Mid forties sapiosexual, lesbian, bratty babygirl, sapphic romance writer hopped up on rum and peanut m&ms. she/her NO MEN or MINORS!
425 posts
"Being Rude Is Easy. It Does Not Take Any Effort And Is A Sign Of Weakness And Insecurity. Kindness Shows
"Being rude is easy. It does not take any effort and is a sign of weakness and insecurity. Kindness shows great self-discipline and strong self-esteem. Being kind is not always easy when dealing with rude people. Kindness is a sign of a person who has done a lot of personal work and has come to a great self-understanding and wisdom. Choose to be kind over being right, and you’ll be right every time because kindness is a sign of strength." U.N. Owen.
-
lillechrille liked this · 3 months ago
-
thepromiseskept reblogged this · 3 months ago
-
thepullofy0u liked this · 3 months ago
-
sensessences reblogged this · 3 months ago
-
sensessences liked this · 3 months ago
-
warriorhealer reblogged this · 3 months ago
-
warriorhealer liked this · 3 months ago
-
rivieragiris liked this · 3 months ago
-
swimmingcandydelusion liked this · 3 months ago
-
braendtbarn reblogged this · 3 months ago
-
braendtbarn liked this · 3 months ago
-
kittymoonblog liked this · 3 months ago
-
907tumblerhunter reblogged this · 3 months ago
-
907tumblerhunter liked this · 3 months ago
-
omonit liked this · 3 months ago
-
echoesofphilip reblogged this · 3 months ago
-
echoesofphilip liked this · 3 months ago
-
ciarakmari liked this · 3 months ago
-
prizedprovocateur liked this · 3 months ago
-
prizedprovocateur reblogged this · 3 months ago
-
angela-the-queen liked this · 3 months ago
-
sydnificantt reblogged this · 3 months ago
-
maryam-reda liked this · 3 months ago
-
la-vespertina liked this · 3 months ago
-
vagoasdf liked this · 3 months ago
-
sandmnscastles reblogged this · 3 months ago
-
sandmnscastles liked this · 3 months ago
-
adhdandanxietyandbearsohmy reblogged this · 3 months ago
-
kvfg liked this · 3 months ago
-
vintageot5 reblogged this · 3 months ago
-
sarah84s liked this · 3 months ago
-
surveyscoutgirl96 liked this · 3 months ago
-
tundratoad liked this · 3 months ago
-
oldersiblingcurse liked this · 3 months ago
-
thepaintdragon reblogged this · 3 months ago
-
thepaintdragon liked this · 3 months ago
-
sub-91 liked this · 3 months ago
-
quietlywaiting reblogged this · 3 months ago
-
quietlywaiting liked this · 3 months ago
-
cazuela-con-albondigas liked this · 3 months ago
-
theenemyod liked this · 3 months ago
-
muteablecuteable reblogged this · 3 months ago
-
wollffslair reblogged this · 3 months ago
-
wollffslair liked this · 3 months ago
-
aureliusreborn liked this · 3 months ago
-
blackeneddeatheye liked this · 3 months ago
-
want-to-live-not-just-survive reblogged this · 3 months ago
-
ahumanbeingtryingherbest liked this · 3 months ago
More Posts from Sapphic-baby-girl
I find the best way to develop and create believable characters is this process I was introduced to during a "Save the Cat writing conference.
I find it fleshes characters out well with minimal overthinking and it tends to produce primary and secondary plot points.
Character Profile
- Write five sentences that cover a distinct aspect of that character, such as education, work, social position, love life, or whatever else.
- Write three sentences for each main sentence that expands on the point.
- For each of those five paragraphs, write an additional sentence that contrasts with the ideas presented in the paragraph.
- Finally write three sentences each to expand on each counter sentence
-Now you have five three-sentence paragraphs detailing five different aspects of your first character, each accompanied by a three sentence paragraphs that stand in opposition.
What can I do to understand and psychoanalyze a character better and profoundly?
Supposing you have already developed a well-rounded character (perhaps used a checklist like this), I would say, you can then look deeper into your character by dissecting them in 3 levels:
1. Their individual characteristics, traits, moods, idiosyncrasies etc. You may go through these attributes one by one. Who is your character? What defines them? What are their goals/motivations? How are these goals treated by your character?
2. Who they are within a given context. Who are they when they are alone? How do they behave when they are with X or with Y? When they are at A, do they do things the same as when they find themselves at B? How differently do they behave—if at all? When faced with XYZ situation, what do they do? How do they think and feel in these different contexts and scenarios?
3. Their backstory. What was your character's upbringing like? What significant events transpired? How do these past experiences shape your character now, and moving forward?
Perhaps if you peel back these layers one at a time, you may understand them better and even discover something new. But, ultimately, this is your character. You know them better than anyone else. You hold their future in your hands. All you need to do now is allow the ink to run free.
More: On Psychology More: On Character-Building
OMG!! This is SOO true!! I wish someone had told me this when I was a kid...it would have made my life SOOO much easier!!
Gawd I want to experience this so badly. 🔥🥵🫠
Cindy really enjoyed her times with her older neighbor Jessica. She got a special thrill when Jessica wanted her to dress down, agewise.
Pigtails and frilly socks. A tank top with no bra, short skirts and cutesie undies. She enjoyed being Jessica’s “little girl”.
And she always made sure her mound was shaven clean, which drove Jessica to want to feast on her kitty ravenously. She would drive Jessica more crazy by calling her “mommy” while she was between Cindy’s legs.
The two of them would work each other into an amazing frenzy. After Cindy’s orgasm, it would be her turn to make “mommy” happy. Which she never failed to do. Again and again.
NOTE: This depicts two adults engaged in a MD/lg relationship.