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Story Prompt Ideas

@prompts-and-stuff / prompts-and-stuff.tumblr.com

||Silly little prompts from silly little people|| Feel free to ask anything.
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So... I found this and now it keeps coming to mind. You hear about "life-changing writing advice" all the time and usually its really not—but honestly this is it man.

I'm going to try it.

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missroserose

I love the lawyer metaphor, because whenever I see “John knew that...” in prose writing I immediately think “how?  How does he know it?”  Interrogate your witnesses.  Cross-examine them.  Make them explain their reasoning.  It pays dividends.

All of this, but also feels/felt. My editor has forbidden me from using those and it’s forced me to stretch my skills.

[ID: The full text of an article. It reads:

"Writing Advice": by Charles Palahniuk- In six seconds, you’ll hate me.

But in six months, you’ll be a better writer.

From this point forward – at least for the next half year – you may not use “thought” verbs. These include: Thinks, Knows, Understands, Realizes, Believes, Wants, Remembers, Imagines, Desires, and a hundred others you love to use.

The list should also include: Loves and Hates.

And it should include: Is and Has, but we’ll get to those, later.

Until some time around Christmas, you can’t write: Kenny wondered if Monica didn’t like him going out at night…”

Thinking is abstract. Knowing and believing are intangible. Your story will always be stronger if you just show the physical actions and details of your characters and allow your reader to do the thinking and knowing. And loving and hating.

Instead, you’ll have to Un-pack that to something like: “The mornings after Kenny had stayed out, beyond the last bus, until he’d had to bum a ride or pay for a cab and got home to find Monica faking sleep, faking because she never slept that quiet, those mornings, she’d only put her own cup of coffee in the microwave. Never his.”

Instead of characters knowing anything, you must now present the details that allow the reader to know them. Instead of a character wanting something, you must now describe the thing so that the reader wants it.

Instead of saying: “Adam knew Gwen liked him.”

You’ll have to say: “Between classes, Gwen was always leaned on his locker when he’d go to open it. She’d roll her eyes and shove off with one foot, leaving a black-heel mark on the painted metal, but she also left the smell of her perfume. The combination lock would still be warm from her ass. And the next break, Gwen would be leaned there, again.”

In short, no more short-cuts. Only specific sensory detail: action, smell, taste, sound, and feeling.

Typically, writers use these “thought” verbs at the beginning of a paragraph (In this form, you can call them “Thesis Statements” and I’ll rail against those, later) In a way, they state the intention of the paragraph. And what follows, illustrates them.

For example:

“Brenda knew she’d never make the deadline. Traffic was backed up from the bridge, past the first eight or nine exits. Her cell phone battery was dead. At home, the dogs would need to go out, or there would be a mess to clean up. Plus, she’d promised to water the plants for her neighbor…”

Do you see how the opening “thesis statement” steals the thunder of what follows? Don’t do it.

If nothing else, cut the opening sentence and place it after all the others. Better yet, transplant it and change it to: Brenda would never make the deadline.

Thinking is abstract. Knowing and believing are intangible. Your story will always be stronger if you just show the physical actions and details of your characters and allow your reader to do the thinking and knowing. And loving and hating.

Don’t tell your reader: “Lisa hated Tom.”

Instead, make your case like a lawyer in court, detail by detail. Present each piece of evidence. For example:

“During role call, in the breath after the teacher said Tom’s name, in that moment before he could answer, right then, Lisa would whisper-shout: ‘Butt Wipe,” just as Tom was saying, ‘Here’.”

One of the most-common mistakes that beginning writers make is leaving their characters alone. Writing, you may be alone. Reading, your audience may be alone. But your character should spend very, very little time alone. Because a solitary character starts thinking or worrying or wondering.

For example: Waiting for the bus, Mark started to worry about how long the trip would take..”

A better break-down might be: “The schedule said the bus would come by at noon, but Mark’s watch said it was already 11:57. You could see all the way down the road, as far as the Mall, and not see a bus. No doubt, the driver was parked at the turn-around, the far end of the line, taking a nap. The driver was kicked back, asleep, and Mark was going to be late. Or worse, the driver was drinking, and he’d pull up drunk and charge Mark seventy-five cents for death in a fiery traffic accident…”

A character alone must lapse into fantasy or memory, but even then you can’t use “thought” verbs or any of their abstract relatives.

Oh, and you can just forget about using the verbs forget and remember.

No more transitions such as: “Wanda remember how Nelson used to brush her hair.”

Instead: “Back in their sophomore year, Nelson used to brush her hair with smooth, long strokes of his hand.”

Again, Un-pack. Don’t take short-cuts.

Better yet, get your character with another character, fast. Get them together and get the action started. Let their actions and words show their thoughts. You -- stay out of their heads.

And while you’re avoiding “thought” verbs, be very wary about using the bland verbs “is” and “have.”

One of the most-common mistakes that beginning writers make is leaving their characters alone.

For example:

“Ann’s eyes are blue.”

“Ann has blue eyes.”

