Writing tips by Claire and Eugenie since 2019. Ideas are bulletproof.More tips on Instagram
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Which tense and POV should you write in?
Have you ever wanted to re-write the perspective and tense of your work 50k words deep into a WIP? Because I have, and it was one of the Top 10 living crises of my life. Tenses and perspectives always came naturally to me and I never truly studied the nuances of each one until my Creative Writing class, where my instructor briefly explained the differences of each combination. Naturally, I scrambled to write down (computers were FORBIDDEN) golden knowledge from my instructor, and drew out a table.
This table is in this post, but as per a lovely follower’s request, I’ve elaborated on the topic with some examples to emphasise the effect of each combination. Feel free to skip this to the table, but the table honestly gives a nice overview and guide to see which tense and perspective best fits the tone, storyline, and genre of your work.
And as always, you might not agree with everything said in this post, and that’s okay. It’s just another way to go about writing.
PAST TENSE
Enhances objectivity, creating distance and suspense BECAUSE it’s told like a story. The narrator knows (or doesn’t know) what happened, but the reader doesn’t. Harry Potter, Pride and Prejudice, and most works are written in past tense, because it’s simply easier to wield.
1st: I slammed the door and ran under my bed
2nd: You slammed the door and ran under your bed
3rd: She slammed the door and ran under her bed
PRESENT TENSE
Creates intimacy with the character’s mind with an immediate quality to it (quite a few y/n fanfics are written in this tense), but gives a limited perspective on the plot. If you’re used to reading in past tense, present will feel odd and unnatural to read. Could use for stream-of-consciousness styles.
1st: I slam the door and run under my bed. He is coming.
2nd: You slam the door and run under your bed. He is coming. (Joe from the Netflix show “You” talks like this sometimes for the creepy, watchful tone)
3rd: She slams the door and runs under her bed. He is coming.
FUTURE TENSE
I can envision this being briefly used in a prophetic line forshadowing future events of the story/plot, but an entire story in the future tense can limit commercial success if you’re trying to write for a living because of its rigid nature. Normally, future tense adds variety to the story.
1st: I will slam the door and run under my bed. (Eh…)
2nd: You will slam the door and run under your bed. (Prophecy and suspense!!! It’s giving Trelawney)
3rd: She will slam the door and run under her bed. (Also suspense! It’s just slightly scarier if you’re being told a prophecy, as opposed to hearing a prophecy about someone else)
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June Gehringer, “EARTH IS AN ANAGRAM FOR HEART, U FUCKING IDIOTS”
[Text ID: “I don’t want to talk about it. / I want to lie in what little grass remains / and try to fit your heart inside of mine.”]
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How to write a human main character
By Writerthreads on Instagram
How do you write a character who feels like they could sit across from you at a coffee shop, and tell you everything they’ve never said out loud?
Let them want something they wish they didn’t.
Maybe your character craves something, even when they pretend not to, or hate wanting it. Maybe they long for revenge, or comfort, or the easy way out. Let their wants be messy and raw, and pull them in directions they maybe shouldn’t go.
Let them be a contradiction.
People are rarely just one thing. Your main character might be deeply kind but also quick to anger. They might fight for justice but still hold little petty grudges. Realism lives in these tensions.
The little things matter.
What scent reminds them of home? What song do they skip every time it comes on? What small ritual gets them through bad days? Specific details breathe life into a character—These are the backbone that make someone feel lived-in.
Always ask why.
Every choice they make should come from somewhere. If you know their reasons, even the smallest actions will carry weight.
They don’t have to be good all the time.
Like all of us, your character will make decisions they regret. Sometimes they’ll say the wrong thing, act out of fear or rashness. Let them fail. Let them learn, or not. Humanity is what lies in the grey space between right and wrong.
Writing a character who feels real and reads like a real person is a challenge. Here are some book recs where I think the main character is as real as it gets:
A Little Life
Normal People
The Bell Jar
On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous
Do you have any other book recommendations for realistic, human characters? Share in the comments below, I’d love to hear your suggestions!!
#writing#writing inspiration#creative writing#writers on tumblr#writing tips#writing advice#writerscommunity#writing ideas#teen writer#writers block
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The internet’s influence on my everyday writing
- Relying on autocorrect to correct typos
- Mispelling homophones (by/buy, there/their, we’re/were)
- Thinking that full stops in text messages = you’re mad at the person
- Hence not using full stops anymore when texting
- “Ok” or “K” = you’re also mad
- Can type sentences in abbreviations that my mother wouldn’t understand
- ex. smhhhh ts pmo
- Are capital letters not a thing anymore??
