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anyajamina · 3 years
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Remember the little things in life that make everything so important in the everyday moments of our world.
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Challenges face us everyday of a variety of sizes.
Keep on moving forward...
Magic continues to exist within the natural realm of our everyday ordinary moments, it's the little things that we choose to see in the moment that they are happening that are truly magical indeed.
Someone tells you that what you see as important.. it's not important?
If it's important to you...
Keep it close to your heart.
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anyajamina · 3 years
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Being Me
What can I take from today and put towards tomorrow? How can I justify how I feel about myself? What to say to oneself when the words do not come as easily as you wish... The world is vast and full of adventures to be had, I have no idea how time is measured from within the hourglass. I gotta make the most of today. I don't want to forget the past. I like to think back on the good moments, I also like to remember the moments of today that will eventually become good moments to look back on again. I also like to stay in the moment of feeling the breeze whisk through my hair and see the sunrise and the sunset of any given day. To appreciate every light shone.
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anyajamina · 3 years
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Stay close to anything that makes you glad you are alive.
Unknown (via thoughtkick)
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anyajamina · 3 years
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“Have you ever heard the wonderful silence just before the dawn? Or the quiet and calm just as a storm ends? Or perhaps you know the silence when you haven’t the answer to a question you’ve been asked, or the hush of a country road at night, or the expectant pause of a room full of people when someone is just about to speak, or, most beautiful of all, the moment after the door closes and you’re alone in the whole house? Each one is different, you know, and all very beautiful if you listen carefully.” ― Norton Juster, The Phantom Tollbooth
About Jonathan Carroll: http://www.feedyourneedtoread.com/contributor/jonathan-carroll/
Jonathan Carroll Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/thejonathancarroll
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anyajamina · 3 years
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“Never apologize for being sensitive or emotional. Let this be a sign that you’ve got a big heart and aren’t afraid to let others see it. Showing your emotions is a sign of strength.”
— Brigitte Nicole
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anyajamina · 3 years
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To the World,
I am light even in the dark.
I can chase a sunrise over the shadows,
My direction can change just like a compass.
My spirit rises and falls like the contrast between day and light,
Are you scared of tomorrow?
Can you lift yourself up even when you can’t see what’s ahead?
Can you find the hope that lies within your heart and soul?
As long as the sun and the moon live on throughout the midnight sky I have to believe that I can find the light within the dark.
I am a positive spirit and I cannot allow negative energy to bring me down. I have to rise up and find my essence.
Who I was yesterday. Who I am today.
Who will I be tomorrow?
Someone that will look you in the eye and tell you everything will be okay
Someone that will be kind no matter the circumstances.
Someone who will be human and will fall on occasion.
Believe me, I will get back up every time.
Appreciate the moments in the here and the now.
Take the little things in life and hold them close to your heart.
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anyajamina · 4 years
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Rediscovered my love of rocks when I found a small part of my great grandfathers collection of stones. cut and polished himself. #rocks #jewelry #stones #jewelrydesigner #reblogirl
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anyajamina · 4 years
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anyajamina · 7 years
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Do it now. Sometimes “later” becomes ‘never’
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anyajamina · 7 years
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“I wish more people would talk about things they love, just in casual conversation. Does anyone else notice that sparkle people have when they talk about that stuff? It’s so wonderful to watch and listen and be apart of that little bit of human magic”
Coral-vellichor
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anyajamina · 7 years
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Handy Info
How would you recommend a young writer to make a profit off of their work? I'm unemployed and want something to make an early living off of.
Okay, so, my answer may be quite disheartening, but instead of being discouraged by it I expect all y’all young writers looking to make some cash to decide this will only mean you will work harder and not ever give up. In this line of work, you have to hustle.
There are ways young writers can make money. But those ways are tough and discouraging and require a shit ton of work. If you’re smart, you will pursue just about every option there is.
1. Writing Competitions/Contests
There are approximately fifty zillion of these things, all with varying rewards (many of which actually aren’t monetary). All of them have different restrictions (must be a certain genre, the author must be living in a certain place/be of a certain age, the topic must be on something specific, etc). And the only ones that are easy to find, open to most people, and have a good monetary reward are pretty much always the ones that have an entry fee. Usually entry fees are between $5-50, most often around $20. There are a good number of free writing competitions, but those are the ones with the most restrictions on them.
Writing competitions are (usually) different from writing contests. “Contests” are usually the ones held by really selective literary magazines that p much no one reads, and they’re looking for only the snootiest, driest literature there is. Often these mags will pay you in publication/a number of copies of the issue where your story will be. They also probably want rights to your story until after Jesus comes.
Writing competitions are usually for genre stories. They’ll call for a specific genre, a specific word count, and those are pretty much the only restrictions. The rewards will vary from a few hundred dollars up to about $3,000 for popular publications like Writer’s Digest. (The ones that offer more than that are mostly grants, which are an entirely different beast I don’t know nearly enough about to speak on.) Unfortunately, they also have a huge number of applicants, so there’s a lot more competition.
