You own everything that happened to you. Tell your stories. If people wanted you to write warmly about them, they should’ve behaved better.
Anne Lamott (via loveyourchaos)
Friday, February 15, 2013
Sunday, February 3, 2013
some say the world will end in fire, some say in ice, some say in lists of 50 must read sci fi novels
@lavietidhar
"Most of it she spent gluing pieces of Toby’s heart back together for another Barbie to gently break it with her off-key birdsong."
@nanowrimo_txt
but if capitalism is destroyed how will we know how much yours or mines life is worth how will we know many green papers a piece of bread is
@aliendovecote
Arguing about whether rape joke are funny is like arguing over whether poison tastes good. It might be delicious, but that's not the issue.
@pervocracy
"Since your relationship with the fox has grown stronger, it will give you a discount on its services inside the TV." #videogames
@vogon
She was ugly in a good way, like how a good orgasm makes everyone momentarily hideous.
Fight of Your Life, Snap Judgment #230
I was particularly frustrated by the emails and tweets, because they were out of my control. I suppose no one handles other people’s attention carefully, so one must be vigilent in preserving their own headspace. The tragedy is that cognitive clutter sneaks up on you, no matter how good your intentions.
Frank Chimero
To create organic, compelling obstacles that work, you must make sure that everything your protagonist faces — beginning on page one — springs specifically from the problem she needs to solve, both internally and externally. This will help you avoid a very common pitfall: using a generic "bad situation" to create the protagonist's goal.
Lisa Cron (Wired for Story)
…plot is not synonymous with story. Plot facilitates story by forcing the protagonist to confront and deal with the issue that keeps him from achieving his goal. The way the world treats him, and how he reacts, reveals the theme. So at the end of the day, what the protagonist is forced to learn as he navigates the plot is what the story is about.
Lisa Cron (Wired for Story)
Contrary to what people think, a story is not just something that happens. If that were true, we could all cancel the cable, lug our Barcakoungers onto the front lawn, and be utterly entertained, 24/7, just watching the world go by.
…A story isn't simply that happens to someone either.
…A story isn't even something dramatic that happens to someone.
…So what is a story? A story is how what happens affects someone who is trying to achieve what turns out to be a difficult goal, and how he or she changes as a result.
Lisa Cron (Wired for Story)
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