deadcatwithaflamethrower:

lilyrose225writes:

tinytalkingtina:

lilyrose225writes:

tinytalkingtina:

lilyrose225writes:

lilyrose225writes:

brain:  …hey, so.  *nudge*
me:  dammit brain we’re busy, no we are most certainly not re-writing old fic just because you had a momentary itch!
brain: okay but it could be cool
me:  I KNOW THAT BUT WE’RE STILL NOT DOING IT

update:  am now looking for the particular fic in question with a morbid sense of curiosity if I ever typed it up

the good news:  can’t find it
the bad news:  that doesn’t mean it isn’t digitally out there somewhere, and there’s still the hard copy in my handwriting over there on the shelf

@tinytalkingtina can verify that my first attempt at smut was a) horrible, and b) entirely too ambitious by a third and pretty indicative of how I go about writing nowadays

I am tinytalkingtina and I can verify this statement. However her skills have vastly improved since then

y’all this is why @tinytalkingtina‘s still one of my closest friends after, what, a decade or so? and blundering my way out of the closet, and mangling the English language, and so on.  she’s still got my back on fics that i’d rather disown.

THE INTERNET DOES NOT NEED TO KNOW ABOUT MY WEREWOLF STORY THAT WAS AN ELABORATE METAPHOR FOR MENSTRUATION. Ahem. That being said Lily is an excellent writer and I will fight you if you disagree.

can i disagree

is that allowed

I’m pretty sure best friends will fight their best friends in these particular instances, yes.

jazzypizzaz:

death-star510:

doktorgirlfriend:

Other, More Considerate People: I like to keep my story as close to canon and ship-free as possible so everyone can enjoy it. 🙂

My Self-Indulgent Ass: ‘Sup, assholes, here’re all my implausible OTPs, their future children, a bunch of OCs that play prominent roles, and all my sexuality headcanons are in effect.

“To understand this fic you’ll need to refer to page 15, side A of my Extensive headcanon timeline of the entire history of this character and everyone he ever met, the contents of which are helpfully provided absolutely nowhere.”

“behold as I construct the precarious scaffolding of this story from discarded tumblr shitposts, my id, a dream I had once, poorly concealed psychological projection, the abstract concept of the way it feels to look out at the sea, and a bunch of dumb jokes I couldn’t stop cackling to myself about. oh, but it’s fanfiction.“

deadcatwithaflamethrower:

einarshadow:

glyndarling:

hazeldomain:

writedreamlie:

lizardywizard:

juliedillon:

note to self: just because someone did the thing you were thinking about doing, and did it way better than you could ever hope to do, doesn’t mean it would be stupid or pointless to go ahead and try to still do the thing anyway. 

Also, when it comes to creative things? There really is no “better”.

Sure, someone might be more technically accomplished than you – you might not be able to colour as nicely or craft a sentence that rings as poetically – but art is only really secondarily about that. It’s firstmost about what you, uniquely, have to express, and how the precise way you express it might be what others need to relate to it – even if it’s less flashy, less “beautiful”, and gets fewer notes.

I promise you this: there are obscure fanfics with only a handful of notes that are the read-and-re-read favourites of someone too anxious to comment. There are drawings done by 14-year-olds in poorly-blended markers that are someone’s favourite because they spoke to something that nothing else did. There are covers of songs where your voice cracks and you cringe every time you hear it but someone thinks the way it cracked just at that moment added beauty to the song. There are angsty three-line poems you wrote at 4am that someone once called “pretentious emo trash” that are loved by someone else going through the same thing as you.

And I guarantee you, there is something unique about your art. Even if you’re “saying something someone else has said”. Even if you’re the thousandth person to take on the subject. Even if you feel like you’re not at all unique. You’re bound to express something, however subtle, that didn’t exist until then.

Art is about connection. And the more you create, the more chance you have of finding other people who experience the world the way you do.

“But the one thing that you have that nobody else has is you. Your voice, your mind, your story, your vision. So write and draw and build and play and dance and live as only you can.“ via @neil-gaiman

The “two cakes” theory of content production. 

It was only yesterday that I was lamenting thing I no longer felt allowed to do because someone had done similar.  

I ought to read this post daily.  Maybe twice daily.

@deadcatwithaflamethrower @paranoidwino @potstickermaster

Always reblog the Two Cakes reminder.

randombitsofstars:

lozenger8:

Little fanfic things that make me smile:

  • When there’s a set of specific and intricate detail work and you just know the author is either drawing from life experience and knowledge, or that they spent a long time researching to get it just right.
  • A reframing of a well known metaphor or simile that makes you think of it in a new way. 
  • An original metaphor or simile that you pause and admire for a while because it’s such a sweet turn of phrase.
  • Dialogue that you can hear perfectly because the phrasing is so on point. 
  • The obvious love and care the author has for the character dynamics, plot and/or setting that shines through in every word, sentence and paragraph.

