pastmalebeauty:

Wolfgang Lauinger (1918 – 2017), top and bottom left, has died this week. He was imprisoned in a concentration camp for being homosexual, by the Nazi Regime. Like other homosexuals when the camps were liberated he was sent to a German state prison to complete his sentence, being released in 1951. He was arrested for being homosexual again within a couple of years. However he was released when the key witness refused to testify against him.

In June 2017 a law was passed in Germany to grant compensation and rehabilitation to gay men who had suffered in the past. His application for this was refused two months ago, due to his acquittal in 1951, and his suffering under the Nazis and during the post war years was ignored.

We all remember the evils of fascism against gay men.

Hello, friend. I was wondering if you had any advice on adding a creep factor to a story? I’m trying to make a novella I’m writing creepy without it being obviously so. Like, you know how some things are unnerving and you can’t explain why? I want it sort of like that.

she-who-fights-and-writes:

Congrats,
@im-basic-but-ur-the-bitch​, your ask has been selected for one of my Long
Posts™!

TWO
THINGS TO ADD THAT EXTRA CREEP FACTOR IN YOUR STORIES

image

Hello, friend! The thing about
writing with “creep factor“ is the fact that different things creep different
people out. A person who might be terrified of old porcelain dolls is can be
completely unfazed by masked murderers and vice versa.

Keep this in mind whenever you write
scary stories, so that you know that it’s not going to scare EVERYONE. This
will help make sure that you’re not overwhelmed or daunted by making your story
eerie, since you know that it’s not going to please all of the people that read
it.

With that said, let’s launch into
two things that will make your scary story even scarier.

1.
Setting

image

Setting is key when it comes to
making your story extra creepy; a story set in an abandoned mental asylum
during a midnight storm is way scarier than a story set in a pretty garden on a
sunny day.

However, the setting of your story doesn’t
have to be the classic cemetery or haunted mansion. In fact, those settings in
scary/eerie stories are so predictable that they’re almost cliche by this
point.

Don’t be afraid to spice up your
setting! A part of your story that could make it eerie is that it’s set in a
place that isn’t normally scary but can be under certain conditions.

For example, a nursery school is a
nice, fun place with happy children, colorful walls and pictures, and arts and
crafts. However, it becomes an entirely different place if you’re locked in at
night and there are children laughing despite the fact that the last students
left over eight hours ago.

Places that seem benevolent during
the day transform at night or during a storm, when the shadows stretch across
the walls and manipulate what you see.

What places make the hairs on the
back of your neck stand up whenever you’re there? What places only freak you
out under certain conditions?

In this case with writing, I
encourage you to draw upon your own feelings. What factors would make a
seemingly harmless room turn into a horrorshow? If you get the chills reading
over your story, chances are that your readers will too.

Here are some settings/things that
personally creep me out and perhaps will creep you guys out, too:

– Long, dark hallways

– Antique mirrors

– Forests at night

– Abandoned paths

– Literally any fucking abandoned
place like highkey get me the fuck out of there

– A room that’s empty except for a
creepy thing sitting in the center like a doll or something

– Being alone in dark houses, even
if that house is your own

– Living room with the lights off,
nothing illuminating it except the TV that’s showing static

– Stuffed animals that have been
mutilated

– Footprints belonging to no one

– Disembodied voices

– fucking SCAMPERING like holy shit
on those let’s plays I shit my pants whenever I hear a little
kid/animal/whatever the fuck skittering around somewhere behind me

– Breathing that isn’t your own

– Old mansions that creak in the
wind

– Cemeteries, especially when you’re
standing over a grave and expect hands to reach up and grab your ankle

– Deserted streets and alleyways

– Dead end streets lit but nothing
but street lamps

– Empty parks at night

– Houses lit only by candlelight

– Normal rooms but you know someone
has died in there/ there have been hauntings in there before

– Things looking through the window,
especially humanoids with glowing eyes

– Footsteps running toward you in
the dark

2.
Company

image

Sometimes, the people within the
story can be the deciding factor on it being creepy. This includes both the
villains, the heroes, and the morally ambiguous peeps in between.

Some people are creepier than
others, and some people are unsettled by different things, and once again you
should choose what best fits your story and what creeps you out the most. Would
you be more scared of an axe-wielding man in a mask standing at the end of your
hallway or two black-eyed little girls holding hands.

Here are some people/characteristics
about people and creatures that would personally freak me out and may freak you
out, too:

– Large, empty eyes

-Open/gaping mouths

– Contorted bodies

– Fast skittering and crawling
instead of walking

– Stringy hair

– Sallow, shriveled faces

– Sharp teeth

– White eyes/ no eyes/ completely
black eyes

– Basically look at the
illustrations of any “Scary stories to tell in the dark” book and you’ll get
what I mean

– Suspicious/eerie dialogue


HOPE THIS HELPED!

Holy shit I’m writing this at night
and just had to go get up and close my door because it’s behind me and I was
afraid something was going to creep up and pounce on me. Thanks guys.

systlin:

systlin:

nonsenseandstuff:

systlin:

kamikaze-kumquat:

systlin:

I crocheted myself a pair of socks. 

They are slightly misshapen and lopsided because I followed my standard MO of “Fuckit do the thing PATTERN WHAT PATTERN HAHAHAHA” but I am very proud of them. 

Another crocheter who tells the yarn “Fuck you! I’ll MAKE it work!” in da house! *high five*

My crocheting process; 

1. Start chaining

2. ????????? IDK man stuff happens

3. FUCK (Rips out row)

4.  Repeat step 2

5. Finished project!

A demonstration of the difference between crocheting and knitting and an example of why I don’t knit.
You can’t say fuck it in knitting.

This is EXACTly the explanation of why knitting and I have never gotten on. 

I can wing that shit in crochet. if you need to add a few stitches or drop them NBD. 

Incidentally, crocheting was invented in Scotland by farmwives, presumably because “Fuck you ya dafty tit, am no going tae let no ball of wool tell me what fer while I’m makin some stockings for the weans.” 

the-spoonie-life:

freudian-slip-of-the-tongue:

           I
created this project due to the underwhelming acceptance and knowledge of ‘invisible
disabilities.’ The pill bottles that make up the walker all belong to either
myself or family members of mine who wanted to partake in this project as they
have invisible disabilities. I wished to bring awareness to the range of
disabilities that exist, and show that not all disabilities are viewed the same
nor are they all visible to outsiders.                                                                The
walker represents the fact that these medications, for some, are what allows individuals
to ‘get by’ from day to day. Just like someone with a broken bone would require
a cast to heal, some individuals require daily medication in order to survive
& be able to actively participate in life.
            Some disabilities have a negative stigma attached to them, thus creating a feeling
of shame and embarrassment around them. Sadly, this is not uncommon when it comes
to mental illnesses, which is why this project was so important to me. I strive
towards contributing to the breakdown of negative stereotypes/stigmas/feelings
towards those who have a mental illness(es).                  The medication(s) that some individuals take daily are their ‘walker.’ It helps them stand on their own two feet & gives them their quality of life back. 

This is such a good way of making the “invisible” visible