Music Playing: Star Sailor “Faith Hope Love” (on repeat one)
Urgh. It’s July in Georgia, so naturally it’s hotter than the surface of the sun outside. I think the asphalt is melting…
Anyhow, it’s time for the long awaited status update. Despite the challenge of writing while we’re also moving (countdown to two weeks), I still managed to get some worldbuilding on my new project done. I also bought some Prismacolors colored pencils so I could make my maps pretty (and accurate. I am coloring in the biomes of my made up planet). I am still brainstorming for my newest project, since it would be futile to start something and then move a week later (I moved once while in the middle of writing a novel, and let me warn you: do not do this. Avoid it at all costs. It kills that lovely momentum you generate while you’re in the fervor of creation).
But that’s okay, because I need to do some serious worldbuilding before I can start writing anyway, and it’s proving to be a good diversion from all the boxes lying around.
Recently I have fallen in love with Starsailor’s song “Faith Hope Love.” I mean, in deep, deep lover with this song. I have listened to it over and over. Yes, I am one of those annoying people that like to replay the same song to death. But I am considerately annoying, and only do it when no one else is around.
I consider this song repetition to be an extension of my mild OCD. I call it OCD for lack of a better term, but I am actually just extremely anal retentive about certain things. I don’t have a meltdown if my desk is messy, however, so I am not clinically OCD. But I DO like things to be a certain way, and I am fussy about organization. I can also concentrate on repetitive things (as you might have gathered from my listening to the same song over and over).
This freakish ability has translated well into my writing. I can line edit for a good period of time, not to mention being able to sustain interest in a world, an idea, and characters long enough to write and edit a book with them. Just another example of how certain behaviors that are frowned upon in the “normal” world are a boon for a writer. Other behaviors include talking to yourself, making up stories, and staring at a computer all day.
What about you guys? What personality quirks have actually come in handy for your writing?
Tuesday, July 13, 2010
Friday, July 9, 2010
The Magic Formula: How to Write a Novel
One of my best friends just showed this to me. So naturally, I am going to pass it along.
How to Write a Novel
Clearly I have been doing this novel writing thing all wrong. I am especially guilty of number 2 and 4. And number 1 and 3. Okay, okay. So now that I have been shown the Magic Formula for writing a novel I shall go forth and write a masterpiece. I just need to make sure I remember 1. Think up a story and 2. Using about 80,000 words, write story down.
It’s all so much clearer for me now.
How to Write a Novel
Clearly I have been doing this novel writing thing all wrong. I am especially guilty of number 2 and 4. And number 1 and 3. Okay, okay. So now that I have been shown the Magic Formula for writing a novel I shall go forth and write a masterpiece. I just need to make sure I remember 1. Think up a story and 2. Using about 80,000 words, write story down.
It’s all so much clearer for me now.
Thursday, July 8, 2010
Organization
Music Playing: Slipknot: Snuff
Hi guys! Elizabeth here, blogging from the floor. Yep, the floor. I am moving in two weeks, so we’re getting our stuff pack and furniture broken down. The desk that my lap top normally sits on it no more (it was old and falling apart…it wouldn’t have survived another move), so the lap top is sitting on the floor while I get my desk packed up.
Staring at a mountain of boxes, I am struck by the importance of organization. Not that I have too much stuff, but the importance of organization. At least, that’s my story and I am sticking to it.
I am an organized person, mostly. But there have been times where I searched all over the house in vain for the slip of paper I wrote a book idea or a sentence down on. Especially when that paper relates to a current work, it feels like finding that sentence is the deal breaker for whether or not the book is going to be absolute crap or a literary masterpiece.
Even if you don’t go so far as to have “make such and such list” on your to do list, like yours truly, I think we all can agree that organization is important to writers. Some people make entire “book bibles” where they dedicate a notebook to their book. They keep pictures, and character bios, timelines, settings, and plot events all in one, easy to reference notebook. Sometimes this is in addition to notes on the computer, or in lieu of them.
