#writing problems
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katwritesshit · 7 days ago
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once again consumed by the overwhelming and crushing need to tell a story that changes lives
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inky-duchess · 3 days ago
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Fantasy Guide to Early 20th Century Trains
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Trains were a popular means of transportation during the early 20th century. The previous decades saw to the explosion of more trains, more services and more tracks linking country communities which were isolated from cities and larger towns. So what do we need to know about trains in the early 20th century?
Typical layout
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A basic layout of a train is as follows: passenger compartments, dining cars, luggage and guard vans.
Compartments: Compartments are where the passengers sat. They were divided between three classes – first, second, third. First class compartments were the most expensive. The seats were upholstered, and the floors were often carpeted. They were much larger than the other class compartments. They would be fitted with gas light like the rest of the train, the windows would have curtains, and the walls would often be panelled with wood. Second class compartments were less luxurious but pretty much the same as the first class only smaller and less grand. Third class would feature wooden benches or seats fitted with cushions or fabric, they were smaller and often more crowded. Compartments could be offered as corridor compartments which offered more movement between compartments and cars. Compartments would offer seating areas and areas to store hand luggage. Some trains travelling overnight would offer sleeper cars which offered beds and an area to wash.
Dining Cars: Dining cars were offered on some trains. There would be tables for the passengers to eat and get something to drink. Dining cars were usually offered only to certain classes or segregated by class.
Luggage Cars: Where large luggage would be stored.
Guard Vans: Where railway security staff could get warm. It also held a stove and hand-operated brakes which the designated guard would use to slow the train if needed.
Separation
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Trains in this era were divided by class and in some case race. Unlike the American states and South Africa where there were laws preventing certain races from mixing with others or from using any class other than third class, Europe was a little more forgiving in the case of race. However, this is not to say there was no segregation. This was Europe at the height of the age of Empire. People who hailed from the ‘colonies’ were discriminated through subtler means than simple prevention, they would be discouraged from attempting to use the upper class tickets and sometimes they were even treated not as well as other passengers. Class was the main division on the train. First class of course had more ability to move, more access to amenities. They often had separate dining cars where they could sit down to full meals. Larger trains might even offer some other common areas such as smoking compartments. Second class were sometimes permitted to dine in the dining cars but may not have been allowed access to full meals. Third class was not permitted access to the dining cars, often having to bring along meals or buy food at the station before departure. The classes were not allowed to mingle. In cases of a first-class person travelling with a servant, they had the choice to either purchase a first-class ticket for their servant or leave them in third class.
Train and Station Staff
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Trains did not run by themselves. The passengers and the train had many needs and there had to be an army of staff available to keep things chugging along *hehe*. That being said, the train staff weren’t the only people who kept things going smoothly, the station staff at each stop would also help out the staff and the passengers.
On the Train:
Drivers: These were the people who drove the train.
Firemen: These were the people who shovelled coal and kept an eye on the steam pressure.
Guards: The guards were there to keep the passengers safe. They sometimes checked tickets and would patrol the luggage cars, mainly to keep an out for anybody sneaking onto the trains without a ticket.
Conductors: Conductors would go from car to car to check tickets, collected any outstanding fares and kept an eye on things in the compartments.
Engineers: Would travel on the train to help out with repairs on the train.
Dining car staff: Such as maids to serve tea and coffee, waiters to serve food and if the train is large enough, kitchen staff and bartenders.
The Station:
Station Masters: Was the person in charge of the station, overseeing the flow of trains and passengers through the station.
Porters: Handled the luggage.
Signalmen: Oversaw the signals to keep the trains on track *hehe*.
Parts of the train
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The train is a beast of many parts. A train in this era is a steam train, which links of cars connected together behind a steam engine.
Buffers & Buffing Gear: These are the parts of the train built in to absorb impact.
Cars: The segments of the train.
Couplers: This is what connects the train cars together.
Cowcatcher/Pilot: This is the frame that sits at the very front of the train used to clear things off the track.
Carriages: These are the cars that the passenger compartments are.
Headlamp: This is the light at the front used to improve visibility.
Freight Cars: Used for transporting goods.
Locomotive: This is the train’s engine. It is the driving force of the train, where the driver and the firemen would work.
Truck: The framework that connects the axles to the wheels.
Smokebox: Where the exhaust system of the stream engine is housed.
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dionysiaproductions · 7 days ago
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luna-azzurra · 1 day ago
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Betrayal Scene Prompts
A pause too long before they answer your question.
Looking away when someone else is blamed, for something they did.
A smile that doesn’t quite reach their eyes when you succeed.
Promising they’ll show up, but their silence says they won’t.
Sharing a secret with someone else before they tell you.
Holding back the truth with an “I didn’t want to hurt you.”
Changing the subject every time your name comes up.
Watching you fall apart and doing nothing.
The moment they let the door swing shut behind you.
Pretending they didn’t hear the pain in your voice.
Saying “I’m here for you” but not showing up when it counts.
Hesitating before defending you.
A shift in tone, from warmth to formality.
Being left out of a plan they made for both of you.
A gift returned, unopened.
Laughing with someone who hurt you.
Reading your message but never replying.
Using something you told them in confidence, against you.
Inviting everyone but you.
Saying "I didn’t mean it like that" when they absolutely did.
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themoonlitquill · 7 days ago
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Do you ever wanna write something but YOU DON’T KNOW WTF IT IS JFKDKDKDK PLS.
