Brella:
brella:
important ship tropes:
fake dating
SECRET dating
being locked in a room or trapped in a small space
huDDLING FOR WARMTH
BEING ON THE BRINK OF ADMITTING THEIR FEELINGS FOR EACH OTHER BUT THEN GETTING INTERRUPTED
finishing each other’s sentences, KNOWING WHAT THE OTHER IS ABOUT TO SAY
tou chi NG!!!! FOr eheA DS!!!!!!11!!
wearing each other’s clothes
doing that thing where they accidentally get real close and, like, stare meaningfully at each other for a few seconds too long
channeling the inner romcom and having an epiphany about how much they care about each other and RACING TO CONFESS THEIR LOVE
fucking. Now or Never Kiss
HEIGHT DIFFERENCES
defending each other to scathing tertiary or otherwise minor characters but ONLY WHEN THE OTHER ISN’T AROUND
reincarnation or time loop or OOOOH TIME TRAVEL SCENARIOS
dramatically saving each other from certain death or barely surviving something that almost makes the other break down and just smirking wearily and mumbling flippant smartass remarks to HIDE THE DEPTH OF THEIR FEELINGS
undercover as lovers, the classic
ALMOST KISSING. like getting so close that they start to close their eyes and hold their breath and then SOMETHING HAPPENS and they jump apart, that is MORE VALUABLE THAN ANY ACTUAL KISSING
casually sitting on each other’s laps during ensemble cast conversations or scenes
did i mention F AKE DATinG
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More Posts from Aroswrites
What are some other world building or related blogs you would recommend?
Well…It will be a long list. Let’s see:
World Weaving - blog similar to mine. Answers questions and posts useful stuff.
Making Places - by Evan Dahm and several other people. Not active lately but has a ton of useful information.
Worldbuilding School - exactly what the title says, also they have nice articles on maps.
Fictionfactor: World Building -loads of useful articles, though site specializes in writing and related.
Worldbuilder - have some useful stuff and also some on DnD (Ghostwalk) session by owner of the blog
Other useful places:
Clever Girl Helps - writing, worldbuilding, research, random facts
Fuck Yeah Character Development
Fuck Yeah Critiques For Sue - on hiatus right now but has a lot of useful info, mainly a critique on original and fan characters.
Write World - has a lot of useful information about everything related to writing.
Fuck yeah forensics - useful information on forensics and other police stuff. Also they have a great list of recommended sources on forensics, anthropology and other dead people stuff.
Fix your writing habits - tons and tons of useful information
Fiction writing tips - exactly what title says.
The Writers Helpers - they also can help with finding beta reader - check their navi section.
Daily character development
Writing questions answered - a lot of information, very well organized
Fuck yeah Character development - that’s a different blog, but they also have loads of great stuff, including personality tests.
Writing Weasels
The writing realm
Clever help
TWH-Forensics - help on wiriting forensics stuff
Reference for writers + and their master list of online sites and references
The Writing Cafe
Total Rewrite - warning: good blog but they have a very dark theme so it can be hard to read.
Writing Masterpost
Character Help
MBTI Personality Test
MBTI Personality Descriptions
123 Character Flaws
Character Trait Cheat Sheet
List of Personality Traits
Character Virtues And Vices
Underused Personalities
7 Rules For Picking Names
Character Names
Character Name Resources
Surnames Masterpost
Write Real People Generator
Types of Voice
55 Words to Describe Someone’s Voice
Showing Character Emotion
Character Motivation
Writing Characters Of Colour
More On Writing Characters Of Colour
Describing A Character’s Skin Colour
All Characters Talk The Same
Character Description
100 Character Development Questions
Character Development Questionnaire
30 Day Character Development Meme
Character Development Check List
Character Development Through Hobbies
List Of Character Secrets - Part 1 - Part 2
Mysterious Characters
Flat Characters
European Characters
Creating Believable Characters
Writing A Character Who Has Lost Someone Important
Writing A Drunk Character
Writing Manipulative Characters
Writing Vampires
Writing Witty Characters
Writing Natural Born Leaders
Writing Rebellious Characters
Writing Hitmen
Writing Indifferent Distance Characters
Writing Bitchy Characters
Writing Popular Characters
Writing Rich Characters
Writing Child Characters
Writing Villains
Villain Archetypes
Writing Stalkers
Avoiding LGBTQ Stereotypes
Writing Homosexuals as a Heterosexual
Writing Males as a Female
Writing Convincing Male Characters
Writing Characters Of The Opposite Sex
Revealing A Characters Gender
The Roles Of Characters
Creating Fictional Characters From Scratch
Creating A Strong, Weak Character
Writing Characters Using Conflict And Backstory
Writing A Character Based On Yourself
Switching Up A ‘Too-Perfect’ Character
Help I Have A Mary-Sue!
Dialogue
Dialogue Tips
Realistic Dialogue
Flirty Dialogue
On Dialogue
General Help
Alternatives To Said
Avoid Saying ‘Very…’
100 Ways To Say Good
Avoiding Unfortunate Implications
Begin A Novel
Finishing Your Novel
Creating Conflict
Show Not Tell
Words For Emotions Based On Severity
Getting Out Of The Comfort Zone
A Guide To Writing Sci-Fi
Naming The Story
The Right Point Of View
Essential Story Ingredients
Writing Fantasy Masterpost
Five Rules For Thrillers
Pacing Action Scenes
Writing Races
Using Gender Neutral Pronouns
Dos and Don’t of Writing
General Writing Tips
How To Avoid Tense Change
Seven Steps To A Perfect Story
Plotting
Outlining Your Novel
Creating A Compelling Plot
The Snowflake Method
Beginning and End, But No Middle!
Prompts and Ideas
Prompt Generator Lists
Creative Writing Prompts
Story Starting Sentences
Story Spinner
Story Kitchen
Writing Prompt Generator
Quick Story Generator
Dramatic Scenes
Plot Bank
Masterpost of Writing Execrises
Writers Block?
Visual and word prompts on pinerest boards
Research
Survival Skills Masterpost
Mental Illness
Limits Of The Human Body
Stages of Decomposition
Body Language Cheat Sheet
Importance Of Body Language
Non Verbal Communication
Tips on Drug Addiction
Depression
Obsessive Compulsive Disorder
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder
Anxiety
Schizophrenia
Borderline Personality Disorder
Degrees of Emotion
List Of Phobias - Part 1 (A - L) - Part 2 (M - Z)
Psychology In Writing
Psychology Of Colour
Mob Mentality
How Street Gangs Work
Street Gang Dynamics
How To Pick A Lock
Death Scenes
Realistic Death Scenes
Fighting and Self Defence
Fighting Scenes
Problems With Fighting Scenes
Every Type of Fight Scene
How To Fight Write Blog
Fantasy Battle Scenes
Body Language Of Flirting
Flirting 101
Kissing
Sex Scenes
Friends With Benifits Relationships
Ballet Terms
Torture Guide (Trigger Warning)
Sibling Abuse (Trigger Warning)
Dream Sequences
Kleptomania
Psychiatric Hospital
Understanding issues, -isms and privilege
Guide to writing smut
Post-Apocalyptic Cliches To Avoid
Revision
General Revision Tips
Cliché Finder
Reading What You’ve Wrote So Far
Synonyms For Common Words
Urban Legends On Grammar
Common Grammar Mistakes
Revising A Novel
Setting
Average Weather Settings
Apocalypses
World Building 101
Bringing Settings To Life
Creating A Believable World
Mapping A Fictional World
Mapping Your World
Religion in Setting
5 Editing Tips
Sounds to listen to whilst writing
Coffitivity
August Ambience
Rainy Mood
Forest Mood
SimplyNoise
Soundrown
iSerenity
Nature Sound Player
myNoise
Tools
Tip Of Your Tounge
Write Or Die
Online Brainstorm
Family Tree Maker
Stay Focused
Writeometer App
Hemingway App