I haven’t tried making a book bible yet, but I intend to for my next book. I like having everything on the computer, but sometimes it’s a pain to shift through several documents on the computer. It might be easier to have everything right in front of me.
Whether it’s a book bible, a spot on your desk, or an entire shelf built as a shrine to your book, it’s a good idea to stay consistent with your organization system. And, please please please back up your work. We’ve all heard horror stories about losing books on the computer. Don’t let this happen to you. I lost an entire hard disk (back when dinosaurs roamed the earth and we used hard disks to store information on) of poetry and story ideas when I was 19 and I cried for weeks. I still think about that disk. It feels like losing a piece of yourself when you lose that amount of information. So back up your books. Save an extra copy, and keep it somewhere safe. You don’t want to lose a book because you forgot where you stuffed the manuscript or because it got lost in the shuffle of papers.
In other news, Noah Lukeman has an entire book about writing query letter for free download on his website. I have already downloaded it, and let me tell you, it’s a gem!
Well, that’s the end of today’s PSA. How do you guys organize your work? Anything brilliant?
Hi guys! Elizabeth here, blogging from the floor. Yep, the floor. I am moving in two weeks, so we’re getting our stuff pack and furniture broken down. The desk that my lap top normally sits on it no more (it was old and falling apart…it wouldn’t have survived another move), so the lap top is sitting on the floor while I get my desk packed up.
Staring at a mountain of boxes, I am struck by the importance of organization. Not that I have too much stuff, but the importance of organization. At least, that’s my story and I am sticking to it.
I am an organized person, mostly. But there have been times where I searched all over the house in vain for the slip of paper I wrote a book idea or a sentence down on. Especially when that paper relates to a current work, it feels like finding that sentence is the deal breaker for whether or not the book is going to be absolute crap or a literary masterpiece.
Even if you don’t go so far as to have “make such and such list” on your to do list, like yours truly, I think we all can agree that organization is important to writers. Some people make entire “book bibles” where they dedicate a notebook to their book. They keep pictures, and character bios, timelines, settings, and plot events all in one, easy to reference notebook. Sometimes this is in addition to notes on the computer, or in lieu of them.
I haven’t tried making a book bible yet, but I intend to for my next book. I like having everything on the computer, but sometimes it’s a pain to shift through several documents on the computer. It might be easier to have everything right in front of me.
Whether it’s a book bible, a spot on your desk, or an entire shelf built as a shrine to your book, it’s a good idea to stay consistent with your organization system. And, please please please back up your work. We’ve all heard horror stories about losing books on the computer. Don’t let this happen to you. I lost an entire hard disk (back when dinosaurs roamed the earth and we used hard disks to store information on) of poetry and story ideas when I was 19 and I cried for weeks. I still think about that disk. It feels like losing a piece of yourself when you lose that amount of information. So back up your books. Save an extra copy, and keep it somewhere safe. You don’t want to lose a book because you forgot where you stuffed the manuscript or because it got lost in the shuffle of papers.
In other news, Noah Lukeman has an entire book about writing query letter for free download on his website. I have already downloaded it, and let me tell you, it’s a gem!
Well, that’s the end of today’s PSA. How do you guys organize your work? Anything brilliant?
Tuesday, July 6, 2010
Enjoy the Silence
Quote: “Writing is the only thing that, when I do it, I don’t feel I should be doing something else.”
Gloria Steinem
Song Playing: Wasting My Time--Default
Well, I had intended to post regularly starting last Monday, but a spyware virus rampaging through my laptop greatly impeded my Internet abilities. We (read: my husband) had to reboot the computer with the recovery disks, which gave me ample time to think about what I wanted to post about today.
I was without the Internet (our cabin didn’t have wifi) for almost an entire week while I was getting married/on my honeymoon. And now more recently, the past week.