Versus:

“Ann coughed and waved one hand past her face, clearing the cigarette smoke from her eyes, blue eyes, before she smiled…”

Instead of bland “is” and “has” statements, try burying your details of what a character has or is, in actions or gestures. At its most basic, this is showing your story instead of telling it.

And forever after, once you’ve learned to Un-pack your characters, you’ll hate the lazy writer who settles for: “Jim sat beside the telephone, wondering why Amanda didn’t call.”

Please. For now, hate me all you want, but don’t use “thought” verbs. After Christmas, go crazy, but I’d bet money you won’t. End ID]

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I was getting pretty fed up with links and generators with very general and overused weapons and superpowers and what have you for characters so:

Here is a page for premodern weapons, broken down into a ton of subcategories, with the weapon’s region of origin. 

Here is a page of medieval weapons.

Here is a page of just about every conceived superpower.

Here is a page for legendary creatures and their regions of origin.

Here are some gemstones.

Here is a bunch of Greek legends, including monsters, gods, nymphs, heroes, and so on. 

Here is a website with a ton of (legally attained, don’t worry) information about the black market.

Here is a website with information about forensic science and cases of death. Discretion advised. 

Here is every religion in the world. 

Here is every language in the world.

Here are methods of torture. Discretion advised.

Here are descriptions of the various methods used for the death penalty. Discretion advised.

Here are poisonous plants.

Here are plants in general.

Feel free to add more to this!

An exceedingly useful list of lists for writers.

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Hi there, I'm a writer/artist/all around shipper, and can I ask a request? Request being a male/female or male/male or female/female dangerous criminal and cop/detective lines prompts? If you that I mean

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Sorry for the delay- I sorta forgot this blog exists ^^; That being said, I hope these can help c: A=criminal, B=cop/detective

also this first one isn't between the two, but rather a superior of B and B.

  • "You said that you'd have A by now." "Yeah well that was before they blew up the entire building for the theatrics. Now I need to call in a bomb squad. And the CIA."
  • "Catch me if you can," A teased as they swung a leg over the fence and sprinted away. B would follow, except for the fact that chasing them on foot wouldn't help. Somehow, A was always five steps ahead.
  • "Once I catch you, you will receive due punishment for everything you've done." "Oh, Officer. That assumes you can catch me."
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Helpful things for action writers to remember

  • Sticking a landing will royally fuck up your joints and possibly shatter your ankles, depending on how high you’re jumping/falling from. There’s a very good reason free-runners dive and roll. 
  • Hand-to-hand fights usually only last a matter of seconds, sometimes a few minutes. It’s exhausting work and unless you have a lot of training and history with hand-to-hand combat, you’re going to tire out really fast. 
  • Arrows are very effective and you can’t just yank them out without doing a lot of damage. Most of the time the head of the arrow will break off inside the body if you try pulling it out, and arrows are built to pierce deep. An arrow wound demands medical attention. 
  • Throwing your opponent across the room is really not all that smart. You’re giving them the chance to get up and run away. Unless you’re trying to put distance between you so you can shoot them or something, don’t throw them. 
  • Everyone has something called a “flinch response” when they fight. This is pretty much the brain’s way of telling you “get the fuck out of here or we’re gonna die.” Experienced fighters have trained to suppress this. Think about how long your character has been fighting. A character in a fist fight for the first time is going to take a few hits before their survival instinct kicks in and they start hitting back. A character in a fist fight for the eighth time that week is going to respond a little differently. 
  • ADRENALINE WORKS AGAINST YOU WHEN YOU FIGHT. THIS IS IMPORTANT. A lot of times people think that adrenaline will kick in and give you some badass fighting skills, but it’s actually the opposite. Adrenaline is what tires you out in a battle and it also affects the fighter’s efficacy - meaning it makes them shaky and inaccurate, and overall they lose about 60% of their fighting skill because their brain is focusing on not dying. Adrenaline keeps you alive, it doesn’t give you the skill to pull off a perfect roundhouse kick to the opponent’s face. 
  • Swords WILL bend or break if you hit something hard enough. They also dull easily and take a lot of maintenance. In reality, someone who fights with a sword would have to have to repair or replace it constantly.
  • Fights get messy. There’s blood and sweat everywhere, and that will make it hard to hold your weapon or get a good grip on someone. 
  • A serious battle also smells horrible. There’s lots of sweat, but also the smell of urine and feces. After someone dies, their bowels and bladder empty. There might also be some questionable things on the ground which can be very psychologically traumatizing. Remember to think about all of the character’s senses when they’re in a fight. Everything WILL affect them in some way. 
  • If your sword is sharpened down to a fine edge, the rest of the blade can’t go through the cut you make. You’ll just end up putting a tiny, shallow scratch in the surface of whatever you strike, and you could probably break your sword. 
  • ARCHERS ARE STRONG TOO. Have you ever drawn a bow? It takes a lot of strength, especially when you’re shooting a bow with a higher draw weight. Draw weight basically means “the amount of force you have to use to pull this sucker back enough to fire it.” To give you an idea of how that works, here’s a helpful link to tell you about finding bow sizes and draw weights for your characters.  (CLICK ME)
  • If an archer has to use a bow they’re not used to, it will probably throw them off a little until they’ve done a few practice shots with it and figured out its draw weight and stability. 
  • People bleed. If they get punched in the face, they’ll probably get a bloody nose. If they get stabbed or cut somehow, they’ll bleed accordingly. And if they’ve been fighting for a while, they’ve got a LOT of blood rushing around to provide them with oxygen. They’re going to bleed a lot. 
  • Here’s a link to a chart to show you how much blood a person can lose without dying. (CLICK ME
  • If you want a more in-depth medical chart, try this one. (CLICK ME)

