mouthporn.net
@afuckingconfusedwriter on Tumblr
Avatar

KLEIN

@afuckingconfusedwriter

Can you remember who you were, before the world told you who you should be?
Avatar
Avatar
zeldacw

Spirit of WangJi zither, ChenQing ghost flute, SuiBian, and BiChen swords.

器靈 忘机古琴 & 陳情鬼笛.  劍靈 隨便 & 避塵

 //忘情隨塵 WQSC 

 *my OC spirit design of the magical swords & instruments from danmei novel Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation 魔道祖師 MDZS

WQSC  story: 

….to be cont.

Avatar
Avatar
justkayyy38
220830 12:29 Xiao Zhan Studio Update

Xiao Zhan Studio decided to release this thirst trap today and I'm not okay 🙃

Avatar
Avatar
brynwrites

Making your angst hurt: the power of lighthearted scenes. 

I’m incredibly disappointed with the trend in stories (especially ‘edgy’ YA novels) to bombard the reader with traumatic situations, angry characters, and relationship drama without ever first giving them a reason to root for a better future. As a reader…

  • I might care that the main siblings are fighting if they had first been shown to have at least one happy, healthy conversation. 
  • I might cry and rage with the protagonist if I knew they actually had the capacity to laugh and smile and be happy.
  • I might be hit by heavy and dark situations if there was some notion that it was possible for this world to have light and hope and joy to begin with.

Writers seem to forget that their reader’s eyes adjust to the dark. If you want to give your reader a truly bleak situation in a continually dim setting, you have to put them in pitch blackness. But if you just shine a light first, the sudden change makes the contrast appear substantial.

Show your readers what light means to your character before taking it away. Let the reader bond with the characters in their happy moments before (and in between) tearing them apart. Give readers a future to root for by putting sparks of that future into the past and the present. Make your character’s tears and anger mean something.

Not only will this give your dark and emotional scenes more impact, but it says something that we as humans desperately, desperately need to hear. 

Books with light amidst the darkness tell us that while things are hard and hurt, that we’re still allowed to breathe and hope and live and even laugh within the darkness.

We as humans need to hear this more often, because acting it out is the only way we stop from suffocating long enough to make a difference.

So write angst, and darkness, and gritty, painful stories, full of treacherous morally grey characters if you want to. But don’t forget to turn the light on occasionally.

Writers seem to forget that their reader’s eyes adjust to the dark.”

That’s very true.

No lie, one of the best pieces of writing advice I ever read was a one-page article in some writer magazine that I read as a teenager, in the magazine aisle of Borders (back when there was a Borders!), while I was waiting for my mom to finish in the checkout line. I didn’t even buy the magazine. But it hit me so hard that I’ve never forgotten it, and it was this:

Tragedy and comedy both hit much harder if you alternate them rather than having either one alone.

I think this is narratively true of almost any opposite pair: sad-happy, warm-cold, lonely-supported, divided-united. (And it’s what makes me, personally, love that emotional pivot from enmity to alliance, or isolation to bonding.) You can absolutely write something that’s all fluff all the time - I do! - or all tragic all the time. But the contrast really draws the emotional punches.

Avatar
visceralcoma

I do this light and then dark frequently enough in my fics that whenever there is a good wholesome chapter that makes them smile and giggle, they dread and are very eager at the same time to into the next chapter… because they know something absolutely terrible is about to happen but they don’t know what.

This is a hugely important reminder for me in my own writing.

You are using an unsupported browser and things might not work as intended. Please make sure you're using the latest version of Chrome, Firefox, Safari, or Edge.
mouthporn.net