It was strangely relaxing. Of course, I was busy getting married and having an awesome honeymoon (part of which was spent watching the sharks in the aquarium we visited. Man, I love aquariums. Seriously, these sharks had rows and rows of long, jagged teeth.) but some of that time was spent relaxing on the couch with my laptop, working on my writing stuff.
Without the Internet, I wasn’t distracted by the lure of the blogs, and the siren’s call of Wikipedia and Google fell on my deaf ears. It was glorious. I just sat down and I wrote. I didn’t check my email five times, or my blog, or any of that.
Don’t get me wrong, I think the Internet is a fabulous resource and tool for authors. I have learned more about the publishing industry, and agents, and the proper way of going about getting published in the two years I have spend doing my homework than I feel I would have doing it the old fashioned way of looking all of it up in possibly outdated books.
I also think a writer who ignores the publishing world is at a great deficit to the writer who pays attention to the various industry blogs, and knows what’s going on in the world of publishing. At the very least, writers like me who follow the industry knows what to expect once they get published, better than writers who don’t pay attention to publishing until they are actively trying to get published.
In addition to all of that, the Internet is a great research tool for me whether it’s IPA pronunciation or the migration patterns of hermit crabs (don’t ask).
But I was without the Internet for a week, and I am still alive. I think the writing I did over that time benefited from the lack of distraction. Writing became what it has always been about for me: the words. The people. The worlds. I was able to shut away my fears and doubts about publishing and queries, and I stepped out of the fast paced world of publishing to focus on my craft. It was exhilarating.
These thoughts have lead me to the conclusion that the Internet is like one of the artifacts of massive power you see in cheesy 80’s fantasy movies like “Krull” or “The Dark Crystal.” The Internet (or Internets as I affectionately refer to it as around here) can be used for great good, but also great evil.
You can research almost anything, but you have to double check your sources to make sure you aren’t reading false information. You also have to make sure your “research” phase of the book doesn’t take longer than it should, no matter if you wait to do your research until after the book is written, or before.
You can read agent and publisher and marketers and all other sorts of “-ers” in the publishing industry, and get up to the minute updates on the status of what the submission guidelines are, whether the agent is accepting queries or not, and how they want the queries formatting. There are awesome sites like QueryChecker where you can form an online database of your queries, and look up an agent’s individual query stats. It’s all there, ripe for the picking.
But it can also make you neurotic with worry. You can lay awake wondering if you’re going to make a mistake, sure that you’ll forget to query the agent that could have been “the one”, and in general, drive yourself bonkers with all of the advice out there for authors, much of it contradictory.
Sometimes reading all those blog articles can amount to so much noise in your head, crowding out the real reason why you’re bothering with all of this anyway: your book.
When you sit down to write your book, if you think about the Internet, and all of the stuff you have read, all of the wonderful advice from Nathan Bransford, and Janet Reid, and Anne Mini, and Holly Lisle, you will drive yourself crazy. It’s like having another set of editors in your head—your personal editor and the editor of the Internet, those blogs you’ve tried to read and internalize.
You can’t worry about any of that while writing. You need to find your quiet place, whether it’s at a desk (like me), or a train, or a mountain top or wherever your writing space happens to be. During your allotted writing time, I think you need to just think about the book and nothing else. The publishing industry and the Internet can wait. Your dog might not be able to wait, so you’ll have to schedule time for him, and probably the kids or husband or wife or the mailman you’ve had your eye on will all need some of your time.
But for your writing time, whether you’ve allotted three hours or three days, I think you could do worse than disable the Internet and shut off the TV. I have been reading Anne Mini’s blog lately, which is a remarkable treasure trove for all kinds of information, and she made a statement that has stuck with me. Since I have been reading her backlog, so I have absolutely no idea which post she mentioned this, so forgive me for paraphrasing (I am pretty sure it’s in a post under the tag “Finding More Writing Time”). She said you only have so much time on this Earth. Only so many hours in a given day, week, month, only so many years. A lot of people don’t realize how much time they whittle away on nothing. On the TV, they turn it on “just to see what’s on” and spend hours not even watching something they really care about. At some point you’re going to have to prioritize and protect your writing time. You have to say, “Would I rather watch every episode of The Simpsons, or would I rather write another book?”