Hopefully this helps someone out there. If you reblog, feel free to add more tips for writers or correct anything I’ve gotten wrong here. 

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anthurak

I think a very good additional point to consider is that properly establishing any of these more realistic points ahead of time makes it all the more dramatic when a character breaks one of these rules.

Like to use the first point; if you first show people fucking up their joints and hurting themselves by sticking a landing, or have characters warn against doing that, then having a character actually stick a landing WITHOUT fucking up their joints becomes a great way to convey ‘Holy shit, this is one tough SOB!’

Same goes for the ‘its a bad idea to yank an arrow out’ and ‘fist-fights are exhausting’ points. Establishing these points ahead of time before showing a character(s) disregard them makes it into a much bigger deal.

Properly establishing grounded, realistic rules can be a great way to create shock and tension when something comes along to break those rules.

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Writing Tip June 4th

A list of body language phrases.

I’ve included a very comprehensive list, organized by the type of body movement, hand and arm movements, facial expressions etc. In some cases, a phrase fits more than one heading, so it may appear twice. Possible emotions are given after each BL phrase unless the emotion is indicated within the phrase. (They are underlined for emphasis, not due to a hyperlink.)

Note: I’ve included a few body postures and body conditions as they are non-verbal testimony to the character’s physical condition.

Have fun and generate your own ideas.:-)

Eyes, Brows and Forehead

  • arched a sly brow:  sly, haughty
  • blinked owlishly:  just waking, focusing, needs glasses
  • brows bumped together in a scowl:  worried, disapproving, irritated
  • brows knitted in a frown: worried, disapproval, thoughtful
  • bug-eyed:  surprised, fear, horror
  • cocky wink and confident smile:  over confidence, arrogant, good humor, sexy humor
  • eyes burned with hatred: besides hatred this might suggest maniacal feelings
  • eyes flashed: fury, defiance, lust, promise, seduction
  • eyes rolled skyward: disbelief, distrust, humor
  • forehead puckered:  thoughtful, worried, irritation
  • frustration crinkled her eyes
  • gaze dipped to her décolletage: sexual interest, attraction, lust
  • gimlet-eyed/narrowed eyes: irritation, thoughtful, mean, angry
  • gleam of deviltry:  humor, conniving, cunning
  • kept eye contact but her gaze became glazed: pretending interest where there is none/bordom
  • narrowed to crinkled slits:  angry, distrust
  • nystagmic eyes missed nothing (constantly shifting eyes):  Shifty
  • pupils dilated:  interested, attraction to opposite sex, fear
  • raked her with freezing contempt
  • slammed his eyes shut:  stunned, furious, pain
  • squinted in a furtive manner:  fearful, sneaky
  • stared with cow eyes:  surprised, disbelief, hopeful, lovestruck
  • subtle wink:  sexy, humor/sharing a joke, sarcasm
  • unrelenting stare: distrust, demanding, high interest, unyielding

Place To Place, Stationary Or Posture

  • ambled away:  relaxed, lazy
  • barged ahead:  rude, hurried
  • battled his way through the melee:  desperate, anger, alarm
  • cruised into the diner:  easy-going, feeling dapper, confident
  • dawdled alongside the road:  lazy, deliberate delay for motives, unhurried, relaxed
  • dragged his blanket in the dirt:   sadness/depressed, weary
  • edged closer to him:  sneaky, seeking comfort, seeking protection, seeking an audience
  • he stood straighter and straightened his tie:  sudden interest, sexual attraction
  • held his crotch and danced a frantic jig: demonstrates physical condition – he has to pee
  • hips rolled and undulated:  sexy walk, exaggerating for sex appeal
  • hovered over them with malice/like a threatening storm: here it’s malice, but one may hover for many reasons.
  • hunched over to look shorter:  appear inconspicuous, ashamed of actions, ashamed of height
  • leaped into action feet hammering the marbled floor:  eager, fear, joyous
  • long-legged strides:  hurried, impatient
  • lumbered across:  heavy steps of a big man in a hurry
  • minced her way up to him: timid, sneaky, insecure, dainty or pretense at dainty
  • paced/prowled the halls:  worried, worried impatience, impatient, diligently seeking pivoted on his heel and took off:  mistaken and changes direction, following orders, hurried, abrupt change of mind, angry retreat
  • plodded down the road:  unhurried, burdened, reluctant
  • practiced sensual stroll:  sexy, showing off
  • rammed her bare foot into her jeans: angry, rushed
  • rocked back and forth on his heels: thoughtful, impatiently waiting
  • sagged against the wall:  exhausted, disappointment
  • sallied forth:  confident, determined
  • sashayed her cute little fanny:  confident, determined, angered and determined
  • shrank into the angry crowd:  fear, insecure, seeking to elude
  • sketched a brief bow and assumed a regal pose: confident, mocking, snooty, arrogant skidded to an abrupt halt: change of heart, fear, surprise, shock
  • skulked on the edges of the crowd: sneaky, ashamed, timid
  • slithered through the door:  sneaky, evil, bad intentions
  • stormed toward her, pulling up short when: anger with a sudden surprise
  • swaggered into the class room:  over confident, proud, arrogant, conceited
  • tall erect posture:  confidence, military bearing
  • toe tapped a staccato rhythm:  impatience, irritation
  • tottered/staggered unsteadily then keeled over:  drunk, drugged, aged, ill
  • waltzed across the floor:  happy, blissful, exuberant, conceited, arrogant