Always reblog

acemindbreaker:

freedom-of-fanfic:

shipping-isnt-morality:

ladyoftheteaandblood:

shipping-isnt-morality:

I’ve debated for a while about sharing this, but I think it’s important, and, to be fair, plenty of antis have shared the stories of their abuse.

So:

I support people creating romantic content similar to my abuse, even though that content contributed to my abuse.

Let me explain. I was very, very into Twilight when I was around 14. A couple years later a girl called me her lamb, and used the romanticization of jealousy and danger from that novel to excuse things like cutting me, stealing my phone, and demanding my passwords. Among other things. This continued until the end of high school, and it ripped apart every significant relationship in my life without anyone really realizing what was happening.

It’s definitely true that I didn’t recognize jealousy as abuse instead of romance. It’s true that I didn’t recognize “I love you” and “you can’t love anyone but me” as contradictions, and a part of that mentality came from the media I consumed. And she sure as fuck sent me fic – even forced me to write fic – which echoed those values. On a very base level, it is easy to blame my abuse on that fiction, on the unhealthy ideas of romance it gave me. For several years after getting out, I did blame romance like Twilight. I got angry when people I loved enjoyed it, and I thought I was protecting them by demanding that they stop.

But I was wrong.

Let me go out another level.

First of all, I grew up in a deeply homophobic town. There were exactly no adults in my life that I could have even told that I was in a relationship with a girl, let alone that I thought something was wrong. Abuse thrives in silence.

Second of all, I’d been homeschooled most of my life, which meant I had zero education on healthy relationships. I had no context outside of romance novels and fan fiction, which no adults knew I was reading. My view of romance was shaped by media because there were no other sources even trying to compete.

Third of all – and maybe this is most important – writing that fanfic, while in that situation, gave me a voice to things that I couldn’t even admit I was feeling. I wrote fic where a human loved a vampire, but they were scared, they were so scared, it felt like having a gun to their head all the time. They were so scared even as they loved the vampire, and they wanted them, and they wanted to help, and they wanted to be better. (She didn’t like that fic.) It took years before I would call what I experienced abuse, or seek out resources for victims. But fiction gave me a voice right then, when I needed one most.

Media didn’t get me abused. A society which failed utterly at telling me what a healthy relationship looked like got me abused. Parents and teachers and authority figures who were wildly homophobic got me abused. Fiction contributed, but if it wasn’t Twilight, it would have been something else – hell, apparently she repeated the same pattern after me with 50 Shades, and then with Captain America (somehow). Because above all, my abuser got me abused. She used fiction as a tool, but it could have been anything. If I hadn’t read Twilight, it would have been Johnlock, or Drarry, or Russia/America. All those things had more than enough content which portrayed danger and jealousy as sexy.

Do I still read Twilight? Fuck no, it’s a huge trigger. But I’ve stopped blaming it for what happened, because it was never Twilight’s job to teach me about romance. Nor was it fandom’s job to tell me, “if someone actually terrifies you, that’s dangerous, even if it’s sexy. If you love someone but they’re hurting you, you need help, not to try to fix them.” What hurt me most wasn’t fiction; it was the silence from every other quarter.

Media isn’t education on healthy relationships. It can’t be, and it never will be. “Fan fiction made me think that this was ok” means that there were no voices in our lives that we trusted more than fanfiction telling us that it wasn’t okay.

There will always be media that abusers can twist to make it look like what they’re doing is romantic and okay. Always. The abuse is still their fault, and the inability to counter harmful messages is the silence of society’s fault.

I’ll leave you with this: after I got out, I continued reading fic that featured jealousy and possessiveness as something hot. Because I did think it was hot; I now just knew firsthand that it was a kink to only be indulged in controlled situations. Firsthand experience is the harshest teacher, but it does work.

I just tag my own fic that features jealousy and possessiveness as “#abusive behavior.” Because if there is another girl like me out there, being sent these fics by her abuser, stuck in a situation she doesn’t understand – well, if it wasn’t my fic, it’d be someone else’s. The kink’s going to keep on existing. But maybe she’ll see the tag and figure something out.

Fiction is a tool, and taking one tool away won’t stop an abuser, because fiction isn’t causing abuse. If it wasn’t fiction, it’d be something else.

Stop blaming fiction for the actions of a cruel person, and the silence of the people who should have been protecting you.

It hurts to lay the blame at the feet of those you love, but if we deny the problems we will never fix them.

Be safe. Be kind.

I understand that it’s not the fault of a fiction that others get abused BUT I can’t be the only person who feels that aiming a fiction at young girls/boys who are at a very susceptible age, marketing it as hot romance, as a beautiful romance, as exciting. Then doing the same with the films is totally unacceptable.

