Frankenstein triptych
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

⣠Chile in a Photography âŁ
DEAR READER
almost home
dirt enthusiast

Love Begins

romaâ
Peter Solarz
Acquired Stardust

oozey mess
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
Claire Keane

Product Placement
Jules of Nature
Show & Tell
Aqua Utopiaď˝ćľˇăŽĺşă§č¨ćśăç´Ąă

Kiana Khansmith

JBB: An Artblog!
NASA
seen from Sri Lanka
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seen from Indonesia

seen from United States
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seen from Denmark

seen from China

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@lybrarie
Frankenstein triptych

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áľáľ áľáľáś âąâżáľ âąË˘ áľáľ ËĄâąáľâąáľ âť áľË˘áśáľĘł ʡâąËĄáľáľ, áľĘ°áľ áľâąáśáľáľĘłáľ áľáś áľáľĘłâąáľâż áľĘłáľĘ¸
Now the searchers have departed, and life has grown quiet around me, I have come to realize that while for years I might have imagined myself to be somewhere else, in reality I have been there all the time: up at the top by the muddy wheel-ruts in the new grass, where the sky is dark over the shivering apple blossoms and the first chill of the snow that will fall that night is already in the air. â The Secret History, Donna Tartt.
A few hours at home and the Telegraph Club seemed more like a fantasy than a real thing. This troubled her. It felt as if someone had taken an eraser to her memory - to her very self - and rubbed at it, then blown away the remains. Last Night at the Telegraph Club by Malinda Lo
How to Write a Confession of Love
Build the Emotional Tension Before the big confession, let the tension simmer between the characters. Maybe they share little glances across the room, or their hands brush accidentally but neither pulls away. Every shared laugh or lingering look should leave the reader wondering âIs this it?â When the confession finally happens, itâll feel like the natural next step, as if both characters have been teetering on the edge of admitting their feelings for a while.
Inner Turmoil Leading Up to the Moment No oneâs ever totally confident before saying, âI like you,â or âI love you.â Show the characterâs inner freak-out. Maybe theyâre wondering if theyâre about to ruin everything, or if the other person feels the same. Let them overthink every detail, what if they mess it up? What if they say the wrong thing? This nervousness is super relatable and makes the confession way more intense and vulnerable.
Choose the Right Setting Where the confession happens can completely change the vibe. If itâs somewhere quiet and personal, like on the roof under the stars or sitting close on a couch, it adds a sense of intimacy. But maybe itâs in the middle of a party or a chaotic situation, where emotions are running high and everythingâs on the line. The setting should fit the emotionsâare they scared? Excited? Confused? Let the environment match their energy.
Donât Make It Perfect Real life is messy, and confessions of love are no different. Maybe the character fumbles their words, says something awkward, or has to start over. Maybe they get interrupted, or they laugh nervously halfway through. These imperfections make the moment feel real. Itâs not about saying the perfect words, itâs about whatâs in their heart. Let the raw, unpolished feelings shine through.
Balance Between Show and Tell Obviously, theyâre going to say something like âI love youâ or âI canât stop thinking about you,â but actions and body language speak just as loudly. Maybe their voice cracks, they shift closer without realizing it, or they canât seem to meet the other personâs eyes. Maybe their hands are shaking, or their heart is pounding so loud they canât hear anything else. Let those little details paint the full picture of how much this confession means.
The Other Personâs Reaction Itâs not just about the person confessing, the other personâs reaction is a huge part of the scene. Are they completely shocked? Do they hesitate, or respond right away? Do they get teary-eyed or try to play it cool? The way they react adds layers to the moment. Even a pause before answering can make the scene ten times more intense. Their response shows how much theyâve been waiting for or dreading this confession too.
In short, make it messy, emotional, and real. Readers want to feel the build-up, the fear, the excitement, and the vulnerability of both characters. Donât be afraid to make things a little awkward or imperfect, thatâs what makes a confession unforgettable.

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2024 books - gallant by v.e. schwab
All her life, she wanted a house and a garden and a room of her own. But tucked inside that want was something else: a family. Parents who smothered her with love. Siblings who teased because they cared. Grandparents, aunts and uncles, nieces and nephewsâin her mind a family was a sprawling thing, an orchard full of roots and branches.
"That over and over, he was presented with the same impossible decisionâlive and suffer, love and grieveâbut still, every time, with all his being, his answer was and would always be yes. It would be difficult and painful, and however it ended, it would endâbut still, he could choose it. To live, to love; it was always a choice, and inherently a brave one, to face down certain doom with open arms."