Head Movement

  • cocked his head:  curiosity, smart-alecky, wondering, thoughtful
  • cocked his head left and rolled his eyes to right corner of the ceiling:  introspection
  • droop of his head: depressed, downcast, hiding true feelings
  • nodded vigorously: eager
  • tilted her head to one side while listening:  extreme interest, possibly sexual interest

Mouth And Jaw

  • a lackluster smile:  feigning cheerfulness
  • cigarette hung immobile in mouth: shock, lazy, uncaring, relaxed casualness
  • clinched his jaw at the sight:  angered, worried, surprised
  • curled her lips with icy contempt
  • expelled her breath in a whose:  relief, disappointment
  • gagged at the smell: disgust, distaste
  • gapped mouth stare:  surprised, shock, disbelief
  • gritted his teeth:  anger, irritation, holding back opinion
  • inhaled a sharp breath:  surprise, shock, fear, horror
  • licked her lips:  nervous, sexual attraction
  • lips primed: affronted, upset, insulted
  • lips pursed for a juicy kiss
  • lips pursed like she’d been chewing a lemon rind: dislike, angry, irritated, sarcasm
  • lips screwed into: irritation, anger, grimace, scorn
  • lips set in a grim line: sorrow, worried, fear of the worst
  • pursed her lips:  perturbed, waiting for a kiss
  • scarfed down the last biscuit:  physical hunger, greed
  • slack-mouthed:  total shock, disbelief
  • slow and sexy smile:  attraction, seductive, coy
  • smacked his lips: anticipation
  • smile congealed then melted into horror
  • smile dangled on the corner of his lips: cocky, sexy
  • smirked and tossed her hair over her shoulder:  conceit, sarcasm, over confident
  • sneered and flicked lint off his suit: sarcasm, conceit
  • spewed water and spit: shock
  • stuck out her tongue: humor, sarcasm, teasing, childish
  • toothy smile:  eagerness, hopeful
  • wary smile surfaced on her lips

Nose

  • nose wrinkled in distaste/at the aroma
  • nostrils flared:  anger, sexual attraction
  • nose in the air:  snooty, haughty

Face in General

  • crimson with fury
  • handed it over shame-faced
  • jutted his chin: confident, anger, forceful
  • managed a deadpan expression:  expressionless
  • muscles in her face tightened:  unsmiling, concealing emotions, anger, worried
  • rested his chin in his palm and looked thoughtful
  • rubbed a hand over his dark stubble:  thoughtful, ashamed of his appearance
  • screwed up her face:  anger, smiling, ready to cry, could almost be any emotion
  • sneered and flicked lint off his suit: conceit, derision, scorn

