One Thing I Don't See Show Up As A Consideration In Worldbuilding A Lot Is What Things Are Professionalized.

One thing I don't see show up as a consideration in worldbuilding a lot is what things are professionalized.

By that I mean how (and whether) certain activities or focuses are conducted in an organized, professional manner or treated as a career path or industry (often with set standards or training involved) rather than those that are treated primarily as hobbies or conducted in an ad hoc manner.

Standing armies, for example, are professionalized in a way that temporary armies or militias aren't. Being in the military is a profession that is organized and has specific standards and training and that clearly distinguishes between people who are or are not in the military. If we look at a lot of past wars, though, as well as many militias, being in the military was not a career for most people (especially most enlisted) and the time and effort between deciding to join and being on a battlefield was significantly smaller.

A professionalized military will generally be a stronger, more cohesive, more effective military--but it is also far more expensive to maintain, because as it is a profession the military servicemembers pull their salary from the military on a regular basis, and it takes away hands from other tasks such as manufacturing and farming.

Over the last few hundred years a lot of countries have seen (to varying degrees) professionalization of fields like firefighting, policing, pharmacology, emergency response, and search and rescue. In these cases, it reflects 1) a recognized need for a standing trained force that can respond quickly; 2) a recognized need for standards and credentialing; 3) the ability societally to have individuals who might otherwise be contributing to manufacturing or food production not do that indefinitely; 4) a dedicated ongoing effort to maintain standards, trainings, etc.; and 5) organizations (generally governments) that can pay for these services.

We also see the professionalization of other things, like youth sports--the push to treat youth sports as either primarily a system to develop professional athletes or a career on its own.

When you're doing worldbuilding, consider what roles would be treated in this professionalized manner, rather than those that would be viewed as temporary positions or conducted on an ad hoc basis.

Is there a standing professional military? How does the professionalization differ between officers and enlisted?

Is emergency preparedness, response, or recovery a professionalized field? Is the focus of that profession on planning? On search and rescue, triage, or other immediate response activities or coordination? On rebuilding following disasters? On managing grants, tax relief, or other monetary aspects of rebuilding?

Is pharmacology a regulated industry that requires training or credentialing? Is medicine?

Is firefighting generally conducted by individuals in the neighborhood? By private industry? By unpaid volunteers managed by a governmental or non-governmental organization? By full-time paid staff?

Are these positions generally a full-time job or an ad hoc/as needed job that can be called on? If it is an ad hoc position, what are the credentialing requirements to be put on the roster?

More Posts from Allegedlyiwrite and Others

1 month ago

born to infodump forced to constantly worry if the other person actually cares or if im making sense or if i said something wrong or if im embarrassing myself or if they want me to stop talking or


Tags
1 month ago

I feel called out and I don’t like it

Hey, stop scrolling and start writing. The book ain't gonna write itself.


Tags
1 month ago
Lots Of Thoughts Recently. Everything Feels Plastic.
Lots Of Thoughts Recently. Everything Feels Plastic.
Lots Of Thoughts Recently. Everything Feels Plastic.
Lots Of Thoughts Recently. Everything Feels Plastic.

Lots of thoughts recently. Everything feels plastic.

I could go on and on about why all that AI "art" is bad. I could mention theft, lack of creativity, it's impact on the work field and environment, but countless people have already said all that. I wanted to touch on something that to me is the most utterly wrong about all of it.

Art is more than just something pretty to look at or listen to. It's therapeutic. It's a form of communication. A tool for human connection. It's a pure, human need.

Support real artists ☀️

4 months ago

Tips for writing flawed but lovable characters.

Flawed characters are the ones we root for, cry over, and remember long after the story ends. But creating a character who’s both imperfect and likable can feel like a tightrope walk. 

1. Flaws That Stem From Their Strengths

When a character’s greatest strength is also their Achilles' heel, it creates depth.

Strength: Fiercely loyal.

Flaw: Blind to betrayal or willing to go to dangerous extremes for loved ones.

“She’d burn the whole world down to save her sister—even if it killed her.”

2. Let Their Flaws Cause Problems

Flaws should have consequences—messy, believable ones.

Flaw: Impatience.

Result: They rush into action, ruining carefully laid plans.

“I thought I could handle it myself,” he muttered, staring at the smoking wreckage. “Guess not.”

3. Show Self-Awareness—or Lack Thereof

Characters who know they’re flawed (but struggle to change) are relatable. Characters who don’t realize their flaws can create dramatic tension.

A self-aware flaw: “I know I talk too much. It’s just… silence makes me feel like I’m disappearing.” A blind spot: “What do you mean I always have to be right? I’m just better at solving problems than most people!”

4. Give Them Redeeming Traits

A mix of good and bad keeps characters balanced.

Flaw: They’re manipulative.

Redeeming Trait: They use it to protect vulnerable people.

“Yes, I lied to get him to trust me. But he would’ve died otherwise.”

