Writing requires discipline, but disciplined writers are not necessarily prolific. Most good work gets produced over time, sometimes many years, allowing the writer to grow with the material, to allow her world, her command over craft, and her psychological maturity to coalesce at just the right moment to produce something of value. This process often involves dreadful periods of not writing, or, worse, periods of writing very badly, embarrassingly badly. As time passes in a writing life, the writer learns not to fear these arid periods. The words come back eventually. That’s the real discipline: to train the mind and heart into believing that words come back.

Be willing to wait. In the meantime, write when you don’t feel like it. If you can’t write, read.

Monica Wood, The Pocket Muse (via mysandrist)

(via aldergroves)

nevver:

Writer’s advice from writers

(via aldergroves)

How To Poison Your Fictional Characters ›

therevenantwrites:

A short list of several types of poison and their effects.

(via theagingsea)

#advice  

Being a good writer is 3% talent and 97% not being distracted by the internet.

(via worldinink)

— the writer reblogs, being distracted by the internet

(via cameralinz)

(via afoolinastarrycloak)

(via serenadeof-flames)

Write? I was dying of desire for it, of love, dying to give writing what it had given to me.

Hélène Cixous, “Coming to Writing“ (via Interior Forest)
#quote  

Um. Hello. I am not really sure if you can help me. But, do you know a website that you write short stories and its just a chunk of it and people read it online and if they want to read more, they pay like a dollar to read the whole story.

be good if you can get back. c: 

— iwishdog

Tazzy: Unfortunately I’ve never heard of a website like this, but I’m posting this here so any of our followers who might know more can shed some light on the situation! :)

So, does anyone know of a website like the one iwishdog asked about?

Anonymous asked: r u editing essays???

Tazzy: Iiiiiii really have no idea what you’re trying to ask here. As in, do we edit our own essays that we might have to write for whatever reason, or are we willing to edit other people’s essays? (Answer: no, I personally will not edit someone’s essays- such as for schoolwork etc- because 1. I have my own essays to write and 2. That’s cheating, so.)

Um. Rephrase this message and send it in again, perhaps?

jaymug:

Creativity takes no excuses.

mydearestdream:

To All Writers of Everything Ever

latenightspooky:

I need to rant about this:

image

Also known as the best writing program ever! It’s a full-screen writing program!

So you open it up, and it looks like this:

image

You’re thinking, “Ok, so what? It’s a screen with a picture. Whoopdie do.” But it get’s better! It’s customizable!

See that “appearance”? Click it.

image

You can also use custom fonts that you have installed!

See that “music”? Click it.

image

If you drag your own music into the folder, like so:

image

You get this!:

image

But wait! It gets better!

See “typing sounds”? You can change those too!

Perhaps the best is - YOU CAN USE ANY PICTURE FOR THE BACKGROUND. It will automatically fade it for you!

Seriously, guys, this tool is wonderful. You can use it for:

  • Research papers
  • Novel writing
  • Play writing
  • Short stories
  • Homework assignments
  • Ranting about your friends when they piss you off
  • Writing your shopping list

It auto-saves. It exports to .rtf. Hotkeys from Word for italicize, underlining, and bold work. You can print RIGHT FROM THERE.

And the seriously best thing ever?

It fits on a flash drive. The entire thing with added music is maybe 131MBs.

The bestest thing ever.

It’s free.

(via angelesnovak)