Arm and Hand

  • a vicious yank
  • arm curled around her waist, tugging her next to him:  possessive, pride, protective
  • bit her lip and glanced away:  shy, ashamed, insecure
  • brandished his fist:  anger, threatening, ready to fight, confident, show of pride
  • clamped his fingers into tender flesh:  anger, protective, wants to inflict pain
  • clenched his dirty little fists: stubborn, angry
  • clapped her hands on her hips, arms crooked like sugar bowel handles:  anger, demanding, disbelief
  • constantly twirled her hair and tucked it behind her ear:  attracted to the opposite sex, shy crossed his arms over his chest: waiting, impatient, putting a barrier
  • crushed the paper in his fist:  anger, surrender, discard
  • dived into the food: hunger, eager, greedy
  • doffed his hat:  polite gesture, mocking, teasing
  • doodled on the phone pad and tapped the air with her foot:  bored, inattention, introspection
  • drummed her fingers on the desk:  impatient, frustrated, bored
  • fanned her heated face with her hands: physically hot, embarrassed, indicating attraction
  • fiddled with his keys: nervous, bored
  • firm, palm to palm hand shake:  confident, honest
  • flipped him the bird: sarcastic discard
  • forked his fingers through his hair for the third time:  disquiet/consternation, worry, thoughtful
  • handed it over shame-faced:  guilt, shame
  • held his crotch and danced a frantic jig:  physical need to relieve himself
  • limp hand shake:  lack of confidence, lack of enthusiasm
  • propped his elbow on his knee: relaxed, thoughtful
  • punched her pillow:  restless, can’t sleep, angry
  • rested his chin in his palm:  thoughful, worried
  • scratched his hairy belly and yawned:  indolent, bored, lazy, relaxed, just waking
  • shoulders lifted in a shrug:  doubtful, careless discard
  • slapped his face in front of God and country:  enraged, affronted/insulted
  • snapped a sharp salute:  respect, sarcastic gesture meaning the opposite of respect
  • snapped his fingers, expecting service:  arrogant, lack of respect, self-centered
  • sneered and flicked lint off his suit
  • spread her arms wide: welcoming,  joy, love
  • stabbed at the food: anger, hunger, determined
  • stood straighter and smoothed his tie:  sudden interest, possible sexual interest
  • stuffed his hands in his pockets: self-conscious, throwing up a barrier
  • sweaty handshake:  nervous, fearful
  • touched his arm several times while explaining:  sign of attraction, flattery, possessive
  • wide sweep of his arms:  welcoming, all inclusive gesture, horror

Sitting or Rising

  • collapsed in a stupor:  exhausted, drunk, drugged, disbelief
  • enthroned himself at the desk:  conceit, pronouncing or taking ownership
  • exploded out of the chair:  shock, eager, anger, supreme joy
  • roosted on the porch rail like a cock on a hen house roof:  claiming ownership, conceit, content
  • sat, squaring an ankle over one knee:  relaxed and open
  • slouched/wilted in a chair and paid languid attention to:  drowsy, lazy, depressed, disinterest, sad, totally relaxed, disrespectful
  • squirmed in his chair: ill at ease, nervous, needs the bathroom

Recline

  • flung himself into the bed: sad, depressed, exhausted, happy
  • prostrated himself: surrender, desperate, miserable, powerless, obsequious, fawning, flattering
  • punched her pillow:  can’t sleep, anger, frustrated
  • threw himself on the floor kicking and screaming: tantrum

Entire body and General

  • body stiffened at the remark:  offended, anger, alerted
  • body swayed to music:  dreamy, fond memories, enjoys the music
  • bounced in the car seat, pointing:  excitement, fear, eager
  • cowered behind his brother:  fear, shyness, coward, desperate
  • curled into a ball:  sorrow, fear, sleepy, defensive
  • heart galloping:  anxiety, joy, eager
  • held his crotch and danced a frantic jig
  • humped over his cane, each step shaking and careful: pain, aged
  • inhaled a deep breath and blew out slowly: buying time to find words/thoughtful, reconciled
  • quick and jerky like rusty cogs on a wheel:  unsure of actions, self-conscious, tense, edgy
  • rocked back and forth on his heels:  impatient, cocky, gleeful
  • manhandled the woman into a corner:  bully, anger
  • slumped shoulders: defeat, depressed, sad, surrender
  • stiff-backed:  priggish, haughty, affronted
  • stood straighter and straightened his tie:  sexual interest, wants to make an impression
  • stooped and bent: aged, arthritic, in pain
  • stretched extravagantly and yawned:  tired, bored, unconcerned
  • sweating uncontrollably: nervous, fear, guilt
  • tall erect posture:  confidence, military bearing
  • was panting now at:  afraid, exhausted, out of breath, sexual excitement
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inky-duchess
Writer's Guide: Writing about Alcoholic Drinks and Cocktails

Or how to write believable bar and nightclub scenes. I often find myself helping friends with their WIPs and often it as a bartender, I find myself having to correct them on bar and mixology terminology. So here's my quick guide to keeping your lingo on the straight and narrow.

Terminology

  • DASH/SPLASH: a drop of a mixer such as juice or flavouring.
  • MIXER: non alcholic beveraged served with the measure of alcohol in the same glass.
  • NEAT: Plain, without any addition of ice or a mixture. Just the alcohol.
  • ON THE ROCKS: Served over Ice.
  • STRAIGHT UP: The cocktail is chilled with ice and strained into a glass with no ice
  • DIRTY – if somebody asks for a dirty martini, you add olive juice, the more juice the dirtier it is
  • DRY- A dry martini includes a drop of vermouth and an extra dry martini contains a drop of scotch swirled in the glass and drained before adding the gin
  • BACK – a ‘back’ is a drink that accompanies an alcholic beverage such as water or Coke, but isn't mixed.
  • GARNISH – something added to a drink such as a lime or lemon or orange.
  • TWIST - a twist is literally a twist of fruit skin in the drink.
  • BITTERS – a herbal alcoholic blend added to cocktails.
  • RIMMED - the glass is coated in salt or sugar to enhance the taste.
  • VIRGIN- non alcoholic
  • MOCKTAIL- a virgin cocktail
  • DOUBLE - Two measures of the same alcohol in the same glass. A bartender can only legally serve a double in the same glass. They cannot serve you a triple.

