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a-hippie-witch · 5 years
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Rådare (Norse Creatures)
I will be using the Swedish names/words as there are no English translations.
Rådare comes from the word “råda” which means “to rule/take care of” so a rådare is a creature that rules over something.
Every rådare rules over their own thing. For example there’s a skogsrå for every forest.
The easiest way to make them happy is through respect and gifts.
You can protect yourself from them by wearing metal.
Remember that the gift has to be biodegradable! A lot of sources say that you should give coins, clothes, tobacco etc. But this is extremely disrespectful as you’re destroying their home (and it’s generally shitty to pollute).
Even if you haven’t done anything to make them angry it’s always good to show respect by acknowledging them when you enter their home.
Skogsrå
Rules over the forest and the creatures that live there.
Usually looks like a beautiful woman with a hollow back and/or hooves and tail. She can also take the shape of different forest creatures.
If in a good mood she helps those who are lost and warns people about incoming storms.
If in a bad mood she makes sure people get lost.
If you live on your own in/close to a forest (or if you are camping) she might come at night when you’re sitting by the fire and attempt to seduce you. If you sleep with her she will keep a part of your soul and you will always have a longing and obsession with the forest.
If hunters give her gifts she might “give” them an extra big animal. Though if they manage to shoot one of the animals she protects they have to face her wrath
Havsrå
Rules over the ocean and the creatures that lives there.
Usually looks like a beautiful woman with long hair, gills, fins, and a fishtail. She can also take the shape of different sea creatures.
If in a good mood she shows fishermen where they can find the best fish or warns them about incoming storms. She can also give them good wind and help boats that are taking in water.
If in a bad mood she can trick boats into storms so they get lost or sink.
Sometimes she will seduce people and drag them down to her home at the bottom of the ocean where they are forced to work as servants.
She might stop boats and offer to buy their load, if this happens it’s best to accepts as if you say no she might get so angry that she takes down the entire ship.
Sjörå
Rules over lakes and the creatures that live there.
Usually looks like a beautiful woman with a hollow back. Unlike havsrået she has legs. She can also take the shape of different freshwater creatures.
If in a good mood she might help fishermen and warn them about incoming storms.
She only drowns people who have made her angry or if she is very hungry.
Just like skogsrået if fishermen give her gifts she might “give” them an extra big fish. Though if they manage to catch one of the creatures she protects they have to face her wrath.
Gruvrå
Rules over mountains and mines.
Usually looks like a tall woman in an elegant, grey dress. If seen wearing black it is a sure sign of death.
If in a good mood she shows miners better ore veins or warns them about any dangers.
If in a bad mood she tries to scare people away, if they ignore the warning signs she makes sure they get lost in the mine.
Enjoys silence and solitude.
Doesn’t like it when people make too much noise.
Becomes very angry if miners manage find one of the ore veins she protects.
Källrå
Rules over natural springs.
Usually looks like a young girl but most of the time she’s invisible. She can also take the shape of a toad.
If in a good mood she might show you the future though the water surface. It’s important to remember not to look for too long or too deep as you might lose yourself.
If in a bad mood she can make you sick after you’ve drank the water.
A lot of sources will say that if you sacrifice something to her before you drink the water it will heal you as well as make the water clean/drinkable. This is not true. There’s not a magical cure for deceases or disorders. Also there’s no way to magically make water drinkable. Always make sure a natural spring is clean before you drink from it.
This is compiled from my own grimoire / what I was taught growing up
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a-hippie-witch · 9 years
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#halloween #horror #clown #halloweencostume #halloweenmakeup #creepy #creepygirl #girlswholovehorror #horrorfan (at Visio Electri Photography)
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a-hippie-witch · 9 years
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#lazyday #unmotivated #whenwillmycoffeekickin #coffee #converse #catcup
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a-hippie-witch · 9 years
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a-hippie-witch · 9 years
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a-hippie-witch · 9 years
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Coffee☕️✨💕@skadidub (at Friends Specialty at the Garden Café)
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a-hippie-witch · 9 years
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Lil mushroom Keyrings with citrine points! www.euphoricspiritdesigns.com (10% off with the code “euphoric”) I hope you’re having a lovely day.
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a-hippie-witch · 9 years
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a-hippie-witch · 9 years
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a-hippie-witch · 9 years
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Gather ye rosebuds while ye may Old time is still a flying; And this same flower that smiles today tomorrow will be dying.
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a-hippie-witch · 9 years
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a-hippie-witch · 9 years
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a-hippie-witch · 9 years
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How to Keep a Reader Interested During Slower Parts of the Story
A writing guide requested by galaxys–end
While the main plot is building, as a writer you still must keep the reader interested.