â Masters of Death by @olivieblake
Short Story Recommendations
These all fuck me up to a varying degree of emotions
Crime
Philomel Cottage - Agatha Christie
Lamb to the Slaughter - Roald Dahl
Death and the Compass - Jorge Luis Borges
Horror
The Landlady - Roald Dahl
A Walk in the Dark - Arthur C Clarke
The Wifeâs Story - Ursula K Le Guin
The Veldt - Ray Bradbury
The Hanging Stranger - Philip K Dick
The Colour out of Space - H P Lovecraft
The Spider - Hanns Heinz Ewers
Sad
The Life You Save May Be Your Own - Flannery OâConnor
A Small, Good Thing - Raymond Carver
Cathedral - Raymond Carver
The Haunted Boy - Carson McCullers
The Ones Who Walk Away From Omelas - Ursula K. Le Guin
The Chef - Andy Weir
The Martyr - Ngugi Wa Thiongâo
Jambula Tree - Monica Arak de Nyeko
The Rats Do Sleep At Night - Wolfgang Borchert
Sci-Fi
Love is the Plan the Plan is Death - James Tiptree Jr
The Last Question - Isaac Asimov
The Nine Billion Names of God - Arthur C Clarke
The Star - Arthur C Clarke
Reunion - Arthur C Clarke
The Commuter - Philip K Dick
Exhibit Piece - Philip K Dick
To Serve Man - Damon Knight
Brothers Beyond the Void - Paul W Fairman
What the Fuck?!Â
The Lottery - Shirley Jackson
A Collapse of Horses - Brian Evenson
Some of Us Had Been Threatening Our Friend Colby - Donald Barthelme
Hopeful Monsters - Hiromi Goto
The Box Social - James Reaney
He-y come on ou-t - shinichi hoshi
The Garden of Forking Paths - Jorge Luis Borges
Stories of Your Life and Others - Ted Chiang (just the entire collection bro)
Other
Broken Routine - Jeffrey Archer
A Man Who Had No Eyes - Mackinlay Kantor
Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been - Joyce Carol Oates
The Lady, or the Tiger - Frank R Stockton
The Continuity of Parks - Julio CortĂĄzar
The Dinner Party - Mona Gardner
A Very Old Man with Enormous Wings - Gabriel GarcĂa MĂĄrquez
On Exactitude in Science - Jorge Luis Borges
read in 2019. the picture of dorian gray by oscar wilde
you will always be fond of me. i represent to you all the sins you never had the courage to commit.
I feel like many people have a fundamental misconception of what unreliable narrator means. It's simply a narrative vehicle not a character flaw, a sign that the character is a bad person. There are also many different types of unreliable narrators in fiction. Being an unreliable narrator doesn't necessarily mean that the character is 'wrong', it definitely doesn't mean that they're wrong about everything even if some aspects in their story are inaccurate, and only some unreliable narrators actively and consciously lie. Stories that have unreliable narrators also tend to deal with perception and memory and they often don't even have one objective truth, just different versions. It reflects real life where we know human memory is highly unreliable and vague and people can interpret same events very differently
Some types of unreliable narrator:
The Watson: is present for the event but does not have the same level of perception as protagonist
The Lemony Snicket: isn't present for the event, reconstructs the facts based on later research, can get things wrong or incomplete
The Ted Moseby: is present for the event but has romanticised and embellished their memory of it through nostalgia to an extent that you cannot fully believe it; is also prone to misremembering or outright forgetting details.
The Katniss Everdeen: is present for the event, is the protagonist, but is completely foreign to the world and out of their depth so they don't quite understand a lot of what is going on.
The Rose Quartz: is present for the event, but due to their personal agenda or feelings of shame hides and embellishes what actually happened in favour of a version that paints them in a better light.
The Big Brother: overwrites what actually happened in favour of propaganda.
The Jonathan Harker: is absolutely clueless about what is going on around them and the genre they're in so their perception of events is tinted by their own naivety.
The Goob: the narrator's own emotional bias clouds their judgement of what really happened.
The Tyler Durden: the narrator is suffering from hallucinations and doesn't realise it.
The Pi: the narrator has survived a traumatic experience and copes with it by turning it into a wonderful tale.

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I want to write a book called âyour character dies in the woodsâ that details all the pitfalls and dangers of being out on the road & in the wild for people without outdoors/wilderness experience bc I cannot keep reading narratives brush over life threatening conditions like nothing is happening.
I just read a book by one of my favorite authors whose plots are essentially airtight, but the MC was walking on a country road on a cold winter night and she was knocked down and fell into a drainage ditch covered in ice, broke through and got covered in icy mud and water.
Then she had a âmiserableâ 3 more miles to walk to the inn.
Babes she would not MAKE it to that inn.
Are there any other particularly egregious examples?
