here to say the adult equivilant of being sick and looking at the time and saying āheh id be in 3rd period rnā is getting to go home early, take a nap, and wake up to look at the clock and say ālol id still be at work rnā

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shark vs the universe

Origami Around
will byers stan first human second
Misplaced Lens Cap
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

Andulka
Noah Kahan
occasionally subtle
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
KIROKAZE
tumblr dot com
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

Janaina Medeiros
Cosimo Galluzzi
Game of Thrones Daily
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

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@ohheyhelloitssydney
here to say the adult equivilant of being sick and looking at the time and saying āheh id be in 3rd period rnā is getting to go home early, take a nap, and wake up to look at the clock and say ālol id still be at work rnā

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Iāve heard the joke on polish side of tiktok and canāt stop laughing
the perfect sleeping pose! (some inspiration from hankcon discord and twitter lololl)
Hank 'I-don't-like-androids-or-need-a-partner' Anderson

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like does anyone else still feel the exact same age they were in march 2020 like 90% of the time
Long time no Tumblr
An overwhelming sense of calmness descends upon the Disco.
Frank & Bill THE LAST OF US (1.03) | LONG LONG TIME
Elon Musk pissed in the blue checkmark pit

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I'm showing Detroit: Become Human to my friend for the first time and they've come to the conclusion that this is an accurate representation of Hank and Connor's relationship
Š¾Š·Š¾ŃŠ½Š¾Š¹ Š”ŃŠ³Š°
Daichi likes eat a lot

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I think about this moment a lot
okay if youāre like āwhat is TAZā this is UHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH this is good
Editing Tip: How to Speed Up or Slow Down Your Pacing
Hey friends. Iāve been thinking a lot about pacing lately, as Iām in the process of editing a few of my own stories, which tend to be too slow in the beginning and too fast in the end. Fortunately I have a ton of experience speeding up or slowing down pacing when I edit my clientsā manuscripts, and I wrote up a whole section about it in my book The Complete Guide to Self-Editing for Fiction Writers.
One important thing to keep in mind about pacing is that thereās no one ārightā paceāeach story and genre need something different. A crime thriller will usually have faster pacing than a character-driven literary novel; language-focused writers will usually create slower-paced stories than plot-focused writers. So when youāre revising your pacing, Itās about finding the right pace for your story.
At the same time, remember that stories generally build in tension, continually ramping up the conflict until it crests at the climax and falls at the resolution. While youāll want some ebbs and flows in tension so the reader doesnāt get completely exhausted, the story shouldnāt feel resolved for too long without introducing another problem or further complicating the conflict.
A storyās pace is controlled by a number of factors but luckily, there are pretty much only two problems you can have with your pacing. A story can be too slow (which usually feels boring), too fast (which can produce a lot of anxiety), or a combinationātoo slow in some parts, too fast in others.
In either case, youāll need to learn how to put the brakes on or apply the gas as needed to moderate your pacing.
Speeding Up Slow Pacing
If we feel the pacing is too slow, itās usually either because a scene is too long, too wordy, or not enough is happening. The result is a sense that the story is dragging, and a lot of yawning on the part of the reader. When the pace feels slow, we will naturally start to skim or read ahead to find out āwhat happens.ā
Letās look at how to address each of the three main causes of slow pacing.
Too long. Sometimes the pace feels slow because your scene is simply too long. To remedy that, you might need to start the scene later, end it earlier, or cut slow transitions where not much is happening. Shorter sentences and more frequent paragraph or scene breaks can also help to break up a lengthy scene and make it feel like itās moving faster.
Too wordy. The more words you use, the slower the pace. Long passages of description, excessive dialogue or inner monologue, info dumps, repetition, and filler words are often to blame. If you simply canāt bring yourself to cut excess words, you can also try breaking up long sentences or paragraphs to give the illusion of a quicker pace.
Nothing is happening. A lack of goals, conflict, or stakes can lead to the feeling that ānothing is happeningā in a story. Has your character slipped into the bathtub to ruminate at length on an issue that sheās already mulled over a thousand times before? Have you used five pages to detail a long, boring traveling sequence that shouldāve been summarized in a few sentences of transition? If your scene has scant conflict, and no change by the end of the scene, it may need to be rewritten or cut in order to improve your pacing.
Slowing Down Fast Pacing
On the other hand, if a storyās pace is too fast, an excess of action and dialogue are usually to blame, as well as short, choppy sentences, and a ceaseless maelstrom of conflict. In that case, you have the opposite problem: Your scenes are either too short, too shallow, or too much is happening.
Too short. Short sentences, paragraphs, scenes, and chapters pick up the pace of a story, but can leave readers exhausted when overused. Mix it up, using longer sentences or paragraphs slow the pacing where needed. You can also lengthen action- and dialogue heavy scenes by adding brief spurts of description, inner monologue, or narrative summary.
Too shallow. An action-paced scene often skims over the deeper, more nuanced aspects of the story like theme, emotional depth, and character development. If your too-fast pace is the fault of a flat character, take a moment to let readers know whatās driving her with a few sentences of interiority or narrative summary. The more readers feel like theyāre inside your protagonistās mind and heart, the deeper and slower your scene will feel. Description can also help give depth to a shallow sceneāall that action and dialogue isnāt taking place in a vacuum, and writing it that way can shift your story into turbo speed in no time at all.
Too much happening. If your protagonist is fighting off a centaur in a crowded marketplace, resolving a longstanding resentment with her brother who works at the tomato stand, looking for a choice hiding place for a trunk of buried treasure, wooing the delivery boy, and realizing the true nature of love and war all in the same scene, you might need to dial it back to control your pacing. Decide which storyline is the most important to highlight, and push all the others into the background or save them for another scene.
No breathers. If the protagonist never gets a chance to catch her breath, readers wonāt either. Look for places where she can pause and reflect, like right after a problem is resolved or a new one is discovered, when new information is revealed, or as your character undergoes an important internal change in her motivation or perspective.
Hope this helps!