sorry but the âlex luthor is the baby mama from hellâ jokes will never not be funny

seen from Aruba

seen from Poland
seen from Singapore
seen from Netherlands

seen from Bangladesh
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Netherlands

seen from France
seen from Czechia

seen from United States
seen from Czechia
seen from TĂźrkiye

seen from Czechia
seen from Sweden
seen from China

seen from Czechia
seen from Italy
seen from Netherlands
seen from Italy
sorry but the âlex luthor is the baby mama from hellâ jokes will never not be funny

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.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
always thinking about how draco told harry that scorpius couldnât stop crying after his breakup with albus even though scorpius had been at hogwarts the whole time. so either draco somehow saw scorp face to face enough anyways to conclude he is ALWAYS crying about his breakup, or he can just tell scorpius is always crying through letters he does/doesnât write. thatâs literally his baby omg.
Donât be afraid of cutting characters when youâre doing a rewrite. Sometimes the narrative ends up chopping off characters and scenes that no longer work for the overall story. No point in bringing over a scene/character/story arc to the finished product if it will derail the story/pull the reader out of it.
Besides, that also means you can use that scene for later in another story. Iâve had to cut several characters, including main ones from my second main WIP because they no longer fit the purpose and/or donât vibe with the new direction I have taken with the rewrite of the story.
IM SORRY GUYS ITS ONLY ONE CHARACTER FROM REGRETEVATOR I WAS GONNA DO NULL+MR+THE ATTENDANT BUT IM EXHAUSTED TODAY AHAHOHDOIEHWDFHIODHIDOFSOIDIHOHIFD
Anyways, take my 1,000th Folly design that I am KEEPING until I say Iâm sick of it and scraping it
tumblr butchered the quality but whatever
yapping about her design+ref+little bits/hcs about her under cut
Writers: have you ever totally restarted a project even after you had written a significant amount?
No, I never have, just rewrite / edit whatâs there
No, I would rather shelve or abandon a project than restart
Not really, Iâve restarted projects but not with that much already written
Yes, Iâve restarted a project despite having more than 10k words written
Yes, Iâve restarted a project despite having more than 15k words written
Yes, Iâve restarted a project despite having more than 20k words written
Yes, Iâve restarted a project despite having more than 30k words written
Yes, Iâve restarted a project despite having more than 40k words written
Yes, Iâve restarted a project despite having more than 50k words written
Yes, Iâve restarted a project despite having more than 75k words written
Other answer / itâs complicated / unsure
See results / I donât write