This book already exists, sort of! Or at least, itâs a biology textbook but I bought it for writing purposes:
It starts with a chapter about freezing to death, and it is without a doubt the scariest thing Iâve read in years (and I read a lot of horror fiction).
It's less textbooky and more popular writing, but also of interest may be this book: Last Breath by Peter Stark (the original subtitle was "Cautionary Tales from the Limits of Human Endurance," which I think is far more descriptive than "The Limits of Adventure").
Along with factual information, each chapter features an imaginary character who is facing the hazard in questionâhypothermia, heatstroke, drowning, dehydration, etcâto illustrate what it's like to experience it. And some of these characters survive! But more of them Do Not.
The first chapter (also about freezing to death! though the character manages to get found, get warmed back up, and survive) was originally published as a piece in Outdoor magazine, so you can read it to get an idea of whether you would like the book:
The Cold, Hard Facts of Freezing to Death
Protective prompts:
âGet behind me.â
âHold my hand, okay? Itâs gonna be over soon.â
âClose your eyes for me love.â
âWhen I say run, I need you to do as I say without looking back and donât wait for me.â
âItâs all going to okay, they would never hurt you again.â
âI swear to you, that as long as Iâm alive I wonât let a single soul ever harm you.â
âListen to me. . . take deep breaths, yes follow my breathing just like that. Thereâs no need to panic, Iâm right here now, arenât I? Youâre safe.â
âWhen you love something, you protect it with your entire life at stake, and right now, my guts tell me to do the same.â
âIâll be back very soon, but donât come out. Stay there hidden until I come back and try not to make a noise, hmm?â *forehead kisses being a must here*
âIâm so so sorry! I wish I wouldâve never left you alone! If I knew this would happen, I would never leave you alone.â
"what advice do you have for new writers?" well i could say the typical (but important!) "practice" "read books" but my PERSONAL advice as someone who's been writing since he was a toddler is as follows: feel every emotion u can & touch every texture u can & search for obscure facts or antiquated words or animal behavior or something you wouldn't normally think about. the most arbitrary things can bring inspiration. branch out! leave your comfort zone and seek things that are new & unknown to you. learn to find wonder and beauty in some aspect of the world, but hopefully many aspects. learn how to be patient tbh. fall in any kind of love with anything. most importantly treat yourself with kindness and care and forgiveness - i get wanting to write about pain, trust me, but also trust me, your writing will evolve as your perception of yourself softens. oh yeah and always have a pen on you
Oh, I love this.
Tons of Reasons Why Writerâs Block Happens
Lately Iâve seen a few posts on social media platforms being shared that are (supposedly) quotes from well-known authors. The quotes generally stick to the theme of: writerâs block isnât real! No worries! Itâs just in your head!
LikeâŚ
That is so unhelpful for me and if I had seen those people (again, supposedly) saying that when I was much younger and newer to writing, I would have thought something was wrong with me.
So here are a few reasons why writerâs block IS real for many people and what you can do about it. (Warningâthis is a long text post but I tried putting all suggested solutions in bullet points and have lots of resource hyperlinks!)
You Canât Write Because: Youâre Tired
Sleep affects the entire body. Thereâs no question that when I donât get enough of it, my brain isnât working as well as it normally does.
Letâs start this section with what everyone should acknowledgeâmental health conditions absolutely prevent people from being able to use tips like Just turn the lights off earlier! or Think calming thoughts while taking deep breaths!
If those work for you, great. Fantastic! But if they donât, your doctor is the best person to get advice from. They can work through symptoms with you to rule out conditions like depression and insomnia so you get the best help possible.
Besides your mental health, there are a few other ways you might not be able to fall asleep or stay asleep:
You enjoy drinking afternoon coffee (most have a half life of 3-5 hours, so the caffeine doesnât actually leave your system for a long time!)
You have a diet soda with your lunch or dinner (most diet sodas have the same amount of caffeine as a half cup to a whole cup of coffee)
You eat a midnight snack or a dessert after dinner (the extra digestion works against your bodyâs circadian rhythm and prevents a normal sleep cycle)
Potential Solutions
Swap your afternoon coffee/sodas for caffeine free sodas instead
Eat high-protein snacks shortly after or during dinner (protein keeps you full longer so you can eat them earlier in the evening)
Follow some tips from sleep experts with the Sleep Foundation
You Canât Write Because: Your Routine Is Changing/Has Changed
When my life has gone through routine changes, my creativity has always slowed (if not stopped altogether). Switching from high school to college, from college to graduate life, and even from apartment to apartment is a big deal. My writing slows when I change jobs, see my friends less/more often, and even when the holidays come and go.
If you think this might be a repeat experience in your life, my best advice is to give yourself grace. Your brain is only trying to conserve energy and process everything thatâs going on.Â
Potential Solutions
Resting and gently reattempting to write without expectations of what will come out of that writing session is sometimes the best thing to do until life settles back down.
