Maybe it's my muse, maybe it's Maybelline! my AO3 account has the same name. I've written for various fandoms. whatever strikes my fancy. Other than fanfiction, I reblog poetry and short stories.
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I’ve been mesmerized by this. I love all the details each artist put in. I highly recommend watching the full video. It really inspires me to write.
youtube
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Every evening I take the "You'll make it to tomorrow" sign off my bedroom wall, and put it in my time machine. Every morning, I get into my time machine, go to yesterday before I woke, and hang the sign up. It's nice to have something to be certain of, these days.
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everything u need to know about me can actually be explained by the fact that i read that poem about the serving girl wearing the pearls so they're warm for her mistress when i was like 11 and it rewrote my brain chemistry forever
like this Changed Me
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it is honestly amazing how much of writing and editing is just. logistics. like... do i use a name here or a pronoun? if i move this dialogue tag to the middle of this line and break it in half, does the end of the line hit harder that way? what if i move the tag to the front? what if i remove it entirely? ...wait, whose point of view am i in; can i reasonably say this character is appalled, or must i say they look or seem or sound appalled? is this a deliberate action or a step-removed one; is her hand closing on his shoulder, or is she closing her hand on his shoulder? environment environment environment, we need to break all this dialogue up with some narration, the scene is coming untethered. what! are! they doing! with! the rest of their bodies that are not hands! fuck fuck fuck FUCK i forgot we covered this two chapters ago and now i either need to cut this whole chunk or find a reason to reprise the conversation from earlier. name or pronoun? name or pronoun? name or pronoun? move this clause around in this sentence? oh i'll add this phrase-- nope, never mind, past!me added the same phrase two lines down. okay, if i add too much environmental narration it's going to take away from this bit, but not enough and it won't feel grounded. what if i move this to its own line? where the FUCK are their hands?
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I went through a mimic phase a while back :D
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Jacek Yerka, Eruption
www.artsytoad.tumblr.com
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If u ever fall outside of the known universe, remember to be mindful of the fauna
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Steps to Write 1K Words a Day (with a tight schedule)
follow for more tips 💋 || request writing tips 💌
1. Establish the Foundation
Know Your Why: Clarify your reason for writing daily by finishing a novel, building discipline, therapeutic expression, etc. Purpose keeps you going when time is tight.
Pick a Project & Stick With It: Avoid hopping between too many ideas. Commit to one main project to prevent decision fatigue.
Set a Realistic Timeframe: Determine how much daily time you actually have. Even 30 minutes can be enough with focus.
2. Shape the Writing Routine
Set a Daily Writing Slot: Choose the same 20-60-minute window each day, e.g., early morning, lunch break, and right before bed. Consistency beats chaos.
Break It into Sprints: Divide writing time into 2-3 focused sprints (10–20 minutes each) with mini-goals (e.g., 300 words per sprint).
Use Micro-Moments Wisely: Jot down scenes, lines, or dialogue in short bursts during downtime, e.g., commutes and between classes.
3. Build a Writing Habit
Create a Ritual: Start with a cue (tea, playlist, app launch), write, and end with a reward. Conditioning helps it stick.
Track Your Progress: Use a word count tracker, habit app, or physical calendar to visualize your momentum.
Aim for “Done,” Not “Perfect”: Don’t revise mid-draft. Keep the focus on finishing today’s 1,000 words, not editing yesterday’s.
4. Define Your Writing Environment
Eliminate Distractions: Silence notifications, close tabs, and let others know you’re “off the grid” during your writing window.
Use Tools That Work for You: Whether it's Google Docs, Scrivener, Word, or a distraction-free app (like FocusWriter), pick what helps you stay in flow.
Keep Materials Nearby: Outlines, scene notes, character sheets. Have them within reach to avoid losing time to memory gaps.
5. Develop Content Efficiently
Outline Briefly Before Writing: Know the scene’s goal, characters involved, and 1–2 key beats. This cuts down time spent thinking mid-writing.
Use Prompts or Templates: If stuck, use writing prompts or scene formulas (e.g., conflict ↣ tension ↣ resolution) to keep moving forward.
Lower the Stakes for First Drafts: Treat your draft as clay, not marble. Write fast, revise later.
6. Reward Yourself Consistently
Use Immediate Micro-Rewards: After each sprint, give yourself a small treat: a stretch, snack, meme scroll, or a favorite song.
Build End-of-Day Rituals: After hitting 1K, reward yourself with a guilt-free indulgence:
- A hot drink
- 30 minutes of gaming
- A mini-episode of your comfort show
- Reading time
Track for Bigger Rewards: Hit a streak (5 days? 2 weeks?) and treat yourself to something bigger: new notebook, movie night, favorite meal.
Celebrate Wins, Big or Small: Even if you only wrote 300 words, that’s progress. Celebrate effort, not just perfection.
7. Develop a Sustainable Arc
Adjust as Needed: If 1,000 words becomes overwhelming, drop to 500 and scale up again. It's better to be consistent than burned out.
Build in Break Days: Choose 1-2 buffer days per week for rest or catch-up. Remember, your brain needs recharge time.
Reflect Monthly: Look back on what worked, what didn’t, and what to change. Writing daily is a living habit, not a static rule.
Tools That Can Help
Timers: Pomodoro apps (e.g., Focus Keeper, Forest)
Trackers: Pacemaker Planner, WriteTrack
Writing Tools: 4theWords (gamified), Google Docs offline, Scrivener
Voice-to-Text Options: Google Voice Typing, Otter.ai
Examples of People with Tight Schedules Who Write Daily
Octavia Butler: Wrote early each morning before work. Do what she said, “Persist.”
Brandon Sanderson: Wrote in sprints between teaching and family time.
Toni Morrison: Wrote after her children went to sleep, hence treating every moment as sacred.
You (Eventually): With the right systems, even the busiest writer can find their rhythm.
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thank you, i am farkle :)
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Only on the darkest arctic nights can you encounter this Primordial Pokémon. It manifests as aurora and ice, gently towering over the pole's frigid denizens... ✨❄️🧊 (There are 12 kinds of Pokémon in this #art! Can you find 'em all? Some are well hidden... Have fun, open your mind, & don't give away answers! 💕) Image on Bluesky~
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Members of carnivora paired with their common ancestor, a miacid.
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on watching a parent age
i saw somebody say “what if you’re gone and i haven’t become anything yet” and basically that broke me on a random thursday evening

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@ilikeloons
I do hope someone makes one since this is a genius idea but I don't think I'll ever finish this sketch lol - was a very fun use of 50 minutes tho!

Wow i really didnt stick to the reference oops. Looking at the photos now I think it would look more hydra-ish if I used their actual anatomy haha.
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