Updated 9th September 2024 More writing tips, review tips & writing description notes
Facial Expressions
Masking Emotions
Smiles/Smirks/Grins
Eye Contact/Eye Movements
Blushing
Voice/Tone
Body Language/Idle Movement
Thoughts/Thinking/Focusing/Distracted
Silence
Memories
Happy/Content/Comforted
Love/Romance
Sadness/Crying/Hurt
Confidence/Determination/Hopeful
Surprised/Shocked
Guilt/Regret
Disgusted/Jealous
Uncertain/Doubtful/Worried
Anger/Rage
Laughter
Confused
Speechless/Tongue Tied
Fear/Terrified
Mental Pain
Physical Pain
Tired/Drowsy/Exhausted
Eating
Drinking
Warm/Hot
How do I write a girldad? Because I saw a severe lack of girldad prompts in your writing prompts.
Make the character show love and attention to his daughter(s).
He is proud of everything his daughters do and encourage them to achieve their dreams and simply do what they want to do.
Listening to his daughters concerns, and giving advice if it is wanted.
Being protective of his daughters, but knowing that they also need to respect their independence and the decisions they make.
Being involved in their lives, knowing who their friends are and how they are doing in school and in sports.
Treating other women in his life with respect, showing his daughters the right standard.
That the daughters are getting older may be difficult for the girldad, but he copes and learns to adapt to their new lives.
Including light-hearted and playful conversations to show their close bond.
Giving them sincere and loving exchanges.
Showing everyday interactions, like discussing school, friends, or plans for the weekend.
Having him give attention and affection to his daughters even in public.
Showing that the daughter's female friends also feel comfortable with the dad.
Having them share a hobby, especially one that is considered more feminine.
More: Masterpost: How to write a story
I hope you have fun with this! I'm thinking about making a prompt list for a girldad, so maybe there is something coming in the future.
- Jana
Rain: cleansing, sadness, renewal, obstacles
Sunshine: happiness, hope, clarity, energy
Storms: conflict, turmoil, dramatic change
Snow: purity, stillness, coldness, isolation
Fog: confusion, mystery, uncertainty
Wind: change, freedom, unrest, communication
Eagle: freedom, vision, strength, courage
Lion: bravery, power, leadership, pride
Dove: peace, love, innocence, spirituality
Wolf: loyalty, cunning, survival, community
Snake: transformation, danger, temptation, wisdom
Butterfly: transformation, beauty, impermanence
Rose: love, beauty, passion, secrecy
Oak Tree: strength, endurance, wisdom
Willow Tree: sadness, flexibility, resilience
Lotus Flower: purity, enlightenment, rebirth
Ivy: friendship, fidelity, eternity
Cactus: endurance, protection, warmth
Mirror: self-reflection, truth, illusion
Key: opportunity, secrets, freedom
Bridge: connection, transition, overcoming obstacles
Candle: hope, spirituality, life, guidance
Clock: time, mortality, urgency
Mask: disguise, deception, concealment
One: beginnings, unity, individuality
Two: partnership, balance, duality
Three: creativity, growth, completeness
Four: stability, order, foundation
Five: change, adventure, unpredictability
Seven: mystery, spirituality, luck
Spring: renewal, birth, growth, hope
Summer: vitality, abundance, joy, freedom
Autumn: change, maturity, decline, reflection
Winter: death, stillness, introspection, endurance
Light: knowledge, purity, safety, enlightenment
Darkness: ignorance, evil, mystery, fear
Shadow: the unconscious, secrets, mystery
Twilight: ambiguity, transition, mystery
Fire: passion, destruction, energy, transformation
Water: emotion, intuition, life, change
Earth: stability, grounding, fertility, growth
Air: intellect, communication, freedom, change
π¦π±βπ° π«π¬π± π¦πͺππ¬π°π°π¦ππ©π’ π±π¬ ππ’ π°ππ±π¦π°π£π¦π’π‘
Itβs one of the first instincts writers have: describe your character. What they look like, what they wear, how they move. But the truth is β readers donβt need to know everything. And more importantly, they donβt want to know everything. At least, not all at once. Not without reason.