If we give our young people very bad veiws of what a healthy romance is in fiction and then fail to educate them via home or school what chance do they have.

My daughter read Twilight and 50 shares of grey (at 15), and because I have been talking to her and answering her questions (and there were lots) since she could talk. She could see them for what they were.( She gave me a lecture on why they were bad) Many males and females do not have this at home or at school, so how are they supposed to sort it out in their heads.

Personally, and I know it isn’t fashionable to have these thoughts, I think fiction does have a responsibility not it aim stuff like this at kids and to NSFW tag ect to let people know it’s not for under 18. Iam as I said old fashioned.

Hi! So, first of all: I totally agree that adult content should be tagged NSFW. I think that, overall, a clear distinction between content for adults and minors is a good thing in media and something that helps with a lot of issues.

I also agree, to a degree, that media marketed specifically at people under at a fairly young age needs to be held to more stringent standards than media marketed to people who are older. Based on the ratings systems that most countries have adopted, this is a pretty universal position.

However!

I wanted to use this as a bit of a launching off point, because

If we give our young people very bad veiws of what a healthy romance is in fiction and then fail to educate them via home or school what chance do they have

is a very good point. I stand by the idea that censoring media does relatively little, but does that mean we just abandon kids who don’t have the support in their home or school to learn about these things? Well, no. I don’t think it’s anybody else’s responsibility, per se, but I think a lot of us can relate to that situation and want to help, so I wanted to talk a little about some things that I do that I think can be actually helpful to kids in this position.

  • Get politically involved to support better sex education. A lot of these decision are made at a local level – some as small as at the school-board level – which means any participation has a big impact. Even if you’re a student – especially if you’re a student – this is something you can do right now. Here’s a real basic breakdown of how to do some district-level activism. While this doesn’t instantly help kids in the situation, comprehensive and accurate sex and relationship education in schools is the only long-term solution to this problem.
  • Support resources aiming to help kids that aren’t getting this information elsewhere. Planned Parenthood’s a common one; Scarleteen and Sex Etc. are two other sites specifically directed at teens that are lgbtq+ friendly and aimed at education.  If you know of an organization that’s working to educate teens about these things, support them.
  • Write meta. At the fandom & community level, I think that meta is one of the things that is the most underrated in this discussion. Meta is part of what helped me realize that what was depicted in Twilight – and therefore what had happened to me – was abuse. If you see abuse, or other problematic things, in fandom, I think putting together a well-structured argument for why you think that is one of the best tools available for education. (In the current fandom climate it might be necessary to put a disclaimer of “This isn’t meant as a condemnation of people who enjoy this media, but just a discussion of it” might be necessary. I don’t think that takes away from its power at all.)
  • Pay attention to how work is getting tagged. If you’re a consumer of “problematic” content, keep a close eye on the tagging being used in your community. Lots of people get sloppy after a while, if they’re posting a lot and used to only interacting within the community (myself included). Gentle reminders of “hey, this really should be tagged with [X]” from within the community are going to be way, way, way more effective than attacks from outside the community.

There’s a lot that can be done to help teens that aren’t getting the kind of education they need and deserve while at home; I just don’t really agree that restriction the kind of fictional content allowed to exist on public sites that allow adult content on the basis of “but what if young people get the wrong idea?” is an effective method of combatting this problem.

this post is such a good post.

one thing I’d add: 

recognize and talk about fiction in the context of the society it’s from. for instance, Twilight and 50 SoG both romanticize abusive relationships. However, they didn’t spring out of a vacuum. They were written, marketed, and praised as great romance stories because in America – the country where both stories were written – abusive relationships are treated as romantic in real life, and the possessive, overbearing, controlling behavior is proof of a man’s love, not warning signs of an abuser.

as visible, slightly removed depictions of what women/afab people are often told to want irl by all signs around them, Twilight and 50SoG were easy vehicles to abuse for abusers in fandom spaces. but they can also be a great vehicle for showing how disturbing and abusive these relationships actually are in reality. recognizing how stories like this are part of a whole can help young fandom members more clearly see how the real world pushes dangerous ideas, and how to avoid being hurt by them.

I feel like basically all of my concerns about Twilight and 50SoG would be solved if they’d been published with some sort of tag or disclaimer saying that the relationships depicted in those stories are abusive, and in the case of 50SoG that real BDSM is not like this.

If we could normalize AO3 style tagging as a thing that mainstream books have in the foreword or something, that’d be awesome. Although to be fair, I’m pretty sure Stephanie Meyer wouldn’t be willing to tag Twilight, and I’m guessing the same is true for whoever wrote 50SoG (I can’t remember the author’s name). But if editors went ‘hey, we won’t publish this unless it’s appropriately tagged’, that would be awesome.

justgot1:

welkinalauda:

goodqueenalys:

goodqueenalys:

goodqueenalys:

goodqueenalys:

goodqueenalys:

When I find my ship in times of trouble,

Fanfic authors come to me,

Speaking words of wisdom: Ao3.