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And this is why it takes me so long to write 😮‍💨
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me as a writer
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anna-pineappel · 10 months ago
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Writing really goes one of two ways:
1. Write 3k words in 30 minutes
2. Takes 3 hours to write 3 sentences
There is no in between
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so-many-ocs · 8 months ago
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revising your writing is just like "is this weird. is this a weird sentence. is this the weirdest most poorly-worded sentence ever written by anyone" and the sentence in question is "he walked across the room"
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bunnie-tells-stories · 5 days ago
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Me when the writing inspiration was just a tiny sprinkle and not a massive wave that drowns me in golden glorious inspiration
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promptcorner · 2 days ago
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God damnit, burnt my note. :/
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theitcharchives · 1 year ago
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My writing abilities when I have an entire free day: twelve words. Take it or leave it
My writing abilities when I have to be somewhere in fifteen minutes: I got six thousand more in the pocket
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chocolateloml · 5 hours ago
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so who's gonna write this for me
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that-queen-nobody-knows · 2 days ago
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That's what is so gripping about Trigun and why you cant escape it once you watch or read
People go into Trigun as: Hehehehe silly space cowboy in a red coat 🤣
And then: Oh my god oh lord oh please why? But I still love you all the more 😭😭😭
Writing Grief Without Romanticizing It
Grief is raw, messy, and deeply personal. It doesn’t follow a neat arc or fit into tidy narrative beats. While stories often use grief as a dramatic device, romanticizing it can cheapen the emotional reality. Writing grief authentically means embracing its discomfort and unpredictability, not sanitizing or idealizing it. 
What Romanticizing Grief Looks Like
Characters who seem emotionally wrecked but always manage to look graceful in their suffering.
Overly articulate monologues that sound more like a eulogy than a real moment of loss.
Depictions of grief as a singular, cathartic event instead of a long, jagged process.
Romanticized Grief:
“Every day without you is like a piece of me fading away into a tragic, beautiful void. I’ll carry this pain forever, for it’s all I have left of you.”
This might be poetic, but it lacks the authenticity of how most people actually process grief.
Realistic Grief:
“I forgot your birthday. I didn’t mean to, but when I remembered, it was already too late. And then I hated myself because forgetting felt like erasing you.”
Writing Grief Authentically
1. Show the Physical Toll
Grief isn’t just emotional—it’s physical. Insomnia, headaches, exhaustion, or even the inability to move can be part of the experience.
“She woke up in the middle of the night again, choking on the air. Her chest felt like a cinderblock had been wedged inside, heavy and unmoving. It was three days since the funeral, and she still hadn’t slept longer than an hour.”
2. Let Grief Be Messy
Grief isn’t a perfectly linear journey. There’s no logical progression from denial to acceptance—there are setbacks, breakdowns, and even moments of denial long after healing has started.
“He yelled at his mother for throwing out the cereal box. ‘It was his favorite,’ he said. She didn’t remind him that it had been expired for months. She just handed him the trash bag and walked away.”
3. Avoid Glossy Sentimentality
Sometimes grief isn’t poetic; it’s ugly, blunt, and devoid of grandeur. Characters might lash out, shut down, or isolate themselves.
Romanticized: “I’ll cry every day, but I’ll keep going because you’d want me to.”
Realistic: “They said time would heal it. But it didn’t. Time just put more space between me and the life I knew before.”
4. Let Grief Manifest in Small, Unexpected Ways
Grief isn’t always about sobbing—it can show up in mundane moments: hesitating to delete a voicemail, holding onto an old sweater, or instinctively setting the table for someone who’s gone.
“She turned to tell him the joke, the one about the broken lamp, and stopped halfway through. The silence hit harder than the punchline ever would.”
5. Highlight the Absurdity of It
Grief can be absurd and disorienting. Characters might laugh inappropriately, obsess over trivial details, or feel disconnected from reality.
“At the funeral, all she could focus on was how crooked the flowers were arranged. She kept wanting to fix them. If she didn’t, she thought, none of this would feel real.”
6. Explore How Grief Changes Relationships
Grief doesn’t happen in isolation—it affects relationships, often in unexpected ways. Some people pull closer, others drift apart.
“Her friends stopped asking how she was doing after the first few weeks. She didn’t blame them; she didn’t have an answer. ‘Fine’ wasn’t a lie—it was just easier than saying, ‘I still can’t breathe when I see his empty chair.’”
7. Show the Longevity of Grief
Grief doesn’t end when the funeral does. Let it linger in your story, showing how it ebbs and flows over time.
“It had been five years, but she still called his number when something exciting happened. She didn’t know why. Maybe it was just habit. Or maybe it was hope.”
8. Allow for Moments of Respite
Grief isn’t constant agony. People still laugh, find joy, and go about their lives—sometimes feeling guilty for it.
“She smiled for the first time in weeks, and then immediately hated herself for it. It felt like betrayal, like forgetting.”
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writer-of-worlds · 6 days ago
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What editing feels like TBH! (Ignore the last panel. IDK how to cut it out on my phone).
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schmedterlingfreud · 2 days ago
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Is someone else having trouble with linking AO3 stories here on Tumblr?
Usually, pasting the link on a post opens a little window, right? But recently I'm having trouble with that, and the link remains a simple "long link", and doesn't make the window appear. Every other link of every other site works... it's just AO3 that gives me this trouble.
Do you guys suffer from this problem as well? Do you know how to fix it? Does it have something to do with the spam problem or with the AI scrap we suffered?
Any little help will be greatly appreciated 💚
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bethanythebogwitch · 6 days ago
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I have many creative ideas and little time. I'd rather have many time and little creative ideas
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