Expand your subplots.
Consider character relationships. Is your MC fighting with their best friend? Are the siblings having a break through?
Consider romantic relationships.
When achieving their goal becomes slow, does your character lose faith? Focus? Hope? What is their mental state like?
Does your character have a good support system? Are they lonely? Can your character motivate themselves, even when times get tough?
How is your character dealing with what’s going on in their life emotionally?
Are they happy? Grieving? Depressed? How are they coping? Do they have support from those in their life?
Is your character physically well?
Stress can have detrimental affects on health. Is your character run down? How is the character’s health in relation to their goal?
Consider reworking the plot. If the other aspects of your story can’t uphold a reader’s attention, maybe you should change how the plot works.
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a-hippie-witch · 9 years
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http://ift.tt/1NaOKLW
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a-hippie-witch · 9 years
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a-hippie-witch · 9 years
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Guide: Avoiding Mary Sues
eutrophian asked:
I have this kind of embarrassing habit that I’m very aware of but just can’t shake. I feel like all my characters (ESPECIALLY main characters) are Marie Sues. I know that’s a really bad thing and I shouldn’t do that and I constantly try to think of how not to, but I just can’t shake the habit. Do you have any advice on how not to make my characters Marie Sues?
WQA’s Guide to Avoiding Mary Sues
1) Give your character flaws. Make sure at least one or two of those flaws impact the story in a meaningful way. 2) Have the character make mistakes now and then. Create meaningful consequences for those mistakes, and make sure the character learns from them. 3) Make sure there are at least a few people who don’t like your character. In real life, we all have people–whether they’re classmates, co-workers, neighbors, or acquaintances–who just don’t like us for whatever reason. 4) Try to avoid the “Plain Jane Who Everyone is Madly in Love With” scenario. If your character is a “Plain Jane” and has multiple love interests, make sure it’s clear to the reader what the attraction is. Maybe she’s really smart and funny, a really good athlete, or is super confident and charming despite her plain appearance. 5) It’s okay for characters to have multiple love interests, but not every potential love interest should be madly in love with or even interested in your character and vice verse.  6) Don’t make your character’s love interest “the hottest guy in school” (or “the hottest guy at work” or “the hottest astronaut on this mission,” etc.) The “hottest” anything is painfully cliche. It’s okay for your character to be interested in an average person and vice verse. 7) While it’s okay for your character to have special skills, knowledge, and abilities, make sure they’re not masters of all things. Characters who know everything and ace every new thing they try are unbelievable and boring. Real people are good at some things and bad at others. Also, make sure no new knowledge, skills, or abilities are acquired without explanation, such as through training or drinking a magic potion. 8) Also, avoid an unlikely or unbelievable mix of traits, skills, knowledge, and abilities. If your character saves the day because they take down the bad guys using a combination of martial arts and their awesome sniper skills, then use their medical training to save the lives of their fallen buddies, and finally fix their damaged aircraft and fly it out of the enemy lair during a terrible snowstorm–you’ve got yourself a Mary Sue!
9) Avoid unnecessary tragic back stories. It’s one thing if a tragic incident in the character’s past plays a true role in the actual story–like what happened to Harry’s parents in the Harry Potter series–but don’t write in a bunch of tragic stuff just to give your character a painful past. It isn’t necessary and it’s a huge cliche. 10) Avoid character names that are randomly exotic, difficult to pronounce, or incongruous with the setting. (Pro-tip: save the Japanese names for Japanese characters.) 11) While it’s a good idea to give your character a believable tic or habit to make them more realistic, make sure it’s not overwrought or overused.  12) Avoid traits and background details that are superficial, like a character who is supposed to be extremely poor, yet lives in a reasonably sized home and goes to bed with a full stomach every night. 13) Make sure your character’s motivation is clear and understandable. Even if the reader doesn’t find the motivation to be rational, the reader should at least understand why it’s important to the character. 14) If your character is the “most special” in an already special group of people, make it clear why they are the “most special.” Not just what it is about them that makes them the most special, but how they happen to be the one who was blessed with that particular trait, skill, etc. 15) Look online for a Mary Sue Litmus test (or several) and try them with your character. While they shouldn’t be used as a 100% true analysis of your character, they can help you spot Sue-ish problems with your character that wouldn’t have otherwise occurred to you.
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a-hippie-witch · 9 years
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LEGENDS: A little bit early but here is my now second annual Halloween tumblr post. My last one exploded on tumblr and got over 18,000 notes.  You can find that one HERE Who else is excited for Halloween?! I know I am…
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