End of my terrible paraphrase. Now, I am not saying TV is evil, and you should never watch it. Heaven knows I have a few TV shows that I watch religiously. But I love the idea of deciding to spend your time consciously. Instead of sitting in front of the TV or surfing the Internet, or whatever other activities you do that are time wasters, and letting hours pass, hours that you will never get back, you could make a choice. You could say, “I want to watch something at 7” and work on your writing until then. Or if you know you have to go to your parent’s house, you could schedule your writing time around it, instead of just killing time before you have to leave.
So today I urge you to go forth and protect your writing time, and also devote yourself to it. Try to shut out the voices of the blogs, and the critics, and the fans, and everyone else. While you’re writing, make it just about you, and your book.
Now, there’s the greatest romance ever told!
Gloria Steinem
Song Playing: Wasting My Time--Default
Well, I had intended to post regularly starting last Monday, but a spyware virus rampaging through my laptop greatly impeded my Internet abilities. We (read: my husband) had to reboot the computer with the recovery disks, which gave me ample time to think about what I wanted to post about today.
I was without the Internet (our cabin didn’t have wifi) for almost an entire week while I was getting married/on my honeymoon. And now more recently, the past week.
It was strangely relaxing. Of course, I was busy getting married and having an awesome honeymoon (part of which was spent watching the sharks in the aquarium we visited. Man, I love aquariums. Seriously, these sharks had rows and rows of long, jagged teeth.) but some of that time was spent relaxing on the couch with my laptop, working on my writing stuff.
Without the Internet, I wasn’t distracted by the lure of the blogs, and the siren’s call of Wikipedia and Google fell on my deaf ears. It was glorious. I just sat down and I wrote. I didn’t check my email five times, or my blog, or any of that.
Don’t get me wrong, I think the Internet is a fabulous resource and tool for authors. I have learned more about the publishing industry, and agents, and the proper way of going about getting published in the two years I have spend doing my homework than I feel I would have doing it the old fashioned way of looking all of it up in possibly outdated books.
I also think a writer who ignores the publishing world is at a great deficit to the writer who pays attention to the various industry blogs, and knows what’s going on in the world of publishing. At the very least, writers like me who follow the industry knows what to expect once they get published, better than writers who don’t pay attention to publishing until they are actively trying to get published.
In addition to all of that, the Internet is a great research tool for me whether it’s IPA pronunciation or the migration patterns of hermit crabs (don’t ask).
But I was without the Internet for a week, and I am still alive. I think the writing I did over that time benefited from the lack of distraction. Writing became what it has always been about for me: the words. The people. The worlds. I was able to shut away my fears and doubts about publishing and queries, and I stepped out of the fast paced world of publishing to focus on my craft. It was exhilarating.
These thoughts have lead me to the conclusion that the Internet is like one of the artifacts of massive power you see in cheesy 80’s fantasy movies like “Krull” or “The Dark Crystal.” The Internet (or Internets as I affectionately refer to it as around here) can be used for great good, but also great evil.
You can research almost anything, but you have to double check your sources to make sure you aren’t reading false information. You also have to make sure your “research” phase of the book doesn’t take longer than it should, no matter if you wait to do your research until after the book is written, or before.
You can read agent and publisher and marketers and all other sorts of “-ers” in the publishing industry, and get up to the minute updates on the status of what the submission guidelines are, whether the agent is accepting queries or not, and how they want the queries formatting. There are awesome sites like QueryChecker where you can form an online database of your queries, and look up an agent’s individual query stats. It’s all there, ripe for the picking.
But it can also make you neurotic with worry. You can lay awake wondering if you’re going to make a mistake, sure that you’ll forget to query the agent that could have been “the one”, and in general, drive yourself bonkers with all of the advice out there for authors, much of it contradictory.
