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Mario Kart but there’s no carts and you’re just running.
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I don’t think he hears genuine laughter very often
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me: I don’t like mushrooms
Also me when there’s raw mushrooms in the fridge: 😋
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I will take that rabbit and give him found family whether he LIKES IT or NOT.
Click for higher quality + alt text :)
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Title - The Endos
Fandom - My Hero Academia
Rating - Mature
Genre - Angst, family drama
TW / warning in general - Child / domestic abuse, mental illness and neurodivergence (DID, autism, (unspecified mood disorder), etc.)
Summary / description: Kosa Endo, a 15 year old male with autism and DID, is part of a family of fifteen. None of these children are his siblings, but he loves them as if they were. Him and his siblings (except one) were all adopted by a hero couple. How lucky! You’d think so, wouldn’t you.
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Chapters: 20/?
Name: The Endos
Fandom: My Hero Academia
Language: English
Relationships: None so far
Chapters: 10/?
Rating: Teen and up (not sexual but still mature).
Warnings: Abuse, violence, neurodivergence (autism and a mood disorder), mental illness (DID), OCxCanon.
#ao3#self promotion#fic#my fic#my hero academia#mha#bnha#boku no hero academia#mha fic#fanfic#ao3fic#ao3 link#ao3 fanfic
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Hagakure Headcanon.
She wasn’t born invisible. She was playing hide and seek with her parents one day and they couldn’t find her. It has been 20 minutes and they were starting to panic. She then crawled out from a spot they had checked 80 times, completely invisible (except her clothes) and ready for another round of hide and seek.
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Name: The Endos
Fandom: My Hero Academia
Language: English
Relationships: None so far
Chapters: 10/?
Rating: Teen and up (not sexual but still mature).
Warnings: Abuse, violence, neurodivergence (autism and a mood disorder), mental illness (DID), OCxCanon.
#writers on tumblr#ao3 link#ao3feed#ao3 stuff#ao3#ao3 writer#ao3fic#ao3 fanfic#self promotion#writing
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Hagakure Headcanon.
She wasn’t born invisible. She was playing hide and seek with her parents one day and they couldn’t find her. It has been 20 minutes and they were starting to panic. She then crawled out from a spot they had checked 80 times, completely invisible (except her clothes) and ready for another round of hide and seek.
#i don’t know if this is a headcanon#i hope it is#mha#mha hagakure#hagakure#toru hagakure#mha headcanons
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Name: The Endos
Fandom: My Hero Academia
Language: English
Relationships: None so far
Chapters: 10/?
Rating: Teen and up (not sexual but still mature).
Warnings: Abuse, violence, neurodivergence (autism and a mood disorder), mental illness (DID), OCxCanon.
#writing#fanfic#writers#fiction#my hero academia#anime#my ocs#my fic#mha fic#mha#bnha#mha oc#fic promo
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Reddish green is technically a colour, it’s just an olivey brown
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Sometimes i’ll spend 30 minutes finding the exact name of the colour i’m describing just so that my readers can perfectly imagine what the character’s hair looks like, even though literally nobody has ever heard of the colour tourmaline before.
Get Specific
I’ve given a lot of feedback (and received even more) across my writing career, and I think one of the most common things I’ve traded with writers is Get Specific. In everything, all the time. Specificity is easy to gloss over because we aren’t actually seeing the scene in front of us—so while we may subconsciously know the trees are cedars, we just write trees. However, word choices matter, and those tiny specific details are painting your world, carrying your tone, and exploring the uniqueness of your writer voice.
What kind of trees? What colour is the rug? What’s included in the breakfast and how does it taste? It’ll be easier to take away too many details than to go back through and try to find every missed opportunity.
However, the level of detail also depends on what the character knows. A biologist should be able to name the different kinds of plants around them with specificity, whereas another character may generalize to ‘ferns’ or ‘small yellow flowers’. Either way, you can get specific using just a general level of knowledge—size, colour, texture, smell, taste, etc.
We create specificity in focusing in on our five senses. If we need to consider what the flower smells like, we’ll have to consider what kind of flower it is, so ‘pretty flowers lined the walkway’ becomes ‘delicate stalks of lavender lined the walkway, their sweet, floral scent hanging on the air—reminding me of bathroom soap.’ Etc. etc.
Try picking out a scene you’ve written recently and see where you can add more specific imagery—how does it change the tone of the scene?
Good luck!
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