Equipment

  • COCKTAIL SHAKER - it is a metal cup that fits into a glass, used to shake the components of your drink together with ice to chill it.
  • STRAINER- used to seperate ice in the shaker from the liquid within as you pour it into the glass.
  • MEASURES- these are little metal cylinders meant to measure out the pours of the alcohol. You pour the alcohol from the bottle into the measure and then put it into the glass. It's imperative that the right measure goes into the glass or the drink will taste of shit.
  • BAR SPOON – a long spoon meant to mix the drink.
  • OPTIC- it is a mechanism that attaches a bottle to an automatic pourer. The bartender usually fits the glass under the spout and pushes up to release the amount which cuts off at the single measure.
  • SHOT GLASS- a shot glass is a small glass to contain one measure
  • PINT GLASS- a glass used for serving pints of lager or ale
  • HALF PINT GLASS - a tulip shaped glass half the measure of a pint glass
  • SPEEDWELL/TAPS/DRAFT: are the taps used to pour beer from kegs stored under the bar floor.
  • SLIM JIM/HIGH BALL GLASS- It is a tall straight holding 8 to 12 ounces and used for cocktails served on the rocks such as a Gin and Tonic.
  • ROCKS GLASS - or an old fashioned glass, it is short and round. These glasses are used for drinks such as Old Fashioneds or Sazerac
  • COUPE GLASS- Are broad round stemmed glasses used for cocktails that are chill and served without ice such as a Manhattan, Boulevardier or a Gimlet
  • MARTINI GLASS - a martini glass is that classic stemmed "v" shaped glass, used to serve drinks without mixers such as Martini and Cosmopolitans
  • MARGARITA GLASS - is a large, round bowl like glass with a broad and a tall stem used for Margaritas and Daiquiris
  • HURRICANE GLASS- a tall tulip-like shaped glass with a flared rim and short stem. It holds 20 ounces which means it is the perfect glass to serve iced cocktails in such as Pina Colada, Singapore Sling, Hurricane

Alcoholic Drinks

  • Vodka- Vodka is made from potatoes or fermented cereal grains. It has a strong taste and scent. It is usually consumed neat with a mixer such as Coke or Orange juice or cranberry juice or in cocktails like Martini, Bloody Mary and Cosmopolitan.
  • Whisky/Whiskey- Whiskey is a distilled alcoholic beverage, made from fermented grain mash such as barley, corn, rye, and wheat. It gets its flavour form being fermented in casks for long period of time. When serving a whiskey, one asks whether they want ice or a mixer. Everyone has their own preference. I prefer mine like myself, strong and Irish. Scotch is Scottish Brewed whisky.
  • Rum- Rum is made by fermenting and distilling sugarcane molasses/juice. It is aged in oak barrels. It has a sweet taste.
  • Beer: is made out of cereal grains and served chilled in bottles or pulled from taps/speedwells.
  • Ale: Ale in the middle ages referred to beer brewed without hops (a kind of flowering plant that gives beer its bitter taste). It is sweeter and would typically have a fruity aftertaste.
  • Stout- is a darker beer sometimes brewed from roasted malt, coming in a sweet version and dry version, the most famous stout being Guinness.
  • Poitín- (pronounced as pot-cheen) is made from cereals, grain, whey, sugar beet, molasses and potatoes. It is a Dangerous Drink (honestly i still don't know how I ended up in that field with a traffic cone and a Shetland pony) and technically illegal. Country folk in Ireland used to brew it in secrets in stills hidden on their land.
  • Vermouth: Is made from infused with roots, barks, flowers, seeds, herbs, spices, brandy but vermouth is classed aromatized wine. It comes sweet or dry
  • Gin- is made from juniper, coriander, citrus peel, cinnamon, almond or liquorice and grain alcohol. Gin has a strong scent and taste and is usually served in a martini or a tonic water.
  • Schnapps- refers to any strong, clear alcoholic beverage. It is considered one of the best types of spirits because of its pure and delicate aroma. Lesson: never drink peach schnapps.