If you canât come to peace with changes, Iâd suggest talking with someone. You can access help for free at:
7 Cups of Tea (chat with volunteer listeners and professional counselors)
Get in-person or virtual therapy through Open Path ($30-60/session with a one-time membership fee; aims to close the financial gap that keeps people from accessing mental health professionals).
Check out other budget-friendly therapy options recommended by the medical community.
You Canât Write Because: Youâre Grappling With Indecisions
Indecision is a creativity killer for sure. Iâll address a few ways Iâve experienced it and how I know my friends have struggled with it:
You only have a few story ideas and donât want to commit to any of them in case some idea comes along thatâs more interesting (I hate leaving unfinished drafts too!)
You wonder how you should format your story and never start because you canât decide (it might be the point of view, past/present tense, etc.)
You canât nail down how a character looks, what sets them apart, what drives them.
You canât decide on a theme because thereâs so much you want to write about.
You donât know how long the story should be, so it never starts.
Potential Solutions
Try new things to come to peace with unfinished drafts (I have a folder on my computer specifically labeled âUnfinished Storiesâ because Iâm more comfortable when they have a home).
Practice writing one page within your storyâs world from a different point of view or tense. See what feels most natural or authentic to you.
Do character research by looking at pictures of people on stock photo websites or Pinterest.
Story length is often found after someone just starts writing. Youâll naturally find a rhythm and come to a conclusion at the right length for your first draft. Revise/add if needed!
My most important tip might beâ
Give your gut 24 hours (go with your gut on whatever youâre trying to decide, then set your work down. Come back in 24 hours to see if you feel as strongly about your creative decision).
You Canât Write Because: Youâve Got Too Many Ideas
When there are too many creative ideas in your brain, it leads to anxiety and potential writerâs block. I know Iâve had the fear that Iâll commit to the âwrongâ story and another one will come to life in my mind, but then be gone by the time Iâm ready to write it.
Potential Solutions
Write all of your ideas down in a list (bold, highlight, or star whichever ones seem super promising at the time so they stand out when youâre ready for a new project)
Try stream of consciousness journaling for 30 seconds (set a timer! Whatever you write will reveal with emotions/thoughts/issues are on your mind and may create stronger stories with similar themes)
Write 500 words of a story idea (or another number youâre comfortable with; if you donât like what you write, you know you can move onto the next idea).
Flip a coin (assign one idea heads and the other tailsâthen flip a coin or use a coin flip generator).
Number your ideas and use a random number generator to pick one for you.
You Canât Write Because: Youâre Not Eating a Brain-Supporting Diet
Iâm not here to tell anyone how to structure their diet. Everyoneâs body is different and what you eat will change throughout your life. Your doctor and/or a licensed nutritionist are the best people for that job.
However, I can give you a few pointers that I definitely didnât learn until way later than I would have liked:
Iron: if you donât eat enough iron, you can feel super sleepy or stuck in brain fog. Iron comes from meat, but it also comes from these foods like spinach, watermelon, beans, whole wheat bread, and many more!
Vitamin D: vitamin D enhances brain function, especially for people with major depressive disorder. Drink that delicious Sunny D juice from your childhood or get it from foods like salmon, tuna fish, dairy fortified with vitamin D, and egg yolks.
Omega-3s: omega-3s are also known as fatty acids, which improve communication between brain cells by fortifying their membrane health. Fish is an excellent source of fatty acids, but you can also enjoy more omega-3s from foods like chia seeds, kidney beans, walnuts, and fortified foods.Â
You Canât Write Because: Your Responsibilities Are Too Important Right Now
As you get older, youâll have varying responsibilities that sometimes you have to take care of on your own. Maybe youâre taking on new roles at your job or youâve just become a parent. You might move into a new home and have a long list of projects to finish before you settle in.
Sometimes responsibilities are acts of self-care during challenging times. Those are all valid. Itâs okay to step back and take a break if your situation is going to drain your energy until your routine becomes normal or you get used to the responsibilities. Youâre a writer even when youâre not actively writing. Nothing can take that skill and passion away from you!
You Canât Write Because: Youâre Uninterested In Writing
Itâs totally normal to sometimes feel like youâre completely uninterested in writing. That feeling might last for months or even years. I went through a good 5-6 year period where I didnât think Iâd ever write again just because I didnât care to.
That may indicate that youâre in a period of self-growth. You might be discovering new parts of yourself that result in new hobbies youâd rather spend your time doing. Thatâs okay too!
Possible Solutions
If thatâs not the case for you, ask yourselfâare you still reading? My writing always grinds to a halt when Iâm not reading a good book. Ask a friend what was the last book they couldnât put down. Find out which books are currently taking the internet by storm and find them at your local library.