- Sending incomplete sentences and assuming the other person will understand
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What To Do When It Happens

Write it down. The date. The time. What they said. What you said. What you couldn’t. This isn’t overreacting. It’s documenting.
Tell someone you trust. Not the one who explains it away. The one who believes you.
Save everything. Emails, DMs, texts. Rename the folder something boring.
Find the policy. It’s probably buried under “Respect in the Workplace.” Highlight it like your job depends on it—because it might.
Pay attention to what happens next. The silence. The cold shoulder. The missed invites. That counts too.
If it gets worse, you're not imagining it. Retaliation is common. It’s also illegal.
Don’t quit just to make it stop. Not before you talk to someone. A lawyer. A hotline. A friend who’s been there.
Crying in the bathroom is not unprofessional. Neither is dissociating. Nor surviving.
It’s okay to stay. It’s okay to leave. Either way, you’re strong.
What happened to you matters. Even if you stayed quiet. Even if you laughed. Even if you stayed quiet for a long, long, time.
NOTE: I wrote this on paper first (pic above) but realised my handwriting is mostly indecipherable trash. Didn't want to put you through that. Also, can people born after 2000 even read cursive nowadays? I truly have no idea.
😇😌🫨
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Every light fantasy story needs
a talking teacup that gives terrible advice
a forest that hums lullabies
a bakery that bakes memories into tea cakes
a prince who turns into a frog on purpose
a moonbeam that you can fold into origami
a pond that reflects your happiest memories
a rainbow that you can climb into the clouds
a scarf that changes colour based on nearby magic
a rocking chair that tells stories from your childhood
a bookshop where book characters sometimes step out for a cuppa
a sleepy coastal town where the sea leaves gifts on your doorstep
Every dark fantasy story needs
a cloak that hides your emotions, not your body
a library where the books whisper secrets and the bookshelves reassemble themselves into a maze the more you want to seek a book
a map that leads you to a different foe every time
a lantern that only lights when someone tells the truth
a door that only opens if you promise never to return
a throne that turns its user into what the kingdom truly deserves
a river that flows with memories instead of water
a sword that hungers, not for blood, but for guilt
a child’s lullaby that summons something watching from the woods
Every academia story needs
all nighters fuelled by caffeine
a rumour about a professor who disappeared halfway through a semester
fighting for the last copy of a textbook
racing each other to find the best supervisor
verbal sparring on question sets
whispered debates in libraries
a mentor who’s either wildly inspiring or borderline unhinged
one student who always sits in the same spot until one day, they don’t
a group project that goes horrifically wrong
philosophising at 3 a.m. in corridors and staircases
the sudden realisation you’ve been working in the library for 12 hours straight and haven’t eaten
a changing quote written daily on the whiteboard that no one claims
Every romance story needs
a lapse of judgement, then an apology
a pet that goes astray--they go find it together
a shared umbrella in the rain
an fight in a kitchen that turns into dancing
a letter never meant to be opened--but it is
a late-night walk where neither wants to say goodbye
a borrowed sweater that still smells like them
a plant they raise together
a reunion at a train station or airport terminal
Every horror story needs
the ghost of your enemy
bloody footprints that lead into a desolate building
a voice that mimics your own, but whispers from another room
a knock at the door when no one should know you’re there
a journal that ends mid-sentence
a smell of rot with no source
a shadow that lingers long after the person is gone
a warning scrawled on the ceiling in your own handwriting
a room that’s colder than the rest of the house, no matter the season
Every historical story needs
a letter that never reached its destination, until now
a secret stitched into the lining of a coat
a forbidden romance
a family heirloom with a history only the family knows about
a moment where history happens in the background while the characters live their quiet lives
an encounter with a real historical figure
an ordinary object that survives through generations
a meal shared between enemies during a truce
#writing#writing inspiration#creative writing#writers on tumblr#writerscommunity#writers block#writing ideas
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How to Write a Character Arc + an example from The Bear
By Writerthreads on Instagram
1) Establish who they are at the beginning
Before anything can change, you need a clear picture of who your character is when the story begins. This includes their flaws, limiting beliefs, fears, and emotional wounds. Are they guarded because of past betrayal? Do they seek validation through success? Create a version of your character that feels believable but incomplete—someone the reader can root for, even if they’re not yet who they need to become.
2) Define what they want vs need
This is the core tension within your character. What they want is usually external and obvious—winning a competition, being accepted, solving a mystery—while what they need is internal, often hidden even from themselves. They might want revenge but truly need healing; they might chase love when they need self-worth. The arc comes from the slow, often painful realization that what they’ve been pursuing doesn’t address their deeper emotional truth.
