what would you do if you’re a pizza delivery driver in gotham city and you deliver six pizzas and two big sodas to bruce wayne’s house (you had to get on a boat to get to his island) and he only tips you $1.50
I’d silently judge him but take the tip anyways because I know I’d probably be too scared to tell him that $1.50 isn’t enough for all of that 😭
(And I’d probably fight the urge to take the pizzas and soda with the tip and run too-)
This is probably a boring ass answer. My bad 💀
WAIT HOLY SHIT YOU LIKE PULSES.?? i’ve literally never met anyone who knows them they’re actually so good, plus they’re from nova
THEY’RE GREAT OMG; I RECENTLY STARTED GETTING INTO THEIR MUSIC! I don’t listen to metal too much, but it’s always fun to listen to them! And it’s something about where their from too made me more interested to listen to them lol ✨
Me as a cat:
Source: poeticalphotos
My second mood board for my book! ✨
(All photos from Pinterest, and my first board, along with what the book is about, is here)
Can I have a Soul reading? Sounds cool as hell
Sure!
This photo since you like blue, and one hand is your soul while the other one is your gf’s! 🫶🏾
Every url that reblog’s will be written in a book and shown to my homophobic dad.
No, tumblr, I don’t want to see more posts from the same blog I blocked/said I wasn’t interested in literally 5 seconds ago-
How to Write a Character
↠ Start with the basics, because obviously. Name. Age. Gender. Maybe even a birthday if you’re feeling fancy. This is step one because, well, your character needs to exist before they can be interesting. But nobody cares if they’re 27 or 37 unless it actually matters to the story.
↠ Looks aren’t everything… but also, describe them. Yes, we know their soul is more important than their hair color, but readers still need something to visualize. Do they have the kind of face that makes babies cry? Do they always look like they just rolled out of bed? Give us details, not just “tall with brown hair.
↠ Personality isn’t just “kind but tough.” For the love of storytelling, give them more than two adjectives. Are they kind, or do they just pretend to be because they hate confrontation? Are they actually tough, or are they just too emotionally repressed to cry in public? Dig deeper.
↠ Backstory = Trauma (usually). Something shaped them. Maybe it was a messy divorce, maybe they were the middle child and never got enough attention, or maybe they once got humiliated in a spelling bee and never recovered. Whatever it is, make it matter to who they are today.
↠ Give them a goal. Preferably a messy one. If your character’s only motivation is to “be happy” or “do their best,” they’re boring. They need a real goal, one that conflicts with who they are, what they believe in, or what they think they deserve. Bonus points if it wrecks them emotionally.
↠ Make them suffer. Yes, I said it. A smooth, easy journey is not a story. Give them obstacles. Rip things away from them. Make them work for what they want. Nobody wants to read about a character who just gets everything handed to them (unless it’s satire, then carry on).
↠ Relationships = Depth. Nobody exists in a vacuum. Who do they love? Who annoys the hell out of them? Who do they have that messy, can’t-live-with-you-can’t-live-without-you tension with? People shape us. So, shape your character through the people in their life.
↠ Give them a voice that actually sounds like them. If all your characters talk the same, you’ve got a problem. Some people ramble, some overthink, some are blunt to the point of being offensive. Let their voice show who they are. You should be able to tell who’s talking without dialogue tags.
↠ If they don’t grow, what’s the point? People change. They learn things, make mistakes, get their hearts broken, and (hopefully) become a little wiser. If your character starts and ends the story as the same exact person, you just wasted everyone’s time.
↠ Flaws. Give. Them. Flaws. Nobody likes a perfect character. Give them something to struggle with, maybe they’re selfish, maybe they push people away, maybe they’re addicted to the thrill of self-destruction (fun!). Make them real. Make them human.
↠ Relatability is key. Your character doesn’t have to be likable, but they do have to be understandable. Readers need to get them, even if they don’t agree with them. If your character never struggles, never doubts, and never screws up, I have bad news: they’re not a character, they’re a mannequin.
↠ You’re never actually done. Characters evolve, not just in the story, but as you write them. If something feels off, fix it. If they feel flat, dig deeper. Keep refining, rewriting, and letting them surprise you. That’s how you create someone who feels real.
Now go forth and write characters that actually make people feel something. And if you need a reminder, just ask yourself: Would I care if this person existed in real life? If the answer is meh, start over.
Can you 🥺 can you give ME a soul reading 🙏🏻
But- I give those to people who are being rude or weird in my asks and you haven’t done anything wrong at all 😭 but I’ll give you one anyways because I’m nice :)
I see this photo as your soul because you have a gothic kind of style on your main blog, and I added a tint of red to the photo so it looks more vampiric (?) because you like vampires!
(this is the first soul reading I’ve done lol)
She/her | 👩🏾🦱❤️🧡🤍💗💜 🏳️🌈| a teen who likes writing, music, art, and witchy things :)Adults, do not dm me. You can like and reblog my stuff, but other than that, dni <3
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