Sometimes reading all those blog articles can amount to so much noise in your head, crowding out the real reason why you’re bothering with all of this anyway: your book.
When you sit down to write your book, if you think about the Internet, and all of the stuff you have read, all of the wonderful advice from Nathan Bransford, and Janet Reid, and Anne Mini, and Holly Lisle, you will drive yourself crazy. It’s like having another set of editors in your head—your personal editor and the editor of the Internet, those blogs you’ve tried to read and internalize.
You can’t worry about any of that while writing. You need to find your quiet place, whether it’s at a desk (like me), or a train, or a mountain top or wherever your writing space happens to be. During your allotted writing time, I think you need to just think about the book and nothing else. The publishing industry and the Internet can wait. Your dog might not be able to wait, so you’ll have to schedule time for him, and probably the kids or husband or wife or the mailman you’ve had your eye on will all need some of your time.
But for your writing time, whether you’ve allotted three hours or three days, I think you could do worse than disable the Internet and shut off the TV. I have been reading Anne Mini’s blog lately, which is a remarkable treasure trove for all kinds of information, and she made a statement that has stuck with me. Since I have been reading her backlog, so I have absolutely no idea which post she mentioned this, so forgive me for paraphrasing (I am pretty sure it’s in a post under the tag “Finding More Writing Time”). She said you only have so much time on this Earth. Only so many hours in a given day, week, month, only so many years. A lot of people don’t realize how much time they whittle away on nothing. On the TV, they turn it on “just to see what’s on” and spend hours not even watching something they really care about. At some point you’re going to have to prioritize and protect your writing time. You have to say, “Would I rather watch every episode of The Simpsons, or would I rather write another book?”
End of my terrible paraphrase. Now, I am not saying TV is evil, and you should never watch it. Heaven knows I have a few TV shows that I watch religiously. But I love the idea of deciding to spend your time consciously. Instead of sitting in front of the TV or surfing the Internet, or whatever other activities you do that are time wasters, and letting hours pass, hours that you will never get back, you could make a choice. You could say, “I want to watch something at 7” and work on your writing until then. Or if you know you have to go to your parent’s house, you could schedule your writing time around it, instead of just killing time before you have to leave.
So today I urge you to go forth and protect your writing time, and also devote yourself to it. Try to shut out the voices of the blogs, and the critics, and the fans, and everyone else. While you’re writing, make it just about you, and your book.
Now, there’s the greatest romance ever told!
Friday, June 25, 2010
I’m Back, Baby!
Hi there! I have returned from my wedding and honeymoon. The wedding went off perfectly, and the honeymoon was wonderful. My new husband (still feels weird to say that) and I returned Wednesday afternoon. Today I am trying to get caught up on the laundry and prepare for work.
I don’t have any pictures on my camera from the wedding (since, you know, I was IN the wedding) but I will show you some pictures of the area up in Gatlinburg, Tennessee where we got married and stayed for most of our honeymoon. On our way back into Georgia we stopped by a quaint town called Helen, which was made to resemble a Bavarian village. We had German Potato salad, and Spaetzle, and knotwurst, and all kinds of awesome German food.
We visited the aquarium right there in Gatlinburg, and we loafed around in our beautiful cabin, and did some sightseeing in Helen, but I also brought writing stuff with me. I know, I am terrible. But my husband and I both like to spend time just sitting around, so I knew I would I would have some free time. I didn’t work on a book, but I did play around with Awkwords a lot. It’s a word generator my friend Lena told me about. I use it to generate a word pool for my constructed languages (called conlangs for short).
I write urban fantasy and fantasy. Some people who write fantasy, like yours truly, enjoy making up a fake language (or two…or three…) in order to make the world seem more realistic, and have an internal sense of order to the names of the characters and cities.
You don’t have to make up a new language, or a skeleton of one, in order to make your fantasy novel work. On the contrary, I have read plenty of fantasy novels that established a realistic setting without using a conlang. But I personally enjoy making up languages, so it’s something I do for the worlds I am making from scratch.