Readers are more forgiving of flaws when they see the bigger picture.

5. Let Them Grow—But Slowly

Instant redemption feels cheap. Characters should stumble, fail, and backslide before they change.

Early in the story: “I don’t need anyone. I’ve got this.”

Midpoint: “Okay, fine. Maybe I could use some help. But don’t get used to it.”

End: “Thank you. For everything.”

The gradual arc makes their growth feel earned.

6. Make Them Relatable, Not Perfect

Readers connect with characters who feel human—messy emotions, bad decisions, and all.

A bad decision: Skipping their best friend’s wedding because they’re jealous of their happiness.

A messy emotion: Feeling guilty afterward but doubling down to justify their actions.

A vulnerable moment: Finally apologizing, unsure if they’ll be forgiven.

7. Use Humor as a Balancing Act

Humor softens even the most prickly characters.

Flaw: Cynicism.

Humorous side: Making snarky, self-deprecating remarks that reveal their softer side.

“Love? No thanks. I’m allergic to heartbreak—and flowers.”

8. Avoid Overdoing the Flaws

Too many flaws can make a character feel unlikable or overburdened.

Instead of: A character who’s selfish, cruel, cowardly, and rude.

Try: A character who’s selfish but occasionally shows surprising generosity.

“Don’t tell anyone I helped you. I have a reputation to maintain.”

9. Let Them Be Vulnerable

Vulnerability adds layers and makes flaws understandable.

Flaw: They’re cold and distant.

Vulnerability: They’ve been hurt before and are terrified of getting close to anyone again.

“It’s easier this way. If I don’t care about you, then you can’t leave me.”

10. Make Their Flaws Integral to the Plot

When flaws directly impact the story, they feel purposeful rather than tacked on.

Flaw: Their arrogance alienates the people they need.

Plot Impact: When their plan fails, they’re left scrambling because no one will help them.

Flawed but lovable characters are the backbone of compelling stories. They remind us that imperfection is human—and that growth is possible.

6 months ago

Fanfiction Taught Me 90% of What I Know About Writing

That’s the gods honest truth. And I’m saying that as someone who has a literal college degree in writing.

I took SO MANY writing classes in college. All genres. Creative. Playwriting. Screenwriting. Editorial. Journalistic. Business. Technical. I’ve been writing since I could hold a pencil correctly, and really started to pursue it in 2nd grade when every teacher following gushed about my writing skills. I can confidently say I’ve been honing my craft for over two decades.

However, I didn’t really git gud at writing until I started really writing fanfiction. Like, joining a fandom and actively writing an ongoing fic for it.

Again, I’d taken years upon years of writing classes. I learned story structure, grammar, theming, POVs, tone, etc. all throughout school. I learned how to receive feedback and edit my work a little more down the road. I learned from professionals in the field. I worked with mentors.

However, none of that helped my skyrocket my skills like writing fanfiction did.

Fanfiction taught me how to actually write deep, nuanced, and compelling characters. I never once filled out a 200-question character sheet for any character I wrote on some silly school assignment. I never knew how to really know my characters until I was writing OCs for a fandom.

Fanfiction taught me the value of being concise. My schooling had drilled the concept of long, purple prose into me over time and in writing for a fandom for a children’s game, I unlearned that real quick.

Fanfiction really taught me the concept of “show, don’t tell.” I never really knew what a penchant I had for info dumping until somebody pointed out to me most of my headcanon’d lore drops happened in exposition and not in action.

Fanfiction taught me how to worldbuild. Eating the canon of my preferred fandom gave me a lot of time to strengthen my chops while I came up with my own answers to canon lore I hated.

Fanfiction taught me consistency. In school, I mostly wrote short stories. I hadn’t really bitten off a longer project until I started writing a longfic, and in doing so, I learned how to keep my characters, plot, and world consistent for a prolonged period of chapters.

Fanfiction gave me a close-knit community to consistently bounce my ideas off of, and give me feedback that actually served me in terms of bettering my skills and the story I was writing. Not just for the sake of meeting the measures of a grade or rubric given by a teacher.

I could go on and on, but tl;dr, I owe my current skillset and understanding of writing to writing fic. I wouldn’t be at the level I am without it. Honestly, I wouldn’t even be writing my current WIP without it.

So, to anyone who might have told you that fanfic is a waste of time, they are just objectively wrong. And if you’re reading this thinking for yourself that fanfic is a waste of time, well, you’re stupid and also objectively wrong :>

Fanfiction is valuable. Don’t underestimate it.

2 months ago

fat character who becomes a vampire and loses a ton of weight and blood can not sate their hunger but they can't eat anything they used to like anymore. everyone views it as a positive healthy positive development but they're starving and dying slowly but never truly dying, a living corpse. this is a metaphor for something


Tags
2 months ago

love me some world building like yeah these words are made up but damn are they cool


Tags
1 month ago

Writers on a random Tuesday: Sits down, locks in, giggles, writes 10k, does not sleep

Also writers on a random Tuesday: writes one sentence and then stares into the abyss for five fours

4 months ago

Commonly misused phrases!

idioms or sayings that people say more often than they write, so when they write it it's usually wrong.

