Reblog If You Are

Reblog if you are

More Posts from Pappysgirl17 and Others

8 years ago
This Is Something I Drew Myself, I Forgot She Had A Part On Her Skirt That Was Part Of The Top When It

This is something I drew myself, I forgot she had a part on her skirt that was part of the top when it was too late. But I'm still pretty excited on how it turned out with it being my first try at Sapphire.


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4 years ago

us gays see the word "fangs" and smash that reblog button, huh. wonder why that is.

2 years ago

Stray fandom, collectively, about the sewers:

Stray Fandom, Collectively, About The Sewers:
2 years ago
Person Who Posted This Originally Made It Unrebloggable So Fuck You It’s Mine Now

person who posted this originally made it unrebloggable so fuck you it’s mine now

3 years ago
Happy Ace Day Everyone!!!!
Happy Ace Day Everyone!!!!

happy ace day everyone!!!!

3 years ago

Bisexual bitches really watched Encanto and immediately got attached to the buff strong woman and the rat man who lives on the walls huh?

4 years ago

Tips for Writing a Difficult Scene

Every writer inevitably gets to that scene that just doesn't want to work. It doesn't flow, no matter how hard you try. Well, here are some things to try to get out of that rut:

1. Change the weather

I know this doesn't sound like it'll make much of a difference, but trust me when I say it does.

Every single time I've tried this, it worked and the scene flowed magically.

2. Change the POV

If your book has multiple POV characters, it might be a good idea to switch the scene to another character's perspective.

9/10 times, this will make the scene flow better.

3. Start the scene earlier/later

Oftentimes, a scene just doesn't work because you're not starting in the right place.

Perhaps you're starting too late and giving too little context. Perhaps some description or character introspection is needed before you dive in.

Alternatively, you may be taking too long to get to the actual point of the scene. Would it help to dive straight into the action without much ado?

4. Write only the dialogue

If your scene involves dialogue, it can help immensely to write only the spoken words the first time round.

It's even better if you highlight different characters' speech in different colors.

Then, later on, you can go back and fill in the dialogue tags, description etc.

5. Fuck it and use a placeholder

If nothing works, it's time to move on.

Rather than perpetually getting stuck on that one scene, use a placeholder. Something like: [they escape somehow] or [big emotional talk].

And then continue with the draft.

This'll help you keep momentum and, maybe, make the scene easier to write later on once you have a better grasp on the plot and characters.

Trust me, I do this all the time.

It can take some practice to get past your Type A brain screaming at you, but it's worth it.

So, those are some things to try when a scene is being difficult. I hope that these tips help :)

Reblog if you found this post useful. Comment with your own tips. Follow me for similar content.

2 years ago

“how could you be so stupid” well you know what. its really not that hard

pappysgirl17 - TERRIFYING TODDLER OF TORMENT
TERRIFYING TODDLER OF TORMENT

249 posts

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