You can even research âBooks like ___â and insert the title of a book thatâs incredibly special to you. I promise there are going to be articles looping it in with other titles that you might enjoy more than branching out into a totally new genre.
You Canât Write Because: Youâre Bored of Your Story
Life can get boring. People are sometimes boring. Stories get boring too.
Itâs okay to step back from an idea if you groan at the thought of spending time in that world or with that character. You can always come back to see if the feeling has passed.
Possible Solutions
If your story is still dull when you come back to it, what can you add or change about it? You might need a plot twist to get things going in a new direction or another character to shake up existing character dynamics.
When all else fails and you still donât care to continue writing what youâve got, go ahead and scrap it. Consider what youâve learned from the experience and move onto your next creative adventure.
You Canât Write Because: Your Story Is Stuck
Maybe youâre writing a story and it reaches a point in the plot where you donât know how to move your characters forward. They may have gotten themselves into a sticky situation you canât think a way out of or the plot device that was working isnât relevant anymore. Getting stuck is a form of writerâs block, but itâs not permanent.
Potential Solutions
Give your protagonist a different goal at the start of the story or a new goal after accomplishing their last one.
Add a new character (theyâll naturally make different choices than your protagonist and challenge them in various ways that are relevant to your themes).
Pull the rug out from under your protagonist (maybe they think theyâre an incredible parent, but overhear their child complaining about them to a friend during a sleepover while walking past the living room).
Other Resources
12 Techniques for Getting Un-Stuck
17 Ideas to Continue Writing Your Novel When You Get Stuck
6 Methods to Unstick Your Story
You Canât Write Because: Your Characters Arenât Real Enough to You
Sometimes characters donât feel real enough and it makes writing about them boring. Everyone encounters this eventually! Think about if your writerâs block is happening because you donât enjoy spending time with your characters.
If thatâs the problem, itâs time to make them more real. There are a few ways to do that! (If you try these solutions or others like them and your characters are still uninspiring, it might be time to walk away for a while/permanently.)
Potential Solutions
Give them something inspired by a real life person (add a personality trait that you love about your best friend, hate about a public figure, want in yourself, etc.).
Add a few flaws (perfect characters donât feel real because no one is perfect)
Give them a face (this goes back to character researchâsave a stock photo that looks like your character or draw them. Post the picture on your wall where you write or in your phone for continual inspiration.)
Rework your plot (maybe youâre not starting them at the best possible point in their journeyâstart with an action scene, shift events around, or add a new twist that challenges their growth in some way.)
Complicate their relationships (maybe they have a fight with their best friend, clash with their teacher, form different opinions than someone they admire and learn from that experience, etc.)
Other Resources
9 Signs Your Main Character is Boring
5 Ways to Make Your Characters More Realistic
4 Bland Character Problems and How to Fix Them
Easy And Effective Ways To Make Your Characters More Memorable
You Canât Write Because: Youâve Set High Expectations for Yourself
Your creativity will stop feeling as natural if your expectations of yourself or your writing are too high.Â
When itâs time to write, where do your thoughts go? You may need healthier expectations if your thoughts center around:
Getting every word or scene perfect
Knowing exactly where the plot goes in every chapter
Worrying that your story wonât be receptive to future readers
Wondering if youâre the right person to talk about a certain theme
Making your characters or story the first of its kind
Itâs good to challenge yourself, but not with unreachable expectations. Give yourself room to try things, to possibly fail, to learn from your mistakes.Â
Every chance you have to write is another opportunity to hone your skills by learning from the experience.
You Canât Write Because: Youâre Burnt Out
Burnout happens all the time, creatively or otherwise. Creative minds can push themselves too hard, just like you can throw too much of your energy into work or school.Â
See if youâre experiencing any of these common symptoms of burnout:
Constant exhaustion, even after a âgoodâ nightâs rest
Headaches
Changes in appetite
Frequent illnesses
No motivation
A general negative outlook on life
Feeling trapped
Loud thoughts of self-doubt or failure
Not feeling satisfied with things that used to bring you joy
Feeling alone
Starting unhealthy coping mechanisms
Isolating yourself from people, even your loved ones
Potential Solutions
Talking with a therapist is a great way to handle burnout. Here are the resources for budget-friendly therapy again:
7 Cups of Tea (chat with volunteer listeners and professional counselors)
Get in-person or virtual therapy through Open Path ($30-60/session with a one-time membership fee; aims to close the financial gap that keeps people from accessing mental health professionals).
Check out other budget-friendly therapy options recommended by the medical community.
I have absolutely been the person who canât afford therapy. I get it. You can also get some mental health help with these resources:
Self care appsâI use the (free) Finch app every day to redirect negative thought patterns!