Letβs talk about when to describe a characterβs appearance, how to do it meaningfully, and why less often says more.
1. Ask: Who Is Seeing Them? And Why Now?
The best descriptions are filtered through a perspective. Whoβs noticing this character, and what do they see first? What do they expect to see, and what surprises them?
She looked like someone who owned every book you were supposed to have read in school. Glasses slipping down her nose. Sharp navy coat, sensible shoes, and an air of knowing too much too soon.
Now weβre not just learning what she looks like β weβre learning how she comes across. That tells us more than eye color ever could.
2. Use Appearance to Suggest Character, Not List Facts
Avoid long physical checklists. Instead, choose a few details that do double work β they imply personality, history, class, mood, or context.
Ineffective: She had long, wavy brown hair, green eyes, a small nose, and full lips. She wore jeans and a white shirt.
Better: Her hair was tied back like she hadnβt had time to think about it. Jeans cuffed, a shirt buttoned wrong. Tired, maybe. Or just disinterested.
You donβt need to know her exact features β you feel who she is in that moment.
3. Know When Itβs Not the Moment
Introducing a character in the middle of action? Emotion? Conflict? Donβt stop the story for a physical description. It kills momentum.
Instead, thread it through where it matters.
He was pacing. Long-legged, sharp-shouldered β he didnβt seem built for waiting. His jaw kept twitching like he was chewing on the words he wasnβt allowed to say.
We learn about his build and his mood and his internal tension β all in motion.
4. Use Clothing and Gesture as Extension of Self
What someone chooses to wear, or how they move in it, says more than just whatβs on their body.
Her sleeves were too long, and she kept tucking her hands inside them. When she spoke, she looked at the floor. Not shy, exactly β more like someone used to being half-disbelieved.
This is visual storytelling with emotional weight.
5. Finally: Describe When It Matters to the Story, Not Just the Reader
Are they hiding something? Trying to impress? Standing out in a crowd? Use appearance when it helps shape plot, stakes, or power dynamics.
He wore black to the funeral. Everyone else in grey. And somehow, he still looked like the loudest voice in the room.
That detail matters β it changes how we see him, and how others react to him.
TL;DR:
Donβt info-dump descriptions.
Filter visuals through a point of view.
Prioritize impression over inventory.
Describe only what tells us more than just what they look like β describe what shows who they are.
Because no one remembers a checklist.
But everyone remembers the girl who looked like sheβd walked out of a forgotten poem.
art will save you, being unreasonably passionate about something niche will save you, letting past sources of joy show you the way back to yourself will save you, earnestness over composure will save you, the natural world will save you, caring for something bigger than yourself will save you, daring to be seen will save you, kindness not as a whim but a principle will save you, appreciation as a practice will save you, daring to try something new will save you, grounding will save you, love will save you, one good nights sleep will save you
When fear, dread, or guilt gets sickeningβliterallyβyour character is consumed with a gut-clenching feeling that something is very, very wrong. Here's how to write that emotion using more than the classic "bile rose to the back of their throat".
This isnβt just about discomfort. Itβs about a complete rebellion happening inside their body.
Their stomach twists like a knot that keeps pulling tighter
A cold sweat beads on their neck, their palms, their spine
Their insides feel sludgy, like everything theyβve eaten is suddenly unwelcome
They double over, not from pain, but because sitting still feels impossible
Vomiting isnβt just a stomach reactionβitβs the whole body.
Their mouth goes dry, and then too wet
Their jaw tightens, trying to contain it
A sudden heat blooms in their chest and face, overwhelming
The back of their throat burnsβnot bile, but the threat of it
Breathing becomes a conscious effort: in, out, shallow, sharp
Nausea doesnβt always need a physical cause. Tie it to emotion for more impact:
Fear: The kind thatβs silent and wide-eyed. Theyβre frozen, too sick to speak.
Guilt: Their hands are cold, but their face is flushed. Every memory plays like a film reel behind their eyes.
Shock: Something just snapped inside. Their body registered it before their brain did.