Cocktails and Drinks

  • Irish Coffee: an Irish coffee is adding whiskey to coffee and sugar and topping it with cream. As a bartender, I would honestly rather cut my arm off than make one of these.
  • Baby Guinness: Is a shot made by pouting Tia Maria or Kaluah into a shot glass and spreading Baileys on the top so it looks like a small pint of Guinness.
  • Silver Bullet: a shot of mixed tequila and sambuca.
  • Long Island Iced Tea:  The Long Island contains vodka, gin, tequila, light rum, lemon juice, triple sec and cola. It has a real kick.
  • Mai Tai: is made with light and dark rum, lime juice, orange curacao, orgeat syrup and rock candy syrup and served with a mint garnish.
  • Manhattan: The Manhattan is made with rye whiskey, sweet vermouth and bitters.
  • Margarita: The margarita is made with tequila, cointreau and lime juice.
  • Mojito: a mojito is made with muddled mint, white rum, lime juice, simple syrup and soda.
  • Martini: a martini is made of gin, dry vermouth and garnished with a lemon twist or olives.
  • Mimosa: a mimosa is a made with sparkling wine and orange juice.
  • Mint Julep: Made with Kentucky bourbon, simple syrup, mint leaves and crushed ice
  • Pina Colada: is made with white rum, dark rum, pineapple juice and coconut cream
  • Screwdriver: Vodka and Orange juice
  • Tequila Sunrise: tequila, orange juice and grenadine
  • Tom Collins: made with spiked lemonade, sparkling water, lemon juice, simple syrup and gin
  • Whiskey Sour: is made with powdered sugar, seltzer, lemon juice and whiskey.
  • White Russian: made with vodka, coffee liqueur and cream.
  • Black Russian: made with two parts coffee liqueur and five parts vodka.
  • Gin and Tonic: gin served with tonic water
  • Bloody Mary: made with vodka and tomato juice mixed with lemon juice, hot sauce, Worcestershire sauce, horseradish, fresh herbs, brown sugar and cracked black pepper.
  • Brandy Alexander: served straight up and made with brandy, cognac, creme de cacao and cream
  • Cosmopolitan: Made with citrus vodka, Cointreau, cranberry juice and fresh lime juice
  • Daiquiri: made with rum, lime juice and sugar.
  • Gimlet: gin and lime juice

My Top 10 Bartending Rules and Responsibilities

  1. Overpouring is never an option. You can seriously hurt somebody by overpouring, not to mention spoil the drink and ruin your sales. You only serve people what they ask and never more.
  2. When somebody has had enough, you stop serving them. After a while, you know when to cut somebody off.
  3. Never leave bottles on the counter or in reach of customers. Your expensive spirits should never be in reach of anybody but you.
  4. If you tell somebody your selling them premium and top shelf alcohol, you cannot substitute with cheaper licqor. It's illegal.
  5. As a bartender, your eyes always have to be scanning a crowd. You can't leave people hanging.
  6. The golden rule - if you see somebody messing with someone's drink, you chuck it if you can or warn the person. And you get that son of a bitch out of your pub.
  7. 50% of the job is cleaning. You have to clean your tools constantly. You cannot reuse measures and spouts, you have to wash everything. Beer traps are clean out every night, rubber mats are washed and anything you have used has to be clean.
  8. You have to hand dry your glasses. You never polish a pint glass as it fucks up the pint. You polish your cocktail glasses, shot glasses and straight glasses.
  9. If someone seems down or on their own, you try make conversation. Often you'll hear some disturbing stuff but always try lend an ear or make everyone feel included.
  10. If you break a glass in the ice bucket, you got to get rid of the ice.
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I have … a tip.

If you’re writing something that involves an aspect of life that you have not experienced, you obviously have to do research on it. You have to find other examples of it in order to accurately incorporate it into your story realistically.

But don’t just look at professional write ups. Don’t stop at wikepedia or webMD. Look up first person accounts.

I wrote a fic once where a character has frequent seizures. Naturally, I was all over the wikipedia page for seizures, the related pages, other medical websites, etc.

But I also looked at Yahoo asks where people where asking more obscure questions, sometimes asked by people who were experiencing seizures, sometimes answered by people who have had seizures.

I looked to YouTube. Found a few individual videos of people detailing how their seizures usually played out. So found a few channels that were mostly dedicated to displaying the daily habits of someone who was epileptic.

I looked at blogs and articles written by people who have had seizures regularly for as long as they can remember. But I also read the frantic posts from people who were newly diagnosed or had only had one and were worried about another.

When I wrote that fic, I got a comment from someone saying that I had touched upon aspects of movement disorders that they had never seen portrayed in media and that they had found representation in my art that they just never had before. And I think it’s because of the details. The little things.

The wiki page for seizures tells you the technicalities of it all, the terminology. It tells you what can cause them and what the symptoms are. It tells you how to deal with them, how to prevent them.

But it doesn’t tell you how some people with seizures are wary of holding sharp objects or hot liquids. It doesn’t tell you how epileptics feel when they’ve just found out that they’re prone to fits. It doesn’t tell you how their friends and family react to the news.

This applies to any and all writing. And any and all subjects. Disabilities. Sexualities. Ethnicities. Cultures. Professions. Hobbies. Traumas. If you haven’t experienced something first hand, talk to people that have. Listen to people that have. Don’t stop at the scholarly sources. They don’t always have all that you need.

I … LOVE reading the replies and tags for this post! I’m happy that, out of all my posts, this is the one that’s blown up so quickly. 

I love the people who are a part of a minority, that are gushing about their favorite fics or books that seem to have done this and offer proper representation. 

I love the people who are bringing up the toxic mindset that is very popular on tumblr, the “you can’t write about it if you haven’t lived it” ideology that makes writers feel guilty for providing representation.

I especially love the people who are mentioning how they should start doing this. I love the people who are probably young or inexperienced writers that are seeing this and thinking of doing this for the first time. I love that there are people who read this and then think to better their writing because of it.