Burnout recovery strategies recommended by health care professionals
Burnout resources recommended by the American Psychiatric Association (APA)
You Canât Write Because: Your Writing Routine Isnât Working Anymore
I used to write short stories literally every day while I was in grade school. Being stuck in classes for 8 hours a day was great for my creative writing because the sounds of the teacher talking, whiteboard markers writing, and students asking questions became background noise that tuned me into my stories. (I highly recommend paying attention to harder classes though đ)
When I had fewer daily classes in college, my writing basically stopped. After I graduated, the environment that helped me write most easily completely disappeared.
It took a long time for me to learn why I had writerâs blockâI wasnât experimenting with my writing environment.
Potential Solutions
Try changing when you write to see if itâs a time issue. Get up earlier in the morning, write after eating lunch, or sit down after youâve completed your responsibilities for the day.
Switch your scenery. You might write better at a coffee shop, the library, a park bench, your living room, your bed, or even your bathtub.
Change what youâre hearing. Try writing in complete silence. Use noise-blocking or canceling headphones and listen to lyricless music. You can also try background noises that often help people focus, like:
Background NoiseâCoffee Shop
Background NoiseâTavern Fireplace
Background NoiseâRain Shower
Background NoiseâCozy Fireplace and Rain Shower
Background NoiseâForest Sounds
Background NoiseâBlizzard Sounds
Background NoiseâInterior Plane Cabin White Noise (The pleasant hum of a plane cabin is what I often write toâweird as it admittedly is!)
Background NoiseâChristmas Music From Another Room
Background NoiseâLo-Fi
Ambient noise apps
Background noise apps
You Canât Write Because: You Donât Feel Motivated
Your story may not feel as captivating as you thought because youâre not as motivated with this one. Does it have a centralized theme? You can always search for your theme or pick one while figuring out what your story is supposed to convey to readers.
Some popular themes are:
Coming of age (discovering something about yourself/the world/both)
Survival
Corruption
Power
Courage
Love
Heroism
Death
Prejudice
You may find your motivation by writing about something very personal to you or something you want to tell other people. Write to the person in your life who needs to see something from your perspective or needs to learn from another personâs perspective.
Write about the thing you canât stop talking about. Write about what youâre going through or want to figure out. Even if your story goes from a novel to a short story to flash fiction (anywhere from 4 words to 1,000 words), youâll likely find it easier to write.
Other Resources
10 Most Popular Literary Theme Examples
Story Themes List: 100+ Ideas to Explore in Your Novel
100 Story Ideas Categorized by Theme
You Canât Write Because: Youâre Doubting Yourself
Self-doubt can pull the emergency brake on your brain. You may not think youâre good enough to write a story the moment you think of it. Self-doubt can come into play after you start writing or just before you finish a manuscript.
No matter when it hits you, it can cause another form of writerâs block. Youâre the only person who can figure out where that doubt stems from and address the root of the problem, but everyone can practice daily positive affirmations to encourage themselves. With daily practice, youâll chip away at your writerâs block.
While talking to a mirror or writing in a journal, tell yourself things like:
Writing is my hobby because itâs part of me.
Iâm always a writer, no matter how often I actually write.
My voice and ideas deserve to exist.
Every word I write makes me better at writing.
No matter what comes out of my brain, stories are always my artwork.
Other Resources
Positive Affirmations for Writers
60 Affirmations for Writers, Authors, and Creatives
77 Positive Affirmations for Discouraged Writers
336 Affirmations For Writers Who Needs Supportâ
60 Affirmations for Authors, Writers, and Poets
You Canât Write Because: Youâre Literally Out of Ideas
Ideas come and go. Sometimes your brain just canât think of anything. Thereâs nothing wrong with your creative spiritâyou may just have other things going on (like one or more of the above challenges).
When you really want to write something but canât come up with anything off the top of your head, use a few generators to get things started.
Potential Solutions
Prompt Generators
Writing Prompt Generator by Genre
Prompt Generator
Random Prompt Generator
Story Generators
Plot Generator (Twists, First Lines, and More)
1 Million Plot Combinations
1000s of Plot Ideas Generator
Character Generators
Character GeneratorÂ
List of Character Generators (Zombies, Fairies, Ghosts, Murder Mystery Victims, etc.)
Character Profile Generator
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Plot Twist Idea Generator
Randomized Plot Twist Generator
Either/Or Plot Twist Generator
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I hope this helps someone feel more at peace with their writerâs block, even if you canât think your way through it yet. Sit with the uncomfortable feeling and it will gradually lose its power over your creativity.