Body Language Cheat Sheet for Writers
As described by Selnick’s article:
Author and doctor of clinical psychology Carolyn Kaufman has released a one-page body language cheat sheet of psychological “tells” (PDF link) fiction writers can use to dress their characters.




Formatting your Manuscript
If you’re planning on one day turning your manuscript in to literary agents and publishing houses, you need to make sure it’s formatted correctly. In many cases, your manuscript will be skipped over if it isn’t done to industry standard, so here’s the basics that you’ll need if you don’t want to be ignored. Before I get started, please know that this is aimed specifically at fiction manuscripts. If you’re writing non-fiction or a memoir, the expectations will be different, so it would be wise to Google what you need.
The Basics
Make sure your font is 12 point Times New Roman, Courier New, or Arial. These are the only three fonts you are allowed to pick from.
Your spacing should be 1 inch on all sides of the text. This is the default on most word processors, but double check your settings just to be sure.
Your text should be double spaced.
All of your indentations must be a half inch. Do not press indent. Instead, drag over the top arrow on the ruler to have every new paragraph automatically indent.
The Title Page
The top left-hand corner of your title page will have all your personal information. They want to see your name, address, phone number, e-mail address, the novel’s genre, and word count.

Your novel’s title is allowed to be between 20-24 point font if you want. Bold is also an option, but not necessary.
The title will appear halfway down the title page.
“A novel by [your name]” will be about three quarters of the way down the page.
The Next Pages
If you have a dedication, it will be on its own page.
If you have some sort of verse or quote, those will also need their own pages.
Do not include a page for acknowledgements.
The Chapters
Chapter titles will be 12 point font. No bolding or italics.
Chapters will start from one quarter to halfway down the page.
An easy way to format chapter headings is to press enter five or six times
Make sure you always start your chapters the same way every time.
When you start a new chapter, make sure you use a page break to bump the new chapter onto a new page. This will keep it in place so that it will never budge, no matter how much you cut out or add to the previous chapter.
Page Numbers
Page numbers will start with 1 on Chapter 1 of your manuscript. Page numbers will not appear on the title page or dedication page.
Page 1 will be labeled in the footer of Chapter 1. It should be centered.
Page 2 will be in the header of the next page.
From page 2 onward, your headers will be labeled like this:

If you insert a section break after the title and dedication pages, it will make it easier to insert the page numbers.
For the most part, this is the most important of what you’ll need to know for formatting your manuscript. I used this video as reference, so I’m trusting everything it says is true because it was made by an author who has several novels published, and because it was uploaded this year, it should be up to date.
But just remember, whenever you go to turn in a manuscript, make sure you check the website of the agent or publisher you’re trying to contact. They might have specifications that differ with the ones stated in this video, and you should always do whatever you can to abide by what they want.