Its me

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See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna
drowsy-quill
zutarae

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My first love

My first love,



So sweet;
So innocent.

You’ve held my heart;
From the start.

Love at first sight;
Though we had many a fight.

We tried to stay true;
To work it all through.

I was so afraid to lose you;
All I did was abuse you.

You’ve always been so good to me;
Helped me with my every need.

I never out you first;
That’s when we hit our worst.

You can’t be blamed;
I’m so ashamed.

I tried my best;
You did the rest.

We were young once;
I almost threw a punch.

But we’re mature now;
And we’ve learned how.

Sure we have our rough days;
And sometimes take the tough ways.

And I can truly say;
Without a doubt today.

That I love you;
You’re in my heart true.

Me oh my,
Do I love you.

My first love;
My hardest heartbreak.

I stare in the mirror;
And I no longer have anything to fear.

Because when I stare at you;
I look back at me.



And finally I know I will always love,
Me me me.

poem poetry poet writing writer poetry things writing things sorry i was on hiatus idk if anyone cares but love poem for myself love selfcare love yourself love you love me internal battle a real fight my number one i love me true love first love love poem

I was afraid, then I was found

I used to hide when it stormed.

At the first sight of those
dark
dark
clouds,

I ran;
inside.

That was where I thought I was safe,

Alone-
perhaps,
but I told myself that I was cozy there.

Even when the lights flickered out,
and the heat gave up,
and I was all alone.

Because it was storming,
and I had to be inside.

I didn’t want to be caught in the rain;

And then one day,
I was outside,
with you;

And the clouds rolled in,
dark,
and dreary
as always.

But you didn’t go inside,
didn’t duck away,
didn’t run for cover;

And ever so hesitantly,
I stayed outside too,
with you.

And as it started to rain,
I was offered a raincoat.

An unfamiliar thing,
a gift,
an open hand,
an invitation.

And so I stayed,
with you,
out in the storm.

Soon I found that we were not alone in the rain,
but that many people came out to be in the storm.

They enjoyed it,
they laughed,
they frolicked,
in the rain.

So I realised,
that I was not alone,
that I was not cold,
that I was not in the dark,
but only in the rain.

That was because of you,
you made me see,
that a little rain never hurt.

The sunshine that is in your soul and now mine;
and that light,
oh that light,
it keeps me warm and dry,
and it makes me feel divine,
like I sit
way
way
up
in the sky.

depression metaphor rain sadness happy ending happiness love yourself finding meaning in life waxing love for you gratefulness eternal gratitude love warmth this strange happy feeling sunshine in my soul thank you all because of you it gets easier poetic poetry Honest Poetry writing words my poem writblr poet writers on tumblr poetry tumblr property of rainwritesandreads

3 2 1 tag game Sum up your WIP(s) in three themes, two nouns, one adjective, and an image.

I was tagged by @the-unwritten-writer

Themes- the social separation society causes, the power of a united force under common goal, and finding true self

Nouns- deities, wings

Adjective- prudent

image

It was nearly impossible to find an image I could settle with for The Darling Terrors, but it’ll do the job.

I’m going to tag @drowsy-quill and @writingwinterridge and encourage them to play along at their convenience.

tagging game 123 tag sum up your wip it took me ages wip my wips property of rainwritesandreads

These Words are Written in Blood

This is written in my blood,
But you already know that.

Because you,
Ignored my screams,
Ignored my suffering,
Ignored my pleas.

You ignored me,
You ignored us.

Because of this,
This is written in the blood of our people.

Who have screamed for you to stop,
Who have suffered because you didn’t,
Who pleaded you to end this.

Because you wrote,
Your laws,
Your acts,
Your bills;
In our blood.

In the blood of our siblings on the other side of the planet,
In the blood of our siblings who cannot fight for themselves,
In the blood of our siblings who do not have voices for themselves because of you,
In the blood of all animals and plants, all living things of our planet.

Our screams,
Our suffering,
Our pleas;

Are ignored,
By you.

And your rules and regulations and condemning statements are written in blood that is
Taken,
Stolen,
Appropriated.

