List of Emotions - Positive
List of Emotions - Negative
Loonâs Character Development Series - Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4
Phobia List A-L (Part 1), M-Z (Part 2)
30 Day In Depth Character Development Meme
Words for Emotions based on Severity
Eight Bad Characters
High Level Description of the Sixteen Personality Types
How Not to Write Female Characters
Writing Female Characters
How to write empowering female characters
Why I write strong female characters
Red Flags for Female Characters Written by Men
Writing strong female characters
The Female Character Flowchart
Eight Heroine Archetypes
Eight Hero Archetypes
Help on picking character names
A tip about realistic characters
Strategies to create believable characters
Additional tips on writing PoC characters
Advice on writing genders
Creating unstable characters
Ambiguous Antagonists
A tidbit on psychological trauma [trigger warnings]
On writing accents
What makes characters stick with me
Sweetening up character description
Making an introverted character stand out
Conveying too much or too little character âinner reflectionâ
Revealing a characterâs asexual orientation
Revealing a characterâs gender & orientation
A habit of killing characters
When characters arenât standing out
Breaking hearts with character deaths
Quick tips on expressing characterÂ
Character development versus pacingÂ
A mini guide to character voice
A Description Resource
55 Words to Describe Someones Voice
Describing Skin Colors
Describing a Person: Adding Details
Emotions Vocabulary
90 Words For âLooksâ
Be More Descriptive
Describe a Characterâs Look Well
100 Words for Facial Expressions
To Show and Not To Tell
Words to Describe Facial Expressions
Describing Clothes
List of Actions
Tone, Feelings and Emotions
Writing A Vampire
Writing Pansexual Characters
Writing Characters on the Police Force
Writing Drunk Characters
Writing A Manipulative Character
Writing A Friends With Benefits Relationship
Writing A Natural Born Leader
Writing A Flirtatious Character
Writing A Nice Character
Fiction Writing Exercises for Creating Villains
Five Traits to Contribute to an Epic Villain
Writing Villains that Rock
Writing British Characters
How To Write A Character With A Baby
On Assassin Characters
Disorders in general (2, 3, 4, 5)Â
Attention Deficit Disorder
Antisocial Personality Disorder
Anxiety (2, 3, 4, 5)Â
Avoidant Personality Disorder
Alice In Wonderland Syndrome
Bipolar Disorder (2, 3)
Cotard Delusions
Depression (2, 3, 4, 5, 6)  Â
Eeating Disorders (2, 3)
Facitious Disorders
Histrionic Personality Disorder
Multiple Personality Disorder (2)
Narcissistic Personality Disorder
Night Terrors
Kleptomania (2)
A Pyromaniac
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
Psychopaths
Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (2) (3)
Sex Addiction (2)
Schizophrenia (2)
Sociopaths (2)
Aspergers Syndrome
ApathyÂ
Autism
Someone Blind (2)
Cancer (2, 3)
Disability
Dyslexia
Muteness (2, 3)
Stutter
Actors
Ballet Dancer (2)
Christianity
Foreigners
Gamblers
Hinduism
Hitmen
Satanism
Smokers
Stoners
Taoism
Journalists
Vegetarians
Alcohol Influence (2, 3, 4, 5)
Cocaine Influence
Ecstasy Influence (2)
Heroin Use
LSD Influence
Marijuana Influence (2, 3)
Opiate Use
Tips on Writing Dialogue:
Itâs Not What They SayâŠ
Top 8 Tips for Writing Dialogue
Speaking of Dialogue
The Great Said Debate
He Said, She Said, Who Said What?
How to Write Dialogue Unique to Your Characters
Writing Dialogue: Go for Realistic, Not Real-Life
Tips on Writing Point of View:
Establishing The Right Point of View
How to Start Writing in the Third Person
The I Problem
Style & Craft of Writing:
The literary âweak verbâ
Do you have word tics?
Victoriaâs Vitamins: vague descriptive words
Victoriaâs Vitamins: mood
Breaking writing habits
Varying sentences
Describing colors
Sweetening up character description
Purple prose
Grammar is a tricksy thing
âSmarteningâ the language of your narrative
Building suspense and making readers sweat
A couple tips about description in fast-paced scenes
Content:
The story of exposition
10 ways to hit your reader in the gut
Make your reader root for your main character
Make your reader hold their breath
Whatâs the big deal about intros?
A tip about description
The word count of your manuscript
Things that make me keep reading
Choosing ideas and endings
When to describe setting
Battling cliches
Is your story YA, NA, or adult?
When a plot isnât strong enough to make a whole story
Flashbacks with multiple POVs
Bulking up your word count
Avoiding cliches
Conquer that opening line || response || discussion
Tips on revealing setting awesomely kind of
Deciding between different ideas for the same storyÂ
Revision:
Youâve finished your manuscript! Now what?
Revision sucks but doesnât have to suck
Where to find beta readers/critique partners
Tips on taking critique
Tips on giving critique
What to do with bad writing advice
Additional insight on bad writing advice
Five quick steps to get into revising that manuscript
When to say youâre done revising
Beginning the awesome journey of revision
Friends are not always the best readersÂ
Plot, Structure, & Outline:
Writing A Novel Using the Snowflake Method
Effectively Outlining Your Novel
Conflict and Character Within Story Structure
Outlining Your Plot
Ideas, Plots and Using the Premise Sheets
How To Write A Novel
Creating Conflict and Sustaining Suspense
Plunge Right InâŠInto Your Story, That Is
Tips for Creating a Compelling Plot
36 (plus one) Dramatic Situations
The Evil Overlord Devises A Plot: Excerpt from Stupid Plot Tricks
Conflict Test
What is Conflict?
