Remember not all characters express emotions the same way. For example, some characters are more closed off than others and will act accordingly. What makes one character collapse into a sobbing, wailing mess, might make another grieve quietly in a way people who don’t know them well might not even notice. That doesn’t make either reaction less impactful, it simply highlights the differences between the characters’ personalities.
Avoid melodrama. Going overboard with intense expressions of sadness can make them unintentionally humorous. Basically, make the intensity of characters’ emotions suit the situation and don’t let characters endlessly wallow in sorrow throughout the story. While it’s perfectly understandable for emotions to linger, dwelling on the same one with minimal variation risks losing the reader’s interest.
Use buildup judiciously. Sometimes, you might decide to reveal that a bad situation is even more dire than the characters’ first thought, leading them to feel hopeless. Other times, the sad event might strike the characters as suddenly as a lightning strike.Giving characters and readers nuggets of hope can be especially effective. That’s because those lead people to believe that a positive outcome is possible, thereby making it hurt all the more when things take a turn for the worse.
Show characters seeking and giving comfort. Whether they try to drown their sorrows in alcohol or hug their friends close, moments where characters seek or give comfort show how much a sad event is impacting them. This provides good opportunities for bonding and possibly more conflict. Plus, coping mechanisms speak volumes about characters. Do they try to comfort others when they’re practically falling apart themselves? Do they seek some kinds of comfort but avoid others?
Emphasize lost opportunities. What will characters’ find much harder or even impossible now? If a character dies, who or what are they leaving behind? Who misses them now that they are gone? What dreams did they leave unfulfilled?
REBLOG: go to your blog and click the egg to see what hatches
to grow up without you: an aang and air nomad playlist a study into aang and the air nomads through ballads and bittersweet songs
this was made for @tisthequenchiest, i hope you enjoy it rad!
tracklist below
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I love you by Hallpen https://www.deviantart.com/hallpen/art/i-love-you-795694435
Um... should I be concerned that I got Butter, Chipotle, and fucking Carl????
I can’t tell if I should be concerned that I count Carl as a word or if I should fear Carl?????
AUNT MAY THROWING A BANANA AT PETER AND CALLING HIS SPIDEY SENSE “Peter Tingle” NAME A MORE ICONIC AUNT MAY-
Hey hey so yea... I did a thing. This server is for any and all fandoms! Read guidelines for rules and if your fandom isn’t already made into a category HMU on the suggestion channel!!
https://discord.gg/kRCRXSY
Say it with me folks:
“Eat the rich” means 1%ers and billionaires
middle class is closer to poverty than being a multimillionaire
“The rich” does NOT include children of billionaires (come on we’re at least slightly better than the plagues of Egypt)
Upper middle class children SHOULD NOT feel guilt over having money
Being aware of privilege and using your privilege to help others IS NOT a guilt trip
Constantly feeling guilty helps no one
Billionaires, however, should feel guilty over hoarding wealth.
Upper middle class is NOT rich
Black Lives Matter
Trans rights are human rights