But know,
That their blood,
That our blood,
That my blood,

Is the same ink that will be used to destroy your carefully written words. 

Because just as well as yours,
These words are written in blood.

Because we have the strength to take our own blood by choice, and use it with purpose for what we believe in. 

Can you say the same?

poem poetry author writer writing my writing honest poetry the planet earth the environment green earth blue sky and sea justice injustice us government out for blood spokenword spoken word spoken poetry the system is rigged murder of our planet save our earth these words are written in blood voice of the people voice of a generation down with capitalism down with the bourgeoisie we will live to see another day can you say the same do not ignore these words
thewrittenpost

Words to Describe Hair

writingwithcolor

This began as a guide to describing Afro/curly hair but of course, I got carried away. From look and texture of hair, colors and various styles, this guide serves as a thesaurus of sorts for hair, as well as pointers for use in your writing.

image

Culturally Significant Hair Coverings:

  • Know the meaning behind head wear and why it’s worn, when and by whom, such as a Native Nation’s headdress, before bestowing a character with it.

Head Coverings Resources:

Afro - Curly - Straightened

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There are many varieties of braids, twists & Afro hair styles; have some more!

Describing Black (Afro) hair:

  • Appropriative Hairstyles: Keep in mind that Afro styles should be kept to those in the African Diaspora, such as dreadlocks, cornrows + certain and many braided styles.
  • Tread carefully describing Afro hair as “wild” “unkempt” “untamed” or any words implying it’s unclean or requires controlling.
  • “Nappy” and “wooly” are generally words to stay away from, the first having heavy negative connotations for many and the latter, though used in the Holy Bible, is generally not acceptable anymore and comes off as dehumanizing due to Animal connotations.
  • There are mixed feelings on calling Black hair “kinky.” I’m personally not opposed to the word in itself and usage depends on the person’s race (I’m more comfortable with a Black person using it vs. a Non-Black person) as well as their tone and context (if it’s used in a neutral or positive tone vs. negatively/with disdain). Get feedback on your usage, or simply forgo it.
  • See our tags “Black Hair” and “Natural Hair” for more discussion on describing Black hair.

Texture - Look - Styles

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Hair Colors and Style

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Writing Tips & Things to Keep in Mind:

  • Combination Words: Try combining words to illustrate look of hair. A character with springy coils that dance across her shoulders with every movement, the man with thick silvery hair slicked back into a ponytail…
  • Mind Perspective: Depending on POV, a character might not know exactly what cornrows or a coiffure style is, at least in name, and it might make more sense if they described the hairdo instead. More defining terms might come from a more knowing source or the wearer themselves. One book I read described a girl’s afro puff as “thick hair pulled up into a cute, curly, poufy thing on top of her head and tied with a yellow ribbon.”
  • POC & Hair Colors: People of Color’s hair comes in all shades and textures. There are Black people with naturally blond and loosely-textured to straight hair, East Asian people with red hair, and so on. Keep that in mind when coding characters if you tend to rely on hair color alone to denote a character is white vs. a Person of Color.
  • Related Tropes: There are tropes and discussion related to People of Color, colored hair, and light-colored hair and features. 

~Mod Colette

drowsy-quill
embersalamander

From Springhole.net [x] [x]

Food-Colored Skin

Not only is purple prose obnoxious; sometimes it’s downright racist. For some reason, writers have a fondness for describing dark complexions as “chocolate” or somesuch.

But wait, people like chocolate! What’s so bad about likening a skintone to something almost everyone likes?

The problem is that food-colored skin is a phenomenon mostly limited to dark-colored complexions. And it’s more than just a little creepy when strangers keep likening your skintone to an inanimate edible object. Plus, in some places “chocolate bar” is a playground taunt used to goad black children.

Not a very tasteful choice in similitudes at all.

Skin Color Only Described When Not White

In many stories, the color of a character’s skin will only be described when the character doesn’t have a fair complexion. This typically happens because the writer is white and subconsciously thinks of xir own skin color as the default and everyone else’s as the outliers. Even JK Rowling, whose books frequently focus on tolerance and equality, is guilty of this.