Monomyth
The Heroâs Journey: Summary of Steps
Outline Your Novel in Thirty Minutes
Plotting Without Fears
Novel Outlining 101
Writing The Perfect Scene
One-Page Plotting
The Great Swampy Middle
How Can You Know What Belongs In Your Book?
Create A Plot Outline in 8 Easy Steps
How to Organize and Develop Ideas for Your Novel
Create Structure in your novel using index cards
Choosing the best outline method for you
Hatchâs Plot Bank
Setting & Making Your Own World
Magical Word Builderâs Guide
I Love The End Of The World
World Building 101
The Art of Description: Eight Tips to Help Bring Your Settings to Life
Creating the Perfect Setting - Part 1
Creating a Believable World
Setting
Character and Setting Interactions
Maps Workshop - Developing the Fictional World Through Mapping
World Builders Project
How To Create Fantasy Worlds
Creating Fantasy and Science Fiction Worlds
Helpful Tools & Software:
Tip Of My Tongue - Find the word youâre looking for
Write or Die - Stay motivated
Stay Focused - Tool for Chrome, lock yourself out of distracting websites
My Writing Nook - Online Text Editor, Free
Bubbl.us - Online Mind Map Application, Free
Family Echo - Online Family Tree Maker, Free
Freemind - Mind Map Application; Free; Windows, Mac, Linux, Portable
Xmind - Mind Map Application; Free; Windows, Mac, Linux, Portable
Liquid Story Binder - Novel Organization and Writing Application; free trial, $45.95; Windows, Portable
Scrivener - Novel Organization and Writing Application; free trial, $39.95; Mac
SuperNotecard - Novel Organization and Writing Application; free trial, $29; Windows, Mac, Linux, portable
yWriter - Novel Organization and Writing Application; free; Windows, Linux, portable
JDarkRoom - Minimalist Text Editing Application; free; Windows, Mac, Linux, portable
AutoRealm - Map Creation Application; free; Windows, Linux with Wine
Grammer & Revision:
How To Rewrite
Editing Recipe
Cliche Finder
Revising Your Novel: Read What Youâve Written
Writing 101: Revising A Novel
20 Common Grammar Mistakes That (Almost) Everyone Makes
Synonyms for the Most Commonly Used Words of the English Language
Grammar Urban Legends
Words Instead of Walk (2)
Commonly Confused Adjectives
A Guide on Punctuation
Common Writing Mistakes
25 Synoms for âExpessionâ
How to: Avoid Misusing Variations of Words
Words to Keep Inside Your Pocket
The 13 Trickiest Grammar Hang-Ups
Other Ways to Say..
Proofreading
300+ Sophiscated and Underused Words
List of Misused Words
Words for Sex
100 Beautiful and Ugly Words
Words to Use More Often
Alternatives for âSmileâ or âLaughâ
Three Self Editing Tips
Words to Use Instead of âWalkâ, âSaidâ, âHappyâ and âSadâ
Synonyms for Common Words
Alternatives for âSmileâ
Transitional Words
The Many Faces and Meanings of âSaidâ
Synonyms for âWroteâ
A Case Of She Said, She Said
Creativity Boosters:
*Creative Writing Prompts
*Ink Provoking
*Story Starter
*Story Spinner
*Story Kitchen
*Language is a Virus
*The Dabbling Mum
Quick Story Idea Generator
Solve Your Problems By Simply Saying Them Out Loud
Busting Your Writing Rut
Creative Acceleration: 11 Tips To Engineer A Productive Flow
Writing Inspiration, Or Sex on a Bicycle
The Seven Major Beginner Mistakes
Complete Your First Book with these 9 Simple Writing Habits
Free Association, Active Imagination, Twilight Imaging
Random Book Title Generator
Finishing Your Novel
Story Starters & Idea Generators
Words to Use More Often
How to: Cure Writerâs Block
Some Tips on Writerâs Block
Got Writerâs Block?
6 Ways to Beat Writerâs Block
Tips for Dealing With Writerâs Block
Improvement:
Improve Your Writing Habits Now
5 Ways to Add Sparkle to Your Writing
Getting Over Roleplaying Insecurities
Improve Your Paras
Why the Right Word Choices Result in Better Writing
4 Ways To Have Confidence in Your Writing
Writing Better Than You Normally Do
Howâs My Driving?
Motivation:
Backhanding procrastination
On habits and taking care of yourself || Response
More troubles with writing motivation
The inner critic and ways to fight it
The writing life is hard on us
For troubles with starting your story
Writing to be published
âYouâre a writer, will you write this for me?â
Writing a story thatâs doomed to suck
Writing stamina builds slowly
When depression goes and writing goes with it
Additional inner critic strategies
Tips on conquering NaNoWriMo (or any project, really)
You will change as a writer
Ways to keep writing while in school
13 quick tips when youâre starting your novel
First draft blues
Getting in your own wayÂ
Writing an Application:
How to: Make That Application Your Bitch
How to: Make Your App Better
How to: Submit a Flawless Audition
10 Tips for Applying
Para Sample Ideas
5 Tips on Writing an IC Para Sample
Writing an IC Sample Without Escaping From the Bio
How to: Create a Worthy IC Para Sample
How to: Write an Impressive Para Sample
How to:Â Lengthen Short Paraâs
Prompts:
Drabble Stuff
Prompts List
Writing Prompts
Drabble Prompts
How to Get Into Character
Writing Challenges/Prompts
A Study in Writing Prompts for RPs
Para Prompts & Ideas
Writing Prompts for Journal Entries
A List of Para Starters