And when some broken-hearted shippers,

Don’t get a canon otp,

There will be an answer: Ao3.

And in my hour of darkness,

The Archive is in front of me,

With the filter set on “Rated E.”

Ao3… Ay oh threeeeee,

Ay oh three… Yeah Ao3,

Why would you pay for porn when fic is free!?

Adding some of my favorite additions to this because omg some of these are seriously pure 24 karat fucking GOLD!

[holds up lighter]

Feedback culture is dead, long live feedback culture!

bonehandledknife:

iguanastevens:

AO3, fanfiction, and comments: the system isn’t working. 

Fic authors have a problem with feedback – or rather, with the lack of it. Fanfiction has a notoriously low ratio of comments to hits, and many of us have expressed our frustration that we can get a hundred, two hundred, five hundred, even a thousand views on our stories, but only a handful of readers will leave kudos, let alone comments.   

Unfortunately, this only gets worse for long, multi-chapter stories (aka, the longfics we know, love, and would sell our souls in a second if it meant an update), which also happen to be the stories that authors need the most support to continue and complete. Law of diminishing returns, y’all, and it sucks. 

We’re not here to guilt you into leaving comments.

We want to address the problem by changing the format, and we need your help to do it. 

The goal is to increase the amount of feedback authors get from readers, especially on stories with multiple chapters, and to make it easier for everyone to show how much we love fics. We’re opening a discussion with ao3 to figure out how/if any of these options can be implemented, but first we need options to present! 

Some of our current ideas: 

  • Ability to leave a form of kudos on every chapter, instead of only once on the entire story: this lets authors know that you’re here and you’re reading their updates, so their hard work isn’t getting tossed into the internet void. 
  • Comment templates: suggested comments that can be customized or posted as-is. Many of us draw a blank or get nervous when we try to think of a comment, so having pre-made options will both increase the total level of feedback and serve as practice, making it easier to leave more in-depth comments in the future. 
  • Upvoting/leaving kudos on comments themselves: positive reinforcement makes giving feedback more fun and rewarding, and it lets the author know that readers are present and agreeing with other comments, even if they don’t leave one themselves. 

We’ll contact AO3 to discuss the possibility of adding any of these as native features, and if that won’t work, we’re looking into creating and sharing a user script. 

 What you can do to help: 

  •  As a reader, what would you like to have? What would you be most likely to use? New ideas, opinions on ideas that are listed here, they’re all good. 
  • As a creator, how would you feel about each of these options? Can you think of other ways of receiving or encouraging feedback? 
  • Pros and cons of these (note: our thoughts on this are discussed in this google doc
  • GET THE WORD OUT! Reblog this post, send it to your friends, link to it from your stories. We need as much input and support as possible to get this off the ground. 

Feedback makes for happy authors. Happy authors make for more stories. Let’s keep this part of fandom alive! 

More details about our thoughts, discussions, and ideas can be found in this google doc.

make it easier to quote stuff you like back at the authors 

see: good reads

So I’m not sure if this has been asked before, but do you remember the reaction you or your fellow fans had to the episode with Tarsus IV tragedy? it’s still a huge thing in the Star Trek fandom, especially with the fanfic writers, so I’m curious how this reveal that kirk is the survivor of such a horrific tragedy affected your outlook of him.

spockslash:

What a great question! Thanks for asking me; I’ve been thinking about it for some days, and I also asked some of my fan friends from way back to get their memories on the subject.

When I returned to fandom after 25 years and started reading modern fan fic on AO3, I noticed how much the Tarsus tragedy is infused into Jim’s being, his character.  It’s my memory, and my friends concur, that this came up in an occasional story back in the 70s, but it was not much written about nor did it shape Jim’s character the way it often does now.

I’ve been puzzling over this difference in how fandom, 40 years apart, views this incident so differently. The best I can come up with is that society’s attitudes and understanding have changed dramatically in the intervening years.

In the 70s we, as a society, were so much less informed and aware of how trauma can affect a person’s psyche.  That shows in how badly Vietnam veterans were treated: they were generally considered to be “malingering” when they came home with PTSD (which was not a term we had in our vocabulary yet). They were criticized and marginalized, because society then thought it unmanly to be so affected by trauma.  A sad and shameful part of our history.

I find it very interesting to read the newer fiction and see how a younger generation allows Jim to be human, not just some outdated ideal of a “real man.” I like how he is treated with more tenderness.  I know it does not appeal to everyone of my generation, but I like it.  And I love that younger people still care enough about Jim and his cohorts to want to write new fan fic, giving a new understanding of these characters, one that is true to their (your?) own worldview and experience.