Once in a while, not 'once and a while.'

Per se, not 'per say.'

For all intents and purposes, not 'for all intensive purposes'

Irregardless is not a word, actually, it's either 'regardless' or 'in regards'. ir- as a prefix means 'without' but so does the suffix 'less'. So if you write 'irregardless' you are writing 'without a lack of regard' which means 'in regards to.' double negative, yeah?

By and large, not 'by in large'.

I could care less vs I couldn't care less. First one means 'yeah I don't mind it, it's whatever.' second one (correct) means "I fucking hate that thing my opinions are in the basement of hell."

"leaves much to be desired" correctly is "lacking in appearance/utility", not "beautiful." What it means is, "that thing is so bad, it does not satisfy my aesthetic/utilitarian needs for it and I desire something better." not, "I desire that thing so much because it's gorgeous."

"Leaving little to the imagination" means you can see/understand all of it. it does not mean 'modest', idk which one of you fucks started that but no. wrong. A sweater leaves a lot to the imagination because you can't see any of the person. Lingerie leaves 'little to the imagination' because you can see everything, you don't have to imagine it. in terms of understanding, 'little to the imagination' would be a very thorough explanation rather than a vague outline.

if you have any others you want me to include, lmk!

xox byeeee

2 weeks ago

if you feel like you forgot how to write: good. forget the rules. be ungovernable. invent a new genre.

  • floramaisel
    floramaisel liked this · 1 week ago
  • aaustinwrites
    aaustinwrites reblogged this · 1 week ago
  • kingggoat
    kingggoat liked this · 1 week ago
  • duelbraids
    duelbraids liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • safesoundxswift
    safesoundxswift liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • youllalwaysfindyourwaybackhome
    youllalwaysfindyourwaybackhome reblogged this · 3 weeks ago
  • that-there-is-a-dragon
    that-there-is-a-dragon liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • grubbyhomunculus
    grubbyhomunculus liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • leahweird
    leahweird liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • a-random-queer-fanpeep
    a-random-queer-fanpeep liked this · 4 weeks ago
  • icewindandboringhorror
    icewindandboringhorror liked this · 1 month ago
  • lokis-wager
    lokis-wager reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • wr1tt3n-th1ng5
    wr1tt3n-th1ng5 reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • chunky-doggo
    chunky-doggo liked this · 1 month ago
  • thezeigal
    thezeigal liked this · 1 month ago
  • knifetengale
    knifetengale reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • knifetengale
    knifetengale liked this · 1 month ago
  • mercelot
    mercelot reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • kurgurbing
    kurgurbing liked this · 1 month ago
  • kevvywiz
    kevvywiz liked this · 1 month ago
  • blanchenotes
    blanchenotes reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • mehanios
    mehanios reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • newdawnhorizon
    newdawnhorizon reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • otterbeewriting
    otterbeewriting reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • tinytintincture
    tinytintincture liked this · 1 month ago
  • a-very-funny-username
    a-very-funny-username liked this · 1 month ago
  • dedgirlfailure
    dedgirlfailure liked this · 1 month ago
  • es367
    es367 liked this · 1 month ago
  • frostkingoftheapocalypse
    frostkingoftheapocalypse liked this · 1 month ago
  • lavenderviisions
    lavenderviisions reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • writer-fennec
    writer-fennec reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • writer-fennec
    writer-fennec liked this · 1 month ago
  • catastrophiccanoodling
    catastrophiccanoodling reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • thats-no-moon-lesbian
    thats-no-moon-lesbian reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • fasten-zip
    fasten-zip liked this · 1 month ago
  • moprocrastinates
    moprocrastinates liked this · 1 month ago
  • chaoticbooklesbian
    chaoticbooklesbian reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • wintersmisery
    wintersmisery reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • noxcorvid
    noxcorvid reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • marinecorvid
    marinecorvid reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • sparkvoid
    sparkvoid liked this · 1 month ago
  • reminiscentrevelry
    reminiscentrevelry liked this · 1 month ago
  • shivstabbington
    shivstabbington reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • shivstabbington
    shivstabbington liked this · 1 month ago
  • amselthebird
    amselthebird liked this · 1 month ago
  • scarthecreator
    scarthecreator reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • scarthecreator
    scarthecreator liked this · 1 month ago
  • lacependragon
    lacependragon reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • gemderplantcat
    gemderplantcat liked this · 1 month ago
  • grauspitz
    grauspitz liked this · 1 month ago
allegedlyiwrite - writing related nonsense
writing related nonsense

21 he/they black audhdWriting advice and random thoughts I guess

232 posts

Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags