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WritingWithColor - Ask Rules and Guidelines | FAQ
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Ask Guidelines
Ever since WWC opened for business, we’ve been inundated with Asks pertaining to writing BIPOC, and some of them are quite difficult to answer thoroughly. We check the answers with the other mods to make sure we’re giving you the best advice we can. Please be patient.
On the other hand, here are Asks that we won’t answer:
general writing questions.
questions that are very broad or vague.
questions more than 2 parts not sent via submit.
questions that ask for facts you can easily Google.
questions that ignore our ask submission guidelines.
questions that have nothing to do with BIPOC or only deal tangentially with them.
questions that ask “how do I write an X character?“ or a variation of this Q. See FAQ.
questions that ask “Do you have resources for–” We will not do your research for you. Check out our many research guides to get started.
questions that indicate you have not browsed the tags thoroughly if at all, such as stating “sorry if this has been asked before” or “this may already be answered but-” These Q’s are grounds for automatic deletion.
questions that have nothing to do with writing (we will either direct you to blogs that can answer them or answer them at our own leisure).
questions using “PoC” as a replacement for an applicable race. Person/woman/man of Color is not a fancy way to say Black people; It’s an umbrella term for a coalition including a lot of different races/ethnicities. If your question isn’t specific it’s likely impossible to answer.
More questions we won’t / will no longer answer
questions about Muslim characters + magic. Here is why.
questions about the Wendigo. Here is why.
Additional Guidelines
We will not answer Q’s that are too similar to ones we’ve already answered (Check the navigation and/or our multiple search functions very thoroughly). We will not often redirect you to the answer.
Questions that are not concise and provide extraneous details will likely be deleted. With the amount of Qs received combined with busy schedules, there’s no time to shift through exceedingly long questions that provide way more details than necessary to answer the question.
Additional issues with long asks: Unrelated details makes a question long and complicated to read and thus answer. It might also mean us misinterpreting your concern and/or answering aspects that you weren’t questioning.
Keep asks focused: Avoid providing a laundry list of multiple characters that you want rubber-stamped for correct characterization. Ask about a specific character or two. You’ll get a more detailed answer on that specific character that way.
Have patience with us: We receive hundreds of asks. It takes time. Also, it is impossible for us to answer every question, but we will prioritize questions that are on fresh topics not covered extensively here before.
Slur policy: Finally, we urge you not to send in questions with racial slurs that aren’t blocked out or denoted as “n word” “g word” etc. We may choose to delete uncensored slurs (and any other blatantly offensive Q’s) as to avoid triggering ourselves and/or others.
Please stop asking us to recommend blogs like WWC except for disability, lgbtqa+ etc. Check our recommendations page!
Frequently Asked Questions
“What are ways to describe my character’s skin tone?”
“What about hair?”
“How do I introduce the race of my characters?”
“How do I denote the race of my characters in a fantasy setting?”
“How do I describe my Asian character’s eyes respectfully?”
“I want my real-world Native American character to do/experience X.”
“I’m afraid my character has harmful stereotypical traits.”
“How do I write a ____________ character?”
“Wouldn’t including PoC make my writing forced?”
“It wouldn’t be historically accurate for my story to include PoC.”
“What is Cultural Appropriation?”
“What is tokenism and why is it harmful?”
See below for answers to our FAQ!
Keep reading
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it’s okay to not know your gender identity or your sexuality from like age 1. it’s okay to come into it at 13, or 17, or 26, or 62. it doesn’t matter when you realize it or come to terms with it. you’re valid as hell no matter what.
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You deserve nice things
you deserve to eat, you deserve to rest, you deserve to take care of yourself, you deserve to get help, you deserve enjoyment in life, you deserve to want things, you deserve to be honest about how you’re feeling, you deserve to think you look nice, you deserve love and you deserve loving yourself. You always have deserved it and you always will
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it’s okay to let yourself do things just for the sake of feeling better. use that bath bomb you’ve been saving, eat that last chocolate, heat up that fancy coffee, take a little break from your work and watch your favorite show. we feel a lot of pressure to save things for the right moment, but if it makes you happy, then why can’t any moment be the right moment?
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Megan Thee Stallion / Saturday Night Live. October 3rd, 2020
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youtube
SHE WON A FREAKING EMMY I’M SO PROUD OF HER OMGHJDKDKKAK
I LOVE HER
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[supreme family group chat]
Peter: I stopped a theif!
Stephen: A *Thief?*
Peter: yeah, a Theif!
Stephen: No Peter, it’s I before E. Except after C.
Peter: Thceif.
Stephen: No.
Tony: he’s doing his best Stephen, leave him alone.
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Just saying what has to be said.
A lot of your favourite influencers, tiktokers, celebrities or whatever don’t actually give a s*** about the BLM movement.
Before you say, ‘but they posted about it and spread awareness’, a lot of people can still do that but not care. Like for example, Kylie Jenner. Kylie Jenner has barely posted about BLM (actually I don’t even know if she has). Compare her instagram with Selena Gomez. Selena has been posting a lot about BLM.
Moving onto tiktokers. A whole bunch of tiktokers made videos about it saying they support it, but they don’t post any petition/donation links, and they don’t spread much awareness at all. Just note that tiktok videos are 15 - 60 seconds long, so someone saying they support it could just be a whole act. Not saying this goes for everyone, but for some people.
I know that people are gonna call me sensitive, and saying that I should appreciate that they at least said something, lemme just say this. If your people were getting killed every single day, and the people around you said they supported it but didn’t raise any awareness, wouldn’t you feel ignored/betrayed or something along those lines? Black people are dying on the daily, while other people get to live their lives without having to worry about being killed. All i’m asking from these influencers, tiktokers etc. is to spread more awareness. It DOESN’T cost a thing to be a genuine human being.
To all the people reading this, please keep spreading awareness as much as you can, it doesn’t cost a thing and it doesn’t take up all your time.
Black lives matter.
❤️
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“This is a special super-petition. When you complete it, it emails every elected official and government office who can make a decision in this case.” please sign and boost this.
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t/w su!c!de
SUICIDE PREVENTION MONTH - THIS SEPTEMBER
About suicide prevention month:
September is National Suicide Prevention Awareness Month—a time to share resources and stories in an effort to shed light on this highly taboo and stigmatised topic. We use this month to reach out to those affected by suicide, raise awareness and connect individuals with suicidal ideation to treatment services. It is also important to ensure that individuals, friends and families have access to the resources they need to discuss suicide prevention.
- Source: NAMI
How can you support suicide prevention month?
- Help promote awareness by sharing images or graphics on your websites, or social media accounts (use the hashtags: #suicideprevention or #stigmafree)
CRISIS RESOURCES!
- If someone you know is in danger call 911 or 111 (depends on where you are)
- Suicide hotlines for your area
Please keep a watch out for your friends, their constant smile or laugh could be covering up deeply rooted pain.
#suicide#tw suicide#suicide prevention month#suicide prevention#prevention#september#mental health awareness#awareness#mental health#suicide awareness
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for whoever may need it
trans lifeline: 877-565-8860
depression hotline: 1-630-482-9696
suicide hotline: 1-800-784-8433
lifeline: 1-800-273-8255
trevor project: 1-866-488-7386
sexuality support: 1-800-246-7743
eating disorders hotline: 1-847-831-3438
rape and sexual assault: 1-800-656-4673
grief support: 1-650-321-5272
runaway: 1-800-843-5200, 1-800-843-5678, 1-800-621-4000
exhale: after abortion hotline/pro-voice: 1-866-439-4253
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As of September 1 2020





Don’t let their names fade. injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.
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THIS!!!

For those of you who feel guilty or even silly about grieving a public figure, here’s five reason why that’s completely ok.
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Y’all didn’t even wait a few hours before you started online debates about it who should be next to play Black Panther. That’s what you’re focused on. WOW. The same actors and actresses that you guys are fan-casting for the next Black Panther are the same people who just lost their friend, colleague, and/or idol. Family. Try to think about that while you’re distastefully and prematurely having your “who’s up next” debates.
I’m honestly disgusted at your lack of compassion and tact.
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Black Panther & the Black Mamba
These two seem to have been take away from us too soon, but all things have a purpose.
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