sin with your body, and you sin as a beast
sin with your mind, and you sin as a man
sin with your soul, and you sin as the angels
sin by fucking a dragon, and god looks down upon you and gives you a thumbs up
check out my games
Catching Elephant is a theme by Andy Taylor
This bundle is the official launch of Ten Thousand Days For the Sword!
Once you buy the bundle, you’ll find Ten Thousand Days For the Sword among the games you own; also, I put it in there like an hour after the guy from BABA IS YOU put in BABA IS YOU ???
the parallel w/ germanic bear is interesting but it must be said that “brown one” is vastly inferior to “cutie pie”
my nickname “guy who doesn’t attack people” is raising a lot of questions that are already answered by the nickname
Hi everyone. Im really sorry about this. And im well aware what decade it is. but transfem ronan lynch
hypokeimena
the thing about ronan lynch is that in many ways she was designed in a lab to be a wildly powerful dyke
this is true BUT ☝most crucially nobody in the blast radius is going to enjoy the process.
“I want you to do this with me for one month. One month. Write 10 observations a week and by the end of four weeks, you will have an answer. Because when someone writes about the rustic gutter and the water pouring through it onto the muddy grass, the real pours into the room. And it’s thrilling. We’re all enlivened by it. We don’t have to find more than the rustic gutter and the muddy grass and the pouring cold water.”— Marie Howe, Boston University’s 2016 Theopoetics Conference (via mothersofmyheart)
Marie Howe:
I ask my students every week to write 10 observations of the actual world. It’s very hard for them.
Ms. Tippett:
Really?
Ms. Howe:
They really find it hard.
Ms. Tippett:
What do you mean? What is the assignment? 10 observations of their actual world?
Ms. Howe:
Just tell me what you saw this morning like in two lines. I saw a water glass on a brown tablecloth, and the light came through it in three places. No metaphor. And to resist metaphor is very difficult because you have to actually endure the thing itself, which hurts us for some reason.
Ms. Tippett:
It does.
Ms. Howe:
It hurts us.
Ms. Tippett:
You naming something.
Ms. Howe:
We want to say, “It was like this; it was like that.” We want to look away. And to be with a glass of water or to be with anything — and then they say, “Well, there’s nothing important enough.” And that’s whole thing. It’s the point.
Ms. Howe:
It’s the this, right?
Ms. Howe:
Right, the this, whatever. And then they say, “Oh, I saw a lot of people who really want” — and, “No, no, no. No abstractions, no interpretations.” But then this amazing thing happens, Krista. The fourth week or so, they come in and clinkety, clank, clank, clank, onto the table pours all this stuff. And it so thrilling. I mean, it is thrilling. Everybody can feel it. Everyone is just like, “Wow.” The slice of apple, and then that gleam of the knife, and the sound of the trashcan closing, and the maple tree outside, and the blue jay. I mean, it almost comes clanking into the room. And it’s just amazing.
Ms. Tippett:
In some basic level, what they’ve done is just engage with their senses.
Ms. Howe:
Yeah, and have been present out of their minds and just noticing what’s around them, which is — we don’t do. And again, not to compare it to anything. They’re not allowed. And that’s very hard for them. And then on the fifth or sixth week, I say, “OK, use metaphors.” And they don’t want to. They don’t know how. They’re like, “Why would I? Why would I compare that to anything when it’s itself?” Exactly. Good question.
So then you think, why the necessity of a metaphor? Why do you have to use a metaphor now? Not just to do it to avoid it, but to do it to make it more there. And it’s very interesting.
Hi everyone. Im really sorry about this. And im well aware what decade it is. but transfem ronan lynch
Nothing Doing no. 64
Do you have any tips and tricks for writing?
I wrote a whole reply and it got completely eaten! No draft or anything! Nightmare.
I’m skimming the basics you already know (read more, write more, stop waiting for inspiration, skimp on speech tags and use said as often as possible when you have to, spend as much time editing as writing) to give you an abridged version of advice I’m obsessed with that I call Total the Car. (I didn’t coin this idea, but I may be the only one who ever talks about it. Forgive me if you’ve heard this lecture before.)
This advice references Ryan North’s excellent Tumblr blog, BttF, on which he did a page by page reading of the novelization of Back to the Future. Ryan North is a very funny guy, and so it’s an entertaining read, but it is also educational. Back to the Future is one of the tightest screenplays ever written, and the novel is a strange, meandering mess, made more so by the idiosyncrasies of its author and the likely fact that it was based on an earlier draft of the a screenplay. This allows us to compare and contrast the two works.
Early on in the story, Biff Tannen wrecks George’s car. In the novelization, Gipe calls the car “nearly totaled,” which causes Ryan to melt down; why nearly total the car? What value does the car have not being utterly totaled? The state of the car is mostly irrelevant. “Total the car!” Ryan says, on his blog. “You’re the writer! You have the power! Total the car!”
I love this advice. I think writers often get bogged down in details like this; we’re married to realism, or some research we did, or we think that going that far will be “too much,” and so we rob our scenes of their own power. The phrase “nearly totaled” is not only weaker - it lacks the emotional gut punch - but it also raises questions where there should be none.
I think, when making a choice like this in writing, you should always err on the side of totaling the car. Kill the survivors. Burn the house to the ground. Make it harder on yourself. On your characters.
Stories don’t happen in the almosts. They exist in the things that happen, the things that can’t be undone. I love forcing people to go through a piece and circle every “almost” and “nearly” and “started to,” and force them to write the piece that would have happened if there had been less restraint.
Go crazy! Total the car!
TOTAL THE CAR
Ants are a form of thing, known for travelling in cliques. They are small in size, unknown in color, and bashful in temperament. Every ant has two appendages they use to hurt other beings, and four appendages for other activities. Scientists have discovered many types of ants; gay, Protestant, electric, and chill. Their wealth is considered low.
i’m not addicted to fancy restaurant. my boyfriend can stop making reservations whenever he wants [cuts to a scene in the future] [he is trapped in a torturous maze
Many are not familiar with what is called a diva moment. Youre about to learn