3) Challenge them
Growth doesn’t happen in comfort zones. Put your character through situations that directly challenge their worldview. Let them make mistakes, lose things that matter, or be forced to face contradictions in their beliefs. Each turning point should push them closer to discomfort—and therefore closer to transformation. The tension between how they see themselves and who they could become is where real development takes place.
4) Show the moment of shift
Eventually, something will happen that forces your character to confront who they are and what they’ve become. This doesn’t have to be one dramatic moment—though it can be—but it should be emotionally honest. Maybe it’s the realization that they’ve been hurting others in the pursuit of a hollow goal, or that vulnerability doesn’t mean weakness. This shift marks the beginning of change, when they start to make different choices not because the plot demands it, but because they’ve truly evolved.
Step 5: Let their ending reflect their growth
By the end of the story, your character should not be the same person they were at the start. They might not be perfect, but they’ve learned something meaningful—and we should see that in how they act, speak, and make decisions. Their arc should feel like the natural consequence of everything they’ve endured, a reflection of internal growth that feels earned, not forced.
The Bear: Richie’s arc (mild spoilers!)
The Bear (before it fell off imo) is a great show that showcases the humanness of its characters and how they interact and grow.
At the start of The Bear, Richie is loud, defensive, and stuck in the past. He clings to tradition and power in a restaurant that’s moving on without him.
He wants respect and purpose but seeks it through authority, not action. What he needs is to let go of ego.
When he’s sent to stage at a fine dining restaurant, Richie’s thrown completely out of his comfort zone, but learns from his peers after being dismissed and humiliated.
In Season 2, Episode 7 Forks, Richie finds joy in polishing cutlery and precision in his service. He lets go of his ego finally.
When he returns to his restaurant, The Bear, he’s more thoughtful, and nurtures his staff without feeling the need to dominate. He hasn’t become someone new—he’s become a better version of himself.
A great character arc doesn’t erase who someone is—it reveals who they were capable of being all along.
Final thoughts
A powerful character arc isn’t just about change—it’s about truth. It’s about peeling back the layers of defense, denial, and doubt until what remains is raw, real, and resonant. The best arcs leave us feeling like we’ve grown alongside the character.
Have fun writing your character arcs!
#writing#writing inspiration#writing tips#creative writing#writers on tumblr#writing advice#the bear#how to write#writerscommunity
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Genius Things to Do When You’re Stuck in Your Plot...
Make a fake conspiracy board connecting every character like you're solving a murder. Use string, post-its, color-coded chaos. Even if your book isn’t a thriller, this helps you spot secret relationships, hidden motivations, and “oh crap, this character actually caused that moment three chapters later” reveals.
Write a therapy session transcript for your protagonist. What would they say to a stranger? What wouldn’t they say? What does the therapist pick up on that they don’t? (Also: gives you instant internal conflict fuel.)
Record a fake podcast episode where your villain is a guest. The topic? “Why I Was Right and Everyone Else Is Just Soft.” Let them monologue. Let them get unhinged. You’ll learn so much about their worldview and how they justify their chaos.
Assign zodiac signs to all your main characters and write how they’d react to a haunted house. Not because astrology is the answer—but because forcing your brain to imagine characters in weird situations unlocks surprising truths. (Your Scorpio would definitely flirt with the ghost. Your Virgo brought sage.)
Write the worst possible ending to your story on purpose. Like, make it hilariously bad. Deus ex machina, everyone dies, aliens show up—it doesn’t matter. Sometimes mocking your plot actually helps you figure out what doesn’t work so you can reverse-engineer what does.
Do a “what if this happened instead?” daydream session in the shower or on a walk. No pressure. Just free-thinking. Let your brain go off-road. You might stumble into a better twist, or a softer moment, or a scene that guts you in the best way.
Write the one scene you’re most excited about—now. Even if you “haven’t earned it” yet in the draft. Screw linear order. Give yourself a jolt of joy. That scene might be the key to unlocking everything else.
Make your characters write Yelp reviews about each other. “One star. Always steals my fries. Would still die for him.” This is ridiculous, yes. But it will reveal interpersonal tension you didn’t know was there.
Tell your plot to someone who knows nothing about it—and see where they get confused. Your roommate. Your cat. Your reflection. If you can’t explain it out loud in 2 minutes, it’s probably too complicated. Simplify the heart of the story. Get clear again.
Write a flash-forward epilogue. Even if it never makes it into the book. Where do these characters end up? Who are they now? That can tell you where the real story wants to go—and help you figure out what’s missing along the way.