Youâll start writing again sooner than you think. đ
WEBSITES FOR WRITERS {masterpost}
E.A. Deverell - FREE worksheets (characters, world building, narrator, etc.) and paid courses;
Hiveword - Helps to research any topic to write about (has other resources, too);
BetaBooks - Share your draft with your beta reader (can be more than one), and see where they stopped reading, their comments, etc.;
Charlotte Dillon - Research links;
Writing realistic injuries - The title is pretty self-explanatory: while writing about an injury, take a look at this useful website;
One Stop for Writers - You guys⌠this website has literally everything we need: a) Description thesaurus collection, b) Character builder, c) Story maps, d) Scene maps & timelines, e) World building surveys, f) Worksheets, f) Tutorials, and much more! Although it has a paid plan ($90/year | $50/6 months | $9/month), you can still get a 2-week FREE trial;
One Stop for Writers Roadmap - It has many tips for you, divided into three different topics: a) How to plan a story, b) How to write a story, c) How to revise a story. The best thing about this? Itâs FREE!
Story Structure Database - The Story Structure Database is an archive of books and movies, recording all their major plot points;
National Centre for Writing - FREE worksheets and writing courses. Has also paid courses;
Penguin Random House - Has some writing contests and great opportunities;
Crime Reads - Get inspired before writing a crime scene;
The Creative Academy for Writers - âWriters helping writers along every step of the path to publication.â Itâs FREE and has ZOOM writing rooms;
Reedsy - âA trusted place to learn how to successfully publish your bookâ It has many tips, and tools (generators), contests, prompts lists, etc. FREE;
QueryTracker - Find agents for your books (personally, Iâve never used this before, but I thought I should feature it here);
Pacemaker - Track your goals (example: Write 50K words - then, everytime you write, you track the number of the words, and it will make a graphic for you with your progress). Itâs FREE but has a paid plan;
Save the Cat! - The blog of the most known storytelling method. You can find posts, sheets, a software (student discount - 70%), and other things;
I hope this is helpful for you!
(Also, check my blog if you want to!)

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prompts â trauma
âyou donât feel safe here, do you?â
âiâm just tired.â âof what?â âeverything.â
âwere you crying?â
âitâs like i canât breathe. i just want to breathe.â
âare you okay? that looked like it really spooked you.â
âitâs fine, iâm used to it.â
âiâm not trying to pry, but i want you to know iâd like to listen, if you want someone to talk to.â
âjust⌠let me lay here for a while.â
âwhat can i do to help?â
âiâm usually stronger than this.â
âjust pretend like iâm not here. what would you say to yourself if nobody was around?â
âiâm sorry i didnât tell you earlier.â
âwhen was the last time you ate?â
âyou stayed?â âof course i stayed. why wouldnât i?â
â[name]? can you hear me?â
âiâm sorry, iâm not trying to be distant.â
âitâs okay. i promise you, i will be here when you wake up.â
âi have a lot going on right now.â
âwhenever you get stressed, you do this thing with your hands. what is it?â
âyou said i could stay with you if i needed a bed.â
âi wonât judge you.â
âi pick my skin/bite my nails when i feel panicky.â
âyou donât have to tell me. but if you do decide you want to, iâll be here.â
âyouâre being way too nice to me.â
ârelax, i wonât hurt you.â
writing characters with one eye
i can pretty much guarantee that âthatâ is not a heading you see everyday.
now i will not be giving advice on writing cyclopses, (though it may be sort of the same thing) i still hope this will be helpful for some people out there that are looking to provide a more diverse cast to their wip!
i have never ever ever read a book, watch a show movie etc etc that involves a character with one eye. (aside from those badass characters who wear eye patches bc they lost sight in one eye in some badass way)
for context: i am one of many people who was born with microphtalmia, an eye disease that results in one or both eyes develope smaller than normal at birth. i myself was born with a smaller left eye, which resulted in my left eye being removed exactly twenty days after birth.
microphthalmia (along with many other eye diseases) typically leads to being half or fully blind. i lucked out and only lost my left eye which i am so so thankful for.
i would really really love to see more representation for my community in literature, especially so people would come to see that being half blind isnât as unusual and weird as people make it out to be.
without further ado, i present to you, a list of information, facts, and first hand experiences from yours truly!
iâve had prosthetic eyes made to fit my eye socket for about fifteen years (iâm 16 lol) (the first 6ish months after the surgery i never had a prosthetic)
in my life iâve had four different prosthetic eyes made because just like other people, my eye socket grew alongside the rest of me, meaning the prosthetic needed to be made bigger
iâve had my current prosthetic for four years now, the past ones lasted about 2-3 years at a time. this one will probably last me through the rest of my life unless i need/want a new one
as opposed to most media/assumptions, my prosthetic (along with most prosthetics) is PLASTIC (people always think itâs glass) and only half a circle!!