The solution is simple - just describe everyone’s complexion, and all will be well.

Written Accents

Written accents are offensive because they essentially tell the group whose accent is being written that “your way of talking is weird; my way is normal.”

Not only are written accents offensive to the group being represented, but they’re offensive to read because you have to spend extra time trying to sort out what the writer was trying to say.

If you want to write a character who is supposed to have an accent, use grammar and slang associated with people who have that accent. You could also just mention that they have an accent. But don’t butcher the spellings of the words. “He’s got himself in a right pickle, he has” is fine, but “‘E’s got ‘imself in a right pickle, ‘e ‘as” is not.

Things Appropriated From Other Cultures

Many new writers are bound and determined to make sure their characters have meaningful and unique names. I see many people who have clearly scoured the bowels of online baby name sites to find the perfect Vedic/Japanese/Aztec name for their white character.

This sort of thing is a form of cultural appropriation, which is a pretty huge faux pas. For the uninformed, cultural appropriation is when a member of a dominant culture takes something from an oppressed/minority culture and uses it in a shallow, trendy, or superficial way - and there’s really nothing more shallow or superficial than trying to make your character stand out by giving xir an “exotic” name instead of giving xir a memorable personality and story.

Likewise, people give their characters katanas and throw youkai into their stories for no other reason than “it’s more interesting” than Western culture. Throwing things from another culture into your story for no other reason than you think it’s “more interesting” reduces that culture to a cheap gimmick, which is pretty rude and offensive.

“Harmless” Stereotypes

The Japanese plant-lover. The wise Native American. The sexy Latina. There’s nothing bad about loving plants or being wise or sexy, so why would anyone find these offensive?

For one thing, it can create unrealistic expectations and assumptions about these people. Many Asian-Americans find themselves having to explain to people that no, they don’t know squat about gardening, really. Many Latinas would rather people didn’t expect them to be hot and spicy lovers based on their race. And contrary to what some think, Native Americans aren’t really born with a magical connection to the Earth and tend to find assumptions that they are quite irritating.

The Supercrip

There are two varieties of supercrips: the first is a disabled person who is treated as a hero just for doing everyday things that most people take for granted. It’s quite frankly condescending, and many disabled people would thank you to knock it off.

The second type is the character who has amazing skills or abilities because or in spite of xir disability. While a writer might be trying to say “just because a person has a disability, doesn’t mean they can’t be amazing!”, what the audience hears is “disabled people often have amazing abilities to make up for their disability,” which unfortunately isn’t true.

The Mighty Whitey

The Mighty Whitey is a white person (if not physically, then culturally) who finds xirself faced with the task of saving a marginalized group (often as not from other white people). The character is usually male and ends up becoming the leader of the people he just liberated, and he usually ends up with a hot ethnic-looking gal to boink. (Think Jake Sulley fromAvatar, and you’ve got the Mighty Whitey in a nutshell.) The Mighty Whitey will learn the ways of an ethnic group, and xe will become even better at them than the people who have been studying them all their lives.

What makes this trope so horrendous is the attitude of white supremacy: it implies that non-white people cannot solve their problems without a white person to help or even lead them, and that white people will always be better at everything.

Also, becoming a leader of a people whose culture you have only known/studied for a few months - or even a few years - is one of the most ridiculously puerile fantasies in existence.

Getting Mental Illnesses & Different Neurologies Wrong

Want to create a chilling plot twist? Just the killer the hero’s evil alternate personality! That’s called schizophrenia… right?

Wrong. And this type of thing is incredibly insensitive and offensive.

Aside from the fact that schizophrenia does not create multiple personalities, most people with schizophrenia and multiple personalities are quite harmless. Yet thanks to their portrayal in fiction, many people expect them to be dangerous, which makes their already-difficult lives even more difficult.

Occasionally, some people go the other direction and portray these people as innocent or even mystical. That’s positive discrimination, and that’s also bad because it creates unrealistic expectations.