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Sometimes you need to read something twice to get it. You might need to watch a movie three times to understand it. You might have to have that album on repeat for a week until the lyrics make any sense. You're allowed to engage with it and can keep engaging with it until it means something to you. People will see a painting at a museum and laugh about not getting what the big deal is but like you can come back, you can see it at another time, and maybe that next time it'll be different for you. I'm of the belief the "media literacy crisis" would solve itself if more people just sat down and did it again. Watched, read, played, listened, etc like I don't think people are getting more ignorant necessarily I just think we're not glorifying personally replaying things nearly as much as we should be.
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sometimes you need dialogue tags and don't want to use the same four
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YALL. Holly Black has a list of resources she's used for writing her books on the fair folk. I'm OBSESSED. I love her work and world building. it's so true to the heart of faeries
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Visceral is EASILY top ten words that feel good as fuck to place precisely into your essay one glorious time
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WEBSITES FOR WRITERS {masterpost}
E.A. Deverell - FREE worksheets (characters, world building, narrator, etc.) and paid courses;
Hiveword - Helps to research any topic to write about (has other resources, too);
BetaBooks - Share your draft with your beta reader (can be more than one), and see where they stopped reading, their comments, etc.;
Charlotte Dillon - Research links;
Writing realistic injuries - The title is pretty self-explanatory: while writing about an injury, take a look at this useful website;
One Stop for Writers - You guys... this website has literally everything we need: a) Description thesaurus collection, b) Character builder, c) Story maps, d) Scene maps & timelines, e) World building surveys, f) Worksheets, f) Tutorials, and much more! Although it has a paid plan ($90/year | $50/6 months | $9/month), you can still get a 2-week FREE trial;
One Stop for Writers Roadmap - It has many tips for you, divided into three different topics: a) How to plan a story, b) How to write a story, c) How to revise a story. The best thing about this? It's FREE!
Story Structure Database - The Story Structure Database is an archive of books and movies, recording all their major plot points;
National Centre for Writing - FREE worksheets and writing courses. Has also paid courses;
Penguin Random House - Has some writing contests and great opportunities;
Crime Reads - Get inspired before writing a crime scene;
The Creative Academy for Writers - "Writers helping writers along every step of the path to publication." It's FREE and has ZOOM writing rooms;
Reedsy - "A trusted place to learn how to successfully publish your book" It has many tips, and tools (generators), contests, prompts lists, etc. FREE;
QueryTracker - Find agents for your books (personally, I've never used this before, but I thought I should feature it here);
Pacemaker - Track your goals (example: Write 50K words - then, everytime you write, you track the number of the words, and it will make a graphic for you with your progress). It's FREE but has a paid plan;
Save the Cat! - The blog of the most known storytelling method. You can find posts, sheets, a software (student discount - 70%), and other things;
I hope this is helpful for you!
(Also, check my gumroad store if you want to!)
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this is so rogue but does anyone have the poetry template that went semi-viral on twitter a while back? it was designed for kids but someone gave it to their mother who has dementia and she wrote a really moving poem about her experience.
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My raw thoughts reading Frankenstein
(SPOILERS) Just read Frankenstein for the first time, and I had some comments as I read through the ending, aka VOL III. I'm happy to talk about it in the comments and see what your thoughts are!
Ch. 1 and 2
Story is going swimmingly, Victor’s going on a Europe trip with Henry Clerval
(might be the wrong chapter) “I will be with you on your wedding night”... SHIVERSSSS
Ch. 3, Victor accused of murder as he arrives in Ireland
Okay… we all know who’s the culprit by now….
You may be my creator, but I am your master”
HOLY CRAPPPP Prometheus reference but also HOLY CRAPPPP THE SUBVERSION
VICTOR WATCH OUR FOR YOUR ASS
So deep into this chapter that when my friend spoke to me I jumped
Ch. 4, corpse revealed
HE KILLED VICTOR’S BEST FRIEND?!?!
How did he even find Henry??? I thought he was busy tracking Victor?
Ran to tell my friend about it
Wow i admire Victor’s impressive display of affection for Clerval (v rare emotion from the guy)
Ch. 5: Tense, because Victor keeps repeating the monster’s words “I will be with you on your wedding night”
Ch. 6: Very tense.
Victor you dumbass why didn’t you just STAY AWAKE the entire night or at least STAY with Elizabeth your wedding night so the monster wouldn’t get to her
Ran to my friend again
Ch. 7: Victor on the verge of death and meets the monster for the last time on his boat
OMG KILL HIMMMMM
*monster deletes himself after Victor passes
Bruh.
You- you lived your entire life, trying to avenge what Victor did to you, and now you just… end it here?
Tbh, I'm not sure how the story would’ve progressed if the monster stayed alive… maybe the monster’s entire purpose was linked to Victor’s life?
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