If you keep talking yourself out of writing a certain chapter or scene and procrastinate around it, maybe you're setting your heart on the wrong direction for your story? Be bold with your writing, always. If you're unsure about a planned sequence of events in your narrative, now's the time to take a sledgehammer to the conventions you've shackled your own ideas to. You never have to write something you feel lukewarm about. Readers will feel the same way. Shatter expectations, don't fall in line with safe ideas or ones you wouldn't be excited about yourself. That weak chapter might cause people to read something else. You never, ever have to commit to a bad or bland section of a story you've planned out. Be passionate about every single word.
Reblogged
Reblogged billcarden
It feels like this every time I write a fic
Reblogged jaydennk
what if... prompts
- they had called beforehand?
- they had never fallen for each other?
- they met as children?
- they had ended up with their ex?
- they hadn't given up?
- they had gotten in?
- they had been the one to blush first?
- they had decided to follow?
- they weren't too late?
- they were part of a larger con?
- they had forgotten?
- they never meant to return?
- they had said "I love you?"
- they had died instead?
- they had followed their gut?
- they had given up?
- they had been there first?
- they hadn't told the truth?
Reblogged dreamyeyedrose
"the 'power of love' trope is such an overused and cliche gimmick" i do not care i will love it always and forever. love prevails and explodes the enemy
Reblogged jewish-kermit
Ao3 version that lets you open the 'director's cut' where I, the author, explain every detail in excruciating detail to you and what it is in reference to.
@bonsaibovine being absolutely correct in the tags
Legit. Ask me anything you want to know about my fics.
Reblogged i-will-write
alright google calm down we all know this to be true