Most of these contests/competitions are for short fiction, poetry, or short non-fiction (essays, basically), so if you only write novels or screenplays, you’re (mostly) out of luck.
BE CAREFUL. As many reputable contests are out there, there are twice as many scams. Be careful.
Resources on writing contests/competitions:
Writer’s Digest Competitions
Poet’s & Writer’s Grants and Awards list (a great resource for those super snooty litmags)
Poet’s & Writer’s Submission Calendar
PEN Literary Awards 
20 Tips for Winning Writing Contests
(NO ENTRY FEE) List of 27 Reputable, Free Writing Contests
(NO ENTRY FEE) Freelancewriting.com’s Creative Writing Contest List
Another List
More
I’m not even half way down the first google page there are so many just look
2. Freelance Writing
Freelance writing is multi-faceted. It can refer to blogging, writing articles, writing for social media, copywriting, etc. Journalism kind of stuff. I have limited experience with this–not with doing those things, just with getting paid for it–but there may be more input from people in the notes, so make sure you check that out.
In a similar vein, you can also try freelance transcription, where you basically listen to/watch a recording and transcribe what’s said in the recording. This is more difficult than it sounds. But if you have a wpm of 80+ and great hearing (and a lot of patience), go for it.
Beware of scams–anything that wants you to pay to get a job is not a real job.
Resources:
Freelancewriting.com/freelancejobs
Paid Writing Gigs
Call for Submissions
Freelance Job Openings
Freelance Transcription Jobs
Transcribe Team
3. Self-Publication
This is one wild beast that should not be entered into lightly. If you publish something, it will always be in your publishing history. Even if you don’t sell anything. And with even more self-pub/e-pub stories out there than there are competitions, you really, really have to work your ass off to make decent money self-pubbing. 
It’s recommended that you only self-publish if you: have worked for an extended period of time on this piece (years), have had professional eyes look over it (more than once), have done your homework on which self-publishing sites you want to use, are prepared to do all the work necessary to see to the success of the piece (editing, formatting, design, promotion, etc), have a good reason for choosing to self-publish (i.e. not because you’re impatient, bitter at being rejected, unwilling to put the work in, etc.)
If you are sure you want to self-publish, here are some resources:
25 Things You Should Know Before Self-Publishing
Writer’s Digest Best 101 on Self-Publishing + Resources
52 Great Blogs for Self-Publishers
There’s this book called The Self-Publisher’s Ultimate Resource Guide
Also check out YouTube because a lot of self-pubbed authors go there to promote, and they have videos talking about their self-publishing journey, so you can learn from their mistakes/emulate their successes
4. Crowdsourcing
I’m mostly going to be talking about Patreon here because that’s really the only thing in this category I have experience with. As far as I’ve found, this is the most conducive site to crowdsourcing for writers who don’t necessarily want to publish a book. I don’t even think it’s technically crowdsourcing.
Patreon is a way for your supporters to support you. It can be for anything. You can write short stories, create art, make tutorials, etc etc. You actually don’t even have to do anything if you’ve got people willing to give you money for that. Set up rewards that your patrons will receive when they pledge a certain amount (exclusive content, physical rewards, etc).
There are two ways to find supporters: connecting with other creators on Patreon, and getting in touch with supporters you’ve already established (friends, family, fans). I don’t know much about connecting with people through Patreon because I just haven’t put much effort into it so far. 
As for reaching out to other supporters, a great way to do this is through social media. Network with fellow creators/consumers through sites like here on tumblr, fictionpress, wattpad/figment, fanfiction sites, Twitter, YouTube, etc. Also, if you can stand it, tell your family. No one wants to support you more than your sweet grandmother who is deep-pocketed, near-sighted, and technologically impaired.
Most importantly, establish yourself where your target audience gathers. Put out as much original content as possible. Make a name for yourself–which brings me to my next point.
5. Social Media and Writing-Adjacent Work
A lot of the sites I listed that you should establish yourself on have ways to make some change if your site gets some traffic. You can put ads on your tumblr blog (or on your fictionpress, I think), you can monetize youtube videos, and the like. You have to get a lot of traffic to make some decent money off of ads, but it’s something. And it’s always good to promote yourself anyway.
As for writing-adjacent work: on the internet, where many people live nowadays and where indie creators have the best chance of making some money, there is a lot vying for your audience’s attention. It’s good to have a shorter, more attention-grabbing service to offer that is relevant to your writing that will draw your audience to you. Basically anything that gives you authority as a creator and interests people that might also be interested in what you’re creating.
For example: create a writing advice blog, build your writerly “brand” on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, tumblr, offer freelance editing, and more that I can’t think of off the top of my head.
Each of these things requires a great deal of work for a lot of initial rejection and not a lot of initial reward. However, if you pursue many or all of these things and really dedicate yourself to them, you will eventually get a payoff.
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