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⣠Chile in a Photography âŁ
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Claire Keane

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@kelinswriter
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Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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Write whatever you want. Write that incredibly niche thing that only two other people on earth will get. Write the super indulgent cliche thing that makes you kick your feet giddily. Write the angry rage story that whumps them all and makes people cry.
Whatever it is that YOU want to write. Write it. Because only YOU can.
forever thinking about that girl at my uni orientation who, after being told to pour out her water bottle before entering an event, looked at me and said "they tell us to stay hydrated and then make us pour out our water, this is like totally kafkaesque" and then poured out what was very obviously an entire water bottle full of whiskey. hope she's doing well.
Lesbians, in my eyes, are defined as the ones who invent their own systems of love: Romantic love. Family love. Friend love. A love for community, and for strangers too. They love when there is nothing to gainâno kingdom, no castle, no seat in the official record books of historyâeven when they are at risk of losing everything.â â Amelia Possanza, Lesbian Love Story

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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Having a "stupider people have done this" attitude about the things you want to do can open so many doors
Starry Kara that I did for the Joseph-Beth Booksellers virtual event! Had a really nice time chatting with Brandon and Mary about the book. :)
Some idiot: "Why are you reading your own fic, that's shallow and stupid"
All fanfic writers and writers everywhere: "Who the fuck do you think I wrote it for?!"
iâm not procrastinating. iâm allowing the story to ferment. like kimchi. or a crime scene
I've never loved anyone as much as I love Ursula Le Guin

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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lesbian scifi is so easy. hereâs a woman in cargo pants and a tank top on a spaceship. are you with me
maybe itâs not even cargo pants. maybe itâs coveralls rolled to + tied around the waist. maybe she even has fuckoff boots
Enemies with benefits be like

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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Writing advice #?: Have your characters wash the dishes while they talk.
This is one of my favorite tricks, picked up from E.M. Forester and filtered through my own domestic-homebody lens.  Forester says that you should never ever tell us how a character feels; instead, show us what those emotions are doing to a characterâs posture and tone and expression. This makes âI felt sadnessâ into âmy shoulders hunched and I sighed heavily, staring at the ground as my eyes filled with tears.â Those emotions-as-motions are called objective correlatives. Honestly, fic writers have gotten the memo on objective correlatives, but sometimes struggle with how to use them.
Objective correlatives can quickly become a) repetitive or b) melodramatic. On the repetitive end, long scenes of dialogue can quickly turn into âhe sighedâ and âshe noddedâ so many times that he starts to feel like a window fan and she like a bobblehead. On the melodramatic end, a debate about where to eat dinner can start to feel like an episode of Jerry Springer because âhe shriekedâ while âshe clenched her fistsâ and they both âground their teeth.â If you leave the objective correlatives out entirely, then you have whatâs known as âfloatingâ dialogue â we get the words themselves but no idea how theyâre being said, and feel completely disconnected from the scene. If you try to get meaning across by telling us the charactersâ thoughts instead, this quickly drifts into purple prose.
Instead, have them wash the dishes while they talk.
To be clear: it doesnât have to be dishes. They could be folding laundry or sweeping the floor or cooking a meal or making a bed or changing a lightbulb. The point is to engage your characters in some meaningless, everyday household task that does not directly relate to the subject of the conversation.
This trick gives you a whole wealth of objective correlatives. If your character is angry, then the way they scrub a bowl will be very different from how theyâll be scrubbing while happy. If your character is taking a moment to think, then they might splash suds around for a few seconds. A character who is not that invested in the conversation will be looking at the sink not paying much attention. A character moderately invested will be looking at the speaker while continuing to scrub a pot. If the character is suddenly very invested in the conversation, you can convey this by having them set the pot down entirely and give their full attention to the speaker.
A demonstration:
1
âIâm leaving,â Anastasia said.
âWhat?â Drizella continued dropping forks into the dishwasher.
2
âIâm leaving,â Anastasia said.
Drizella paused midway through slotting a fork into the dishwasher.  âWhat?â
3
âIâm leaving,â Anastasia said.
Drizella laughed, not looking up from where she was arranging forks in the dishwasher.  âWhat?â
4
âIâm leaving,â Anastasia said.
The forks slipped out of Drizellaâs hand and clattered onto the floor of the dishwasher.  âWhat?â
5
âIâm leaving,â Anastasia said.
âWhat?â Drizella shoved several forks into the dishwasher with unnecessary force, not seeming to notice when several bounced back out of the silverware rack.
See how cheaply and easily we can get across Drizellaâs five different emotions about Anastasia leaving, all by telling the reader how sheâs doing the dishes? And all the while no heads were nodded, no teeth were clenched.
The reason I recommend having it be one of these boring domestic chores instead of, say, scaling a building or picking a lock, is that chores add a sense of realism and are low-stakes enough not to be distracting. If you add a concurrent task thatâs high-stakes, then potentially your readers are going to be so focused on the question of whether your characters will pick the lock in time that they donât catch the dialogue. But no oneâs going to be on the edge of their seat wondering whether Drizellaâs going to have enough clean forks for tomorrow.
And chores are a cheap-n-easy way to add a lot of realism to your story. So much of the appeal of contemporary superhero stories comes from Spider-Man having to wash his costume in a Queens laundromat or Green Arrow cheating at darts, because those details are fun and interesting and make a story feel âreal.â  Actually ask the question of what dishes or clothing or furniture your character owns and how often that stuff gets washed. Thatâs how you avoid reality-breaking continuity errors like stating in Chapter 3 that all of your characterâs worldly possessions fit in a single backpack and in Chapter 7 having your character find a pair of pants he forgot he owns. You donât have to tell the reader what dishes your character owns (please donât; itâs already bad enough when Tolkien does it) but you should ideally know for yourself.
Anyway: objective correlatives are your friends. They get emotion across, but for low-energy scenes can become repetitive and for high-energy scenes can become melodramatic. The solution is to give your characters something relatively mundane to do while the conversation is going on, and domestic chores are not a bad starting place.
I actually first learned this lesson when doing improv. Always have your character doing something, but donât make the scene about what your character is doing. Come in and start putting groceries away and confront your roommate about sleeping with your boyfriend while youâre putting the groceries away. Be working in a clothes store folding shirts and be reunited with your long-lost cousin while working. Etc etc.
And then much later (partially bc I started writing regularly years after I started doing improv but even then it took me way too long to figure it out) I realized this can be applied to writing, and itâs great. Anytime thereâs a long dialogue scene and it feels flat, rewriting it so theyâre doing something else - something that on the surface is totally unrelated to the conversation - is a sure-fire way to make it more dynamic and open up whole new avenues for conveying thoughts and feelings to the reader.
THE GOLDEN GIRLS 2.05 â Isn't It Romantic? â 08.11.86 Betty White as Rose Nylund Lois Nettleton as Jean
1986!!
Golden Girls was so incredibly progressive for its time and not even slightly afraid to be loud about it. They talked about queer people, about race, about ableism, and they made it central and overt. They talked about things that mattered, and they never punched down, and they were allies off the stage too.
Reblogging this again to add some context for anyone who may not know. In the 80's, being outed as gay could get you blacklisted in Hollywood. It ruined people's careers.
Bea Arthur and Betty White both suffered damage to their careers for standing up against racism and homophobia. Back in the 50s Betty White hosted a variety show that was canceled because she featured a black dancer and doubled down when they told her to stop.