Donβt just describe the nauseaβshow them reacting to it.
They press a fist to their mouth, pretending itβs a cough
Their knees weaken, and they lean on a wall, pretending itβs just fatigue
They excuse themselves quietly, then collapse in a bathroom stall
They swallow, again and again, like thatβll keep everything down
Even if they donβt actually throw up, the aftermath sticks.
A sour taste that wonβt leave their mouth.
A pulsing headache
A body that feels hollowed out, shaky, untrustworthy
The shame of nearly losing control in front of someone else
A character feeling like vomiting is vulnerable. It's real. Itβs raw. It means theyβre overwhelmed in a way they canβt hide. And that makes them relatable. You donβt need melodramaβyou need truth. Capture that moment where the world spins, and they donβt know if itβs panic or flu or fear, but all they want is to get out of their own body for a second.
Don't just write the bile. Write the breakdown.
Soooo maybe an oddly specific question. Could you recommend your favorite books about politics in the last decade? Or even in the last 20 years? My school sucked and I'm trying to learn about modern politics on my own but there's so much content available that I'm lost. And you're very smart and read a lot, so I'm hoping you have recommendations. Thanks!!!
Omg thank you, I do read a lot so Iβm glad someone appreciates it.Β
Here are my top 20 books on politics and related sociological issues. I included some of these in a list I made over Christmas but I'll add to it here, and most are from the last 20 years.Β
This Town: Two Parties and a Funeral β plus plenty of valet parking! β in Americaβs Gilded Capital by Mark Leibovich
They Were Her Property: White Women as Slave Owners in the American South by Stephanie E. Jones-Rogers
The Destruction of Hillary Clinton by Susan Bordo (pair with What Happened by Hillary Rodham Clinton)
All the President's Men by Carl Bernstein
We Were Eight Years in Power: An American Tragedy by Ta-Nehisi Coates
Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents by Isabel Wilkerson
The Cruelty is the Point by Adam Serwer
Why We're Polarized by Ezra Klein
Women & Power: A Manifesto by Mary Beard
The Soul of America: The Battle for our Better AngelsΒ by Jon Meacham
This Will Not Pass: Trump, Biden, and the Battle for America's Future by Jonathan Martin and Alexander Burns
Political Fictions by Joan Didion
A Promised Land by Barack Obama
The Origins of Totalitarianism by Hannah Arendt
Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln by Doris Kearns Goodwin
The Optimistic Leftist: Why the 21st Century Will Be Better Than You ThinkΒ by Ruy TeixeiraΒ
The Perils of βPrivilegeβ by Phoebe Maltz Bovy
Both/And by Huma Abedin
Renegades by Barack Obama and Bruce Springsteen (usual recommendation to listen to their podcast)
Beautiful Things by Hunter Biden (As you can tell by the below excerpt, Hunter Biden is me fr fr)
In one of my recent posts, I talked about losses as a core principle in driving a plot forward.
It's recommended in almost all guides. But here's the thing: someone doesn't have to actually die to create that emotional rollercoaster.
Here are 20 different losses your protagonist can face without losing someone to the cold hands of death:
1. Loss of a dream job opportunity
2. End of a long-term relationship or marriage
3. Betrayal by a close friend or family member
4. Financial ruin or bankruptcy
5. Loss of a beloved pet (The pet could go missing.)
6. Rejection from a prestigious program or institution
7. Injury or illness leading to the loss of physical abilities
8. Destruction of a childhood home
9. Loss of custody of a child
10. Failure to achieve a lifelong dream or goal
11. Being falsely accused of a crime
12. Natural disaster destroying personal belongings and home
13. Loss of a valuable family heirloom
14. Experiencing discrimination or injustice
15. Being forced to move away from a beloved community
16. Losing a significant competition or contest
17. Loss of memory or cognitive abilities
18. Falling out with a mentor or role model
19. Closure of a cherished local business
20. Loss of one's reputation due to scandal or rumor
Thank you for all of your support. If you love my blog, consider gifting me a rose. Val's here, and I hope your characters are ready to paint the town red.
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