iâve had three surgeries related to my eye
i do not have depth perception which makes doing certain things very difficult (estimating distance, how close/far i am from something etc)
driving is not affected too much, i just have to turn my head more than other people. i believe being blind in the right eye might be more difficult, but i couldnât say
doing my make up is kinda easy, ďżźexcept for eyeliner is a pain in the ASS since most people close their eye to do it on their upper lid, but clearly i canât close my right eye whilst doing it lol
my family as well as my friends and even myself often forget i have a prosthetic, which sometimes results in awkward/funny situations
i hate walking with people on my right bc i canât tell where they are unless iâm constantly looking down at my/their feet
i sucked at basketball bc i had such a disadvantage (no depth perception, i could only see half the court, i was constantly turning my head) but professional swimming is much easier for me since itâs not a contact sport and doesnât really require for me to be paying attention to a million things at once
i rarely have to take my prosthetic out, and if i do, itâs either to clean it, (we do get eye crusties on our prosthetics just like other people do when they have pink eye or sever allergies) itâs bothering me/really dry, or i want to take it out to show/scare people lol
a lot of people donât realize when i first meet them that itâs fake bc my recent prosthetic is amazing accurate to my real eye. others notice and assume i have a lazy eye since it doesnât move
for some reason people think i canât cry out of my left (prosthetic) eye??? i still have a tear duct??? i actually think more tears come out of my left tear duct than my right lol
i am extremely self conscious about it, but i know there are other one-eyed beauties out there who arenât which is amazing!! i try to live vicariously through them lol
i make sooo many jokes about my eye lol, and iâm usually ok w other people making jokes as long as they arenât like overly rude/offensive, then iâll feel a lil bad about my self
people never really made fun of it, but kids in middle school likes to wave things in front of my left eye/on my left side that i couldnât see which got really annoying after a while
getting custom designed prosthetics are available, but theyâre really expensive (so are normal lol) they costs thousands of dollars, just like other prosthetics do
i run into things that are on my left side ALL THE TIME itâs actually kinda funny lolol
i try to hide my left eye/turn more to my left side in photos bc my eyes arenât always looking in the same direction, which really gets to me
i wear glasses for both protection and bc my right eye is -1.75 lmao but i did used to wear non-prescription glasses purely for safety
i do have contacts to wear during the summer, swim meets etc, for when i donât want/canât wear my glasses but need to see. bc of this, i have a second pair of glasses that have no prescription
if doctors/scientists managed to figure out a way to fix microphthalmia (a birth defect), or do a sort of eye transplant, i would not be able to have that done to me because all parts of my left eye have been removed from my body
microphthalmia is NOT the only disease that results in the haver losing sight in one or both eyes!! there are many others, but it is not my place to share any experiences for something i have not experienced!!!
for once i just want to see a clumsy character who has one eye that WASNT a result of some tragic event.
so please please please consider including a character with one working eye in your wip. it would mean the world to myself and all the other members of the community (thereâs a lot of us, trust me) plus, i wouldnât mind starting an acting debutďżź playing a half-blind female protagonist, that would be so dope.
thatâs about all i can think of for now! please send an ask or reply to this post if you have any questions, iâm willing to answer any!!! and if you happen to be a member of the one eye club, please add to this post!! that would mean the world to me:)
Blind in one eye since birth here! Just adding on a couple of things if your characters just have a genetically shoddy eye instead of losing it to an injury/health condition:
- Most people cannot tell which eye I'm blind in. The only differences between them are I have a much bigger limbal ring in my good eye and my left eye 'wanders' when I'm tired due to an operation I had on it when I was little (too young to remember).
- I sucked at sports like rounders (and baseball I guess, but I've never played it) because my dominant hand and blind eye are on the same side :)))) But that doesn't mean we suck in all sports or that we only do individualistic sports; I'm at the highest rank in my martial art my association allows me to be at my age. I'm just more defence-based than average since my guarding hand is my blind-side one, although this is individualistic.
- I have a very heightened awareness of how close things are to me since my eyes lack in that department (my depth perception sucks). So I tend to stand in the edge of crowds, and also because there's less stimulation on my blind side to make me jump.
- Some people will prefer if you stand on their sighted side, others their blind side; it's personal preference. My grandma is always on my good side so I can see her when we're talking, whereas my mum is always on my blind side so nobody comes in on that side and scares me. I don't know about other charities, but I do know my local sight charities do favour you going on their sighted side. This could just be a quirk of your character, or it could be down to their background/personality.
- Most people who are blind in one eye are not classed as disabled in a traditional sense unless they have problems in their good eye as well. I have to do fitness to drive tests more often than the average person, but I have a full driver's license.