traitspourtraits:

image

(via garrulus)

pascalcampion:
“Feels like spring is on it’s way!
#pascalcampion
”

pascalcampion:

Feels like spring is on it’s way!
#pascalcampion

(via garrulus)

pascalcampion:
“Country roads
#pascalcampion
”

pascalcampion:

Country roads
#pascalcampion

I learned about tally marks yesterday!

everydayanth:

image

(I cross mine from R to L, but Jake does his straight through)

I was watching a kdrama and they were tallying a vote and I was just like: 😍😍😍😍

Cus I’d never considered the cultural implications of tally marks. Lol, I just thought lines to five are lines to 5, ya know? Then I read the whole wiki page and now I want to learn more!

Are there other ways? How do you make tallies? Tell me moooooooore lol ^-^

(via yeahwrite)

momorant asked:

I'm currently having a hard time writing some sort of a catalyst or an event that will lead me to my novel's main conflict. I'm almost at the end of the story but I only have bits and pieces of plotlines. And it felt like I need something to connect them so I can finally lay down what will transpire in this part of the story. Any advice?

writingquestionsanswered:

Stuck on Story Structure and Inciting Incident

It sounds like you’re struggling a bit with plot and story structure. Let me see if I can help! :) <3

First, some quick terminology:

Conflict - the protagonist’s struggle to reach their goal and the forces that drive them toward that goal. For example, if your character is fighting to survive a zombie apocalypse, the zombie apocalypse is the conflict and the force that’s driving that conflict is “man vs nature.”

Inciting Incident - the catalyst that kicks off the conflict and the events of the story, to which the protagonist must respond by formulating a goal.

Plot - the unified sequence of events that make up a story.

Subplot - the underlying side stories that run parallel to the main plot.

Story Structure - the overall layout of your story. There are different methods of story structure, but the standard layout is:

  • exposition - the setup of your story and characters
  • rising action - the events that follow the inciting incident
  • climax - the peak of tension and drama, the “big showdown”
  • falling action - the winding down and resolution of the story
  • denouement - the closing scenes
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Figuring Out Your Plot

The first thing you need to do is look at these disparate plotlines you have and figure out which, if any of them, are the main plot. What is this story about? What is your protagonist trying to achieve? What is the conflict at the heart of this story?

Figuring Out an Inciting Incident

Start with where your character is before the story starts. What is their normal life like? What would an average day be like for them? Now, what sort of event could take place that would set your character off on the path you want them to be on? What incident could shake up their lives or even turn their life upside down, causing them to make a goal that would lead toward the climax?

If you’re still stuck after this point, spend some time reading through the posts on my Plot & Story Structure post master list, which go into greater detail as far as how it all works and how you can create a story from bits and pieces.

Best of luck to you!

————————————————————————————————-

Have a question? My inbox is always open, but make sure to check my FAQ and post master lists first to see if I’ve already answered a similar question. :)

myelicia:

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Quiétude

(via writingstrugglesaugust)

nevver:
“Barriers To Intimacy, Olivia de Recat
”

captainmorningstar:

EMMA (2020) dir. Autumn de Wilde

(via socialdisease609)

thoradvice:

things you can do at any stage in life:

  • love yourself
  • have a fresh start
  • go back to school
  • recover
  • make new friends
  • fall in love
  • go to therapy
  • learn a skill
  • discover your passion
  • repair relationships
  • change the world
  • find a new hobby
  • be happy

it isn’t too late for you. you’ll be okay. there’s no time limit on happiness.

(via healing-positivity)