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How to...

Make a character seem “human”

And by that, I mean how to make them feel real. If you have eyes and the ability to observe people with said eyes, you probably noticed that no one is perfect. People trip on sidewalks, say things and then immediately regret it, spill or drop things.

So, a way to pull these little flaws into your character is to (surprise) simplify things. This makes it a much more concise action and draws less attention to it.

“She tripped on the uneven sidewalk before regaining her footing and brushing off the mistake with a laugh.” vs. “She stumbled on the sidewalk, brushing off her mistake with a laugh”

In this example, the action of her tripping is in focus more than whatever conversation our hypothetical character is attempting to carry on. In the second, the stumble is passive- it’s brushed by, but it’s still there. The focus hasn’t shifted away from the action.

Another way to do this is to carefully build your characters. It’s tempting to build characters that are like yourself- it’s a pitfall we all fall into. Instead of unconsciously using yourself as a model for a characters personality, try using a friend. You’ll find a wider variety of traits in your characters than before.

A general rule of thumb if you’re lazy or need to make a lot of characters rather quickly is to pick 3 “good” traits (ie: kind, generous, easygoing), 2 “neutral” (ie: apathetic, clumsy, immature), and 2 “bad” ones (ie: dishonest, gullible, abrasive). That mix tends to give fairly balanced characters with minimal effort. Feel free to play with the ratio of 3:2:2 if you want.

Figure out who your character is. Those blogs like @tag-your-oc really make you think about what your character would or wouldn’t do so you can define their personality a lot more. I recommend going through their blog a bit, answering prompts as you go. There are the enormous character sheets, and if they work for you- great! If they don’t, try to talk about your character with friends who want to hear more about them. They’ll likely ask questions that force you to give answers you hadn’t thought about, developing your character further.

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do not ignore this

our momentum is slowing down. we can’t let our dashes go back to normal when the world is not normal. so, if you are reading this, you are ~legally~ obligated to choose 2 numbers below; you must complete the task of those two numbers today. don’t pretend you didn’t see this. either do them right now or set a reminder to get it done before the sun goes down. the timer starts now. choose two. 

  1. sign some petitions. LINK HERE. if change.org hasn’t accused you of being a bot yet, you haven’t signed enough. 
  2. watch this youtube video. LINK HERE. do not skip the ads. this is a way to help raise money without having to donate any.
  3. sign up to get daily actions. LINK HERE. after filling out the form, you will receive texts Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays telling you what action to take. (i got this link from @ wp4bl on instagram)
  4. text or call for any of these victims. LINK HERE. this website is extremely helpful, well organized, and practically does all of the work for you.
  5. donate some money. LINK HERE. if you have any more money to spare, please donate it to one of these funds.
  6. follow every single one of these organizations on social media: blcklivesmatter, colorofchange, reclaimtheblock, showingupforracialjustice, and civilrightsorg
  7. post these important sources to your social media. LINK HERE. you have no idea who it might help. 
  8. read this article and forward it to at least one person. LINK HERE
  9. watch this video explaining the racial wealth gap. LINK HERE. it’s really informative and only about 15 minutes long. 
  10. do some reading. LINK HERE. this link has a ton of great resources to educate yourself. read at least one. 
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“There comes a moment in everyone’s life where they do the most awful thing they have ever done, and ever will do. And I hope with all my heart that moment has already passed for me, because I have done terrible things, and it scares me to think of what could be worse.”

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here have 10 pieces of writing advice that have stuck with me over the years

  1. every character’s first line should be an introduction to who they are as a person
  2. even if you only wrote one sentence on a really bad day, that’s still one sentence more than you had yesterday
  3. exercise restraint when using swear words and extra punctuation in order for them to pack a punch when you do use them
  4. if your characters have to kiss to show they’re in love, then they’re not in love
  5. make every scene interesting (or make every scene your favorite scene), otherwise your readers will be just as bored as you
  6. if you’re stuck on a scene, delete the last line you wrote and go in a different direction, or leave in brackets as placeholders
  7. don’t compare your first draft to published books that could be anywhere from 3rd to 103rd drafts
  8. i promise you the story you want to tell can fit into 100k words or less
  9. sometimes the book isn’t working because it’s not ready to be written or you’re not ready to write it yet; let it marinate for a bit so the idea can develop as you become a better writer
  10. a story written in chronological order takes a lot more discipline and is usually easier to understand than a story written with flashbacks
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Prompt 78

Your family came from Ireland long before even your great, great grandmother can remember. For reasons that you sometimes hear your aunts whisper about behind closed doors... stories about the family curse, passed down through generations of women. The story of the bean sidhe.

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Prompt 76

Your mother, you thought, was always strangely distant, sad. If you asked her why, she would gently lay her hand on your head and say, "The sea is part of me, it is part of you, and we are apart from it." Sometimes, she would cry. When you were 10, she disappeared. Your father refused to tell you why, but she left you a note sitting on your pillow, and all it read was: find me.

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