ℝ𝕒𝕪𝕞𝕠𝕟𝕕 🖤 𝔸𝕤𝕥𝕣𝕚𝕕 𝕄𝕒𝕤𝕥𝕖𝕣𝕝𝕚𝕤𝕥

image

Thank you to @lovebarefootblonde​ for making my AMAZING graphic!

Follow ‘Astrid x Raymond’ on Tumblr for posts/updates/threads!!

5/25/2023 Announcement: Because of A03′s issue with AI stealing all works, I have decided to make all of my writings only available to registered users going forward. 

This was a difficult decision, but with the AI concern plus the WGA Strike, it felt like the right thing to do for myself. 

My DM’s are open for comments, concerns, and/or questions. 

Keep reading

villainsoftheweek
9 minutes ago

bending to the honeysuckles.

William "Ironhead" Miller x f!reader

image

rating: explicit. 18+ only.
length: 17,216
content: reader has a prior drug addiction, drug addiction recovery, drug rehab, mentions of past abuse in a relationship, pining, fluff, Will is a simp, smut [oral, unprotected p in v]
summary: while you insist you don't want a relationship, Will Miller falls for you like it's his destiny to do so. he's willing to meet you where you are while he waits for you to let him love you.

image

Keep reading

This was one of the most amazing fics I’ve read in so long - I was gripped by every word

thank you so much, that means a ton xx

transmasc-wizard
10 minutes ago

i just saw a tiktok (<- cursed cursed site) that started out good, talking about how "show don't tell" is something you should keep in mind. It used the example of "instead of saying 'she opened the door', try 'her shaking hand twisted the doorknob, letting out a loud creak'".

And, yeah, if you're trying to convey the hesitance, fear, and eventual sucking-it-up that seems to be going on in the scene, that's great.

But.

The tiktok ended with, "see? Showing is ALWAYS better." And I just...

Friends & enemies, that's how you end up with that insufferable always-showing always-active YA writing style that does not know when to just shut up and say "she opened the door".

Because, yeah, I'll say it. Sometimes "she opened the door" IS better. Sometimes, the act of opening the door is literally just announcing a setting change, and you don't need to focus on it.

Show don't tell is about conveying important or relevant information, not about literally everything you're writing. You're allowed to say "she opened the door" & similar, and in fact, I encourage it in many scenarios.

SHOW if it's story relevant. Setting the scene, conveying description, revealing something important about plot and character.

TELL if you need to get from point A to point B. You can follow an argument with a boyfriend with "She got in the car." We don't need more than that, all the emotion and umph of the scene has come before.

Don't drive yourself crazy thinking you have to describe everything in detail.

there’s a reason an orchestra isn’t just everyone honking their shit as loud as they can for as long as they can all at once. if you paint a canvas uniformly with every single paint you have, you do not end up with a picture. if you make sure every sentence of your story is equally dramatic, you don’t end up with drama or a story, just a hilarious pulp.

image

Fandom Problem #4168:

Puritan pedophile paranoia in fandom has really got people believing that acknowledging that puberty is a thing that exists is pedophilia.

Everyone is a Child who has only Pure Thoughts until they wake up one day as an Adult with Nasty Sinful Thoughts.

(The only exception is a window of time between your late teens and mid 20s its possible to be either A Whole Ass Adult or Basically A Child depending on whether someone is mad at them or mad on their behalf)

Its like the center of a weird Venn diagram between boomers who think their kids are being "groomed" because they can't be as openly homophobic as they want anymore, and teens who are so terrified of growing up that they want to be considered Innocent Pure Children for as long as possible because they believe every Adult is an evil pervert. Where if any of their teenage peers have Impure Thoughts it cannot be natural, they MUST have been groomed.

geekdawson
3 hours ago

one of the more valuable things I’ve learned in life as a survivor of a mentally unstable parent is that it is likely that no one has thought through it as much as you have. 

no, your friend probably has not noticed they cut you off four times in this conversation. 

no, your brother didn’t realize his music was that loud while you were studying. 

no, your bff or S.O. doesn’t remember that you’re on a tight deadline right now.

no, no one else is paying attention to the four power dynamics at play in your friend group right now.  

a habit of abused kids, especially kids with unstable parents, is the tendency to notice every little detail. We magnify small nuances into major things, largely because small nuances quickly became breaking points for parents. Managing moods, reading the room, perceiving danger in the order of words, the shift of body weight….it’s all a natural outgrowth of trying to manage unstable parents from a young age. 

Here’s the thing: most people don’t do that. I’m not saying everyone else is oblivious, I’m saying the over analysis of minor nuances is a habit of abuse. 

I have a rule: I do not respond to subtext. This includes guilt tripping, silent treatments, passive aggressive behavior, etc. I see it. I notice it. I even sometimes have to analyze it and take a deep breath and CHOOSE not to respond. Because whether it’s really there or just me over-reading things that actually don’t mean anything, the habit of lending credence to the part of me that sees danger in the wrong shift of body weight…that’s toxic for me. And dangerous to my relationships. 

The best thing I ever did for myself and my relationships was insist upon frank communication and a categorical denial of subtext. For some people this is a moral stance. For survivors of mentally unstable parents this is a requirement of recovery. 

So, I went and read this and it basically amounts to

  • Elijah woods was a bad choice for Frodo
  • The CGI in a couple of scenes isn't as good as you'd hope, but it's so sparing that at most it looks "clunky" and not outright cartoonish like modern bad CGI
  • It's not a TV show (and we don't understand worldbuilding)
  • It's not Game of Thrones
  • We don't understand the characters
  • We don't understand worldbuilding
  • We don't like that it focuses on European (white) people, even if it's meant to be English prehistory written by an English professor of literature and language
  • It's not Game of Thrones
  • We don't understand the story
  • We don't understand the story

They had the gall to compare LOTR to GOT?????????????????????????????

image

lol, comparing the lesser derivative to the original masterpiece that ignited modern fantasy.

LMAO even

CBR continues to be trash

STOP TOUCHING TOLKIENS WORK.

People have clearly demonstrated they cant handle good literature becasue it doesnt conform to their ideals.