No, coz, I rather weep.
Romeo and Juliet, 1.1.189
same Benvolia, same
[Chuck filming on his phone]
Chuck:*pointing at Sam* Dis a moose.
Chuck:*pointing a Dean* Dis a squirrel
Chuck:*pointing at Rowena* Dis a witch
Chuck:*pointing at Lucifer* Disappointment.
Lucifer:*squinting* Are you filming for your Twitter?
Chuck:....maybe
me: there’s no such thing as soulmates omg
also me: can’t believe my otp are actual soulmates
This is my hot take.
Parade is Millennial Nihilism. Danger Days is Gen Z Nihilism.
Supernatural: a summary
why do people question me liking girls i mean-
they’re fucking beautiful
like, girls are fucking hot
like DAMN I mean boys are hot too
but look at these beauties
you can’t stop me from loving them
They’re too hot
Charlie: if you shame girls about their breast size, I will push you into traffic.
Mary: who’s flat now?
#4
spn writers took this a bit too seriously
every character’s first line should be an introduction to who they are as a person
even if you only wrote one sentence on a really bad day, that’s still one sentence more than you had yesterday
exercise restraint when using swear words and extra punctuation in order for them to pack a punch when you do use them
if your characters have to kiss to show they’re in love, then they’re not in love
make every scene interesting (or make every scene your favorite scene), otherwise your readers will be just as bored as you
if you’re stuck on a scene, delete the last line you wrote and go in a different direction, or leave in brackets as placeholders
don’t compare your first draft to published books that could be anywhere from 3rd to 103rd drafts
i promise you the story you want to tell can fit into 100k words or less
sometimes the book isn’t working because it’s not ready to be written or you’re not ready to write it yet; let it marinate for a bit so the idea can develop as you become a better writer
a story written in chronological order takes a lot more discipline and is usually easier to understand than a story written with flashbacks