Whether it’s schizophrenia, multiple personlities, autism, Asperger’s, psychopathy, sociopathy, or anything else, you’re going to use a mental disorder or alternate neurology of any kind, make sure you research it. And whatever you do,NEVER give your character a mental illness just to make xir more “interesting,” because that’s ableism.

Trying to Create an Aesop About Discrimination Without Actually Understanding the Discrimination in Question

Most people think they have a pretty good bead on what racism is all about - it’s about segregation, ugly slurs, and pointy white hats. Same goes with sexism - women can get jobs and vote now, so it must be over, right? Ha, if only.

In real life, these people are very rarely overt - in fact, most racism is extremely subtle, so subtle that the offender doesn’t even realize that what they’ve said or done is offensive or hurtful and will vehemently deny the possiblity that what they said or did could have been offensive. (A common response from these people is “I can’t be an X-ist! I have X friends!” Yeah, if only.)

Some examples of subtle discrimination:

  • Telling rowdy children to “stop running around like a bunch of wild Indians!”
  • Describing a non-white character or person as “exotic.”
  • Dressing up in Halloween costumes depicting ethnic stereotypes.
  • Insisting that a woman who does not want children right now will “change her mind” in the future.
  • Asking a woman why she’s still single if she’s so attractive.
  • Asing a woman who is angry about something if she’s on her period.
  • Insulting males who don’t live up to expectations of perceived masculinity by accusing them of acting “girly” or calling them gay.

If you want to learn more about what real discrimination of all kinds look and feel like, I recommend readingMicroaggressions. (Language warning.) Also, check out this handy-dandy list of links to privilege checklists so you can check your own privilege before writing off into the sunset.

Trying to Satirize a Thing Without Understanding Why it’s a Thing

The film Death Becomes Her satirizes the perceived vanity of performers who spend mind-blowing amounts of money on beauty products and plastic surgeries to stay young. Funny film? Yes. But it’s rather sexist in that it treats this perceived vanity as something that just happens to some women for no real reason. It ignores the fact that we live in a society obsessed with youth and that our consumerist culture has commodified it and tries to make us feel inferior every day for not buying it from them. It ignores the fact that the men in control of the entertainment industry constantly pressure women into getting plastic surgery and enhancements, even flat-out refusing to hire women who don’t meet their exact standards of beauty, regardless of their talent.

Killing Off LGBT Characters to Make an Allegedly Non-Hateful Point

There’s this thing that some writers do - they introduce an LGBT character, try to build some some sympathy for xir, and before you know it they’ve killed off this character in a manner that’s reminiscent of that old and noxious “too good for this sinful Earth” trope that pervaded Puritan literature.

This sends an absolutely terrible message to LGBT people - that the only way they can escape the shame and the hate that so often comes with being LGBT is if they die. LGBT youth are at a higher risk of committing suicide already - clearly, this is not a message we want to be sending.

Forgetting Women of Color in Female-Oriented Entertainment

Buffy the Vampire Slayer. Charmed. Pan Am. Sex in the City. All of these female-aimed shows exhibit distinctly monochrome casting choices. Sure, Charmed was sort of justified in that the three leads were supposed to be sisters. But Pan Am has no excuse - and there were plenty of non-white stewardesses in the 60’s.

Multi-Racial Groups Always With a White at the Helm

This wouldn’t be a problem if it didn’t keep happening all the time. But invariably, whenever there’s a multi-racial group or team of some kind, the leader will invariably be white. The implication is that while non-whites are good enough to have on a team, they still aren’t leadership material.

The Fairytale Gypsy

You know the character type - they live in wagons, wear colorful clothing, read fortunes, and play a mean fiddle.

The trouble is, what you see in fiction is a romanticized version of a very ugly reality: “Gypsy” is actually a racial slur for the Roma and Dom people. The reason they’re nomads is because racists have a habit of routing them out whenever they try to settle down, and their eclectic fashion comes from having to wear whatever they can get. Also, they’re no more magical than you or me.

Their portrayal in many fantasies perpetuates the myth that these people are fairytale creatures who vanished along with Long Ago And Far Away, rather than real people who suffer systemic oppression today.