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.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
New Tumblr Community for Editing and Revision
I post a lot about editing on this blog, and I plan to keep doing so, since I have 12+ years of experience I'm finally writing down. But I realized how cool it would be to have a hub for editors and writers to connect and swap perspectives. So I've set up the new Editing and Beta Reading Tumblr Community where members can give advice, ask questions, share memes, and celebrate milestones from the second draft to publication.
All writers, professional editors and proofreaders, and beta readers are welcome!Â
(I'm aware Tumblr has an ongoing problem with inauthentic behavior from certain "beta reading" accounts. Spam will be deleted. I haven't set up a formal self-promotion policy yet, but think along the lines of "before promoting yourself, make a concrete contribution to the community." Better yet, promote yourself by contributing to the community.)
Writing Notes: The Rewriting Process
Rewriting - the process of going through a rough draft and fixing things that donât work for you, whether thatâs changing the word choice in a single sentence or cutting entire sections that feel like fluff.
Rewriting is the part of the editing process that usually refers to the larger changes that comprise a whole new draft.
If you put real work into your rewrite, a good piece of writing can become great.
Tips for Rewriting Your Manuscript
The revision process is different for everyone, but hereâs some rewriting advice to help you along:
Take time away. Youâve finished the first draft of your written work, and yet thereâs something overall that is unsatisfying for youâperhaps a character seems flat or one of your central points is uninteresting to you. It can be very hard to determine if something is actually boring or if youâve just grown sick of it, which is why itâs important to take some time away from a project before editing it. Try putting the manuscript aside for a few weeks or months before you do start rewriting. Even a little break can give you a fresh eye later.
Break your work and put it back together. Donât be afraid of âbreakingâ your piece. Chances are a rewrite will make you work better, not worse. Expect the first draft to need major retuning. Often all of the ingredients of a good piece are there. Sometimes a revision is less a matter of rewriting and more a matter of reordering, digging deeper, slowing down here, speeding up there, etc. In further reads of your manuscript, identify whatâs not working. Donât be afraid to rewrite your early chapters or revise your main characters. Maybe the idea itself needs to evolve. This is all part of the process of editing, and it can be frustrating. But donât give up on your idea.
Pretend to be someone else. When you do return to your manuscript to edit it, try to pretend that youâre someone whoâs never read it before. Be someone else entirelyâyour best friend, your ideal audience memberâbut read your writing trying to imagine how they will see it. What would their response be? Donât focus on perfection; keep your attention on the story.
Get feedback from an editor or writing partner. At some point, youâll need to show your work to other people. A new reader can provide valuable feedback, but finding a good one can be difficult. Youâll want to choose someone who likes the type of writing youâve done and who isnât going to be inclined to praise your work just because they love youâin other words, you need someone relatively objective. Other writers are often a great choice as readers. They understand what makes a novel work and where it can be improved. Often you can set up a trade, where you read their manuscript in return. Listen to your editors and readers and try what they suggest. Each idea might not work, but discovering that is a valuable lesson in and of itself; sometimes by figuring out whatâs not right, you come up with something that is.
Spend a limited amount of time working on problem areas. Sometimes itâs hard to decide when youâre done with a manuscript. You may have a whole draft but find yourself disliking it. Donât spend too much time editing the same problem areas over and over. This is a type of procrastination and will generally only augment your feelings of frustration. Try to find a balance: Edit to smooth out your writing, but donât edit so much that you ruin the original magic of your novel.
Look for passages that need rephrasing. Once youâre happy with your draft, do a line edit, looking at language, formatting, and style. Look especially for sections where the writing seems differentâmaybe itâs too sloppy, or something is overwrittenâor sequences where someone acted out of character. Search for sections that are too heavy on dialogue, or too dense with exposition, and try to balance them out. Let your instincts guide you to the places where something feels off, and go back to them later for correction.
Try color-coding. Create a color-coding scheme to keep track of the condition of your writing. Mark all the writing youâre satisfied with in green, the writing youâre not sure about in yellow, and the writing you know needs to be improved in red. As you review your manuscript, your goal will be to get everything green. Having color cues and a concrete objective can gamify the experience of editing and turn it from a tedious exercise into a challenge.
Ask lots of questions. When you have a complete draft of your novel, use the following checklist for your editing process: What is my major dramatic question? What areas have problems with pacing (i.e. too much dialogue, too much exposition)? What areas do I need to work on to buttress my main storyline? What areas are superfluous and distract from my main story? Does my ending answer the major dramatic question? Your answers here could make for significant revisions.
Read your work aloud. As you move into the more polished drafts of your work, read the text aloud. This will train your ear to edit and fine-tune your own writing. Reading your work aloud is a great way to catch grammatical errors, awkward sentence structure, and typos that your eyes skim over when reading your own words on a computer screen or piece of paper. The only caveat here is that you donât want to do too much at once, or you will stop listening.
Print a hard copy. When you go back to the manuscript, try to print out a physical copy. This can put you closer to a readerâs experience. This not only gives you space to take notes on problem areas, it makes a mysterious difference in how you read stories.
When youâre writing something for the first timeâespecially if itâs a longer piece of creative writingâyou probably wonât know exactly where things are going until the whole thing is finished. Once youâve finished your first rough draft, you can start the rewriting process, taking everything you learned from the old version and using it to strengthen subsequent drafts. Rewriting is all about finding surprises along the way and starting to tease out the shape of your story.
Source â More: Notes & References â Writing Resources PDFs