
18 posts
Muselina347 - I Can't Be All By Myself Anymore. It's Too Hard. - Tumblr Blog
someone said we had more fun in childhood because we didnt have any past memories to linger on and it has stuck with me ever since

A friend of mine says she likes to be sick because she gets attention 😭😭😭
The feminine urge to see how sick you can really get before people start noticing or caring
I ran away and hided here to listen the sirens sing😶🌫️



Sylvia Plath // Fyodor Dostoyevsky


— Leo Tolstoy
Why people do not use Tumblr anymore?😞


Manifesting 🙇🏻♀️✨

“Don't bend; don't water it down; don't try to make it logical; don't edit your own soul according to the fashion. Rather, follow your most intense obsessions mercilessly.” ― Franz Kafka












Let them eat cake…
what nonsense I never said that.

Things I Learned About Writing By Reading
New writers often ask, "Do I have to read if I am going to write?"
After teaching university English and more recently writing fiction and non-fiction, my answer is, "No. However, by reading you learn more quickly, and you may come across pointers you might not discover on your own."
For instance, here, in no particular order, a few writing tips I learned from reading and where they came from:
From Percy Bysshe Shelley: Verbs are the strongest category of words.
From Sylvia Plath: The right word can make readers think again about even ordinary subjects.
From George Eliot: (specifically, Middlemarch): Psychology is action)
From F. Scott Fitzgerald: The cadence is as important as the narrative.
From Raymond Chandler: The right metaphor describes more clearly than several pargraphs of detailed description.
From George Orwell: Clarity is a writer's first concern.
From Roger Zelazny (This Immortal): A distinct voice carries a story more effectively than action.
Lois McMaster Bujold (A Civil Campaign): Interlocking plots can unify a story.
J. R. R. Tolkien: A sense of place is as important as character or story.
The list is only a selection. It is far from complete. Nor does it have any authority except in my own development as a writer. Others would almost certainly derive other lessons from the sources I mention. And I can't even guess whether I would have reached the same conclusions had I never read these works.
However, what I can say is that diversity of sources is important. The more variety in your reading, the more you can potentially learn. To read is to have more teachers, and the more teachers you have, the more lessons you might learn.
So read, and read again. Your writing will be richer for it.
Lord... I made such a mess of things. I don't know how much more I can take. I need to clean this up. All of it. I need to make things right before you see me again.
#My Girlhood through movies












© Paul Wetherell










ultraviolence