I had a great time. I will start posting again on a regular basis starting Monday, even though the end of the month might get a little crazy, since I am moving.
I don’t have any pictures on my camera from the wedding (since, you know, I was IN the wedding) but I will show you some pictures of the area up in Gatlinburg, Tennessee where we got married and stayed for most of our honeymoon. On our way back into Georgia we stopped by a quaint town called Helen, which was made to resemble a Bavarian village. We had German Potato salad, and Spaetzle, and knotwurst, and all kinds of awesome German food.
We visited the aquarium right there in Gatlinburg, and we loafed around in our beautiful cabin, and did some sightseeing in Helen, but I also brought writing stuff with me. I know, I am terrible. But my husband and I both like to spend time just sitting around, so I knew I would I would have some free time. I didn’t work on a book, but I did play around with Awkwords a lot. It’s a word generator my friend Lena told me about. I use it to generate a word pool for my constructed languages (called conlangs for short).
I write urban fantasy and fantasy. Some people who write fantasy, like yours truly, enjoy making up a fake language (or two…or three…) in order to make the world seem more realistic, and have an internal sense of order to the names of the characters and cities.
You don’t have to make up a new language, or a skeleton of one, in order to make your fantasy novel work. On the contrary, I have read plenty of fantasy novels that established a realistic setting without using a conlang. But I personally enjoy making up languages, so it’s something I do for the worlds I am making from scratch.
I had a great time. I will start posting again on a regular basis starting Monday, even though the end of the month might get a little crazy, since I am moving.
Thursday, June 10, 2010
An Update (with Squirrels)
I am alive!
Just very busy. I am not exaggerating; just about every day before work I do something wedding related, and spend most of my days off getting ready too. Last Sunday, on my day off, I went shopping with my mom, and it felt like we bought half the city. But we took care of a lot of stuff we needed (cake topper, toasting glasses, and other fiddly odds and ends), so everything is coming along nicely.
I haven’t even looked at the Internet most days except in passing, and forget blogging or reading blogs. I have a lot of catching up to do, sorry guys.
Mom gave me some more pictures of the squirrels she practically tamed in their backyard, so I shall use those to break up my text.

I keep telling myself I won’t be this busy forever, but I also know that after I come back from my wedding, I will be immediately involved with preparing to move.
Last night my fiancĂ©e got his final confirmation from the Federal Aviation Association that he starts training July 30th. Yep, you read that right. We’re getting married June 19th and a month later he leaves for Oklahoma City. I am going to move in with my parents during this time, because the money they give him to train at school is a joke, and we’re going to have to pay for his living expenses out there. He will be gone for about 4 months or so.
But the great news is that when he comes back, he’ll be working out of a large radar center a few towns over, and making good money doing something that he loves.

So yes, it’s going to be a busy, busy summer.
My writing, in the meantime, has screeched to a halt. I haven’t edited in a week, I haven’t even LOOKED at my book in a week. I goofed around on the Internet yesterday doing some preliminary research for my next novel, but mostly I haven’t had the mental capacity to write or edit.
Strangely enough, I don’t feel weird. Usually when I go this long without writing, I go through withdrawal, but I have been so busy I think it’s made up for that. I have WANTED to write, however. I look longingly at my computer and manuscript and give a little whimper. My muse is going crazy. He thinks I am on strike or something, because he’s frantically throwing book ideas at me.
I read a book yesterday, and it was a little disappointing. The beginning, middle, and end all felt like they were from different books, and the character development was uneven for the main character, and nonexistent for the rest of them. I could have cared less when they all started dying off like flies.

So yes…there you have it. I am alive and doing well.
How is everything else doing? I miss all of you guys. How are all of your summers going?
Just very busy. I am not exaggerating; just about every day before work I do something wedding related, and spend most of my days off getting ready too. Last Sunday, on my day off, I went shopping with my mom, and it felt like we bought half the city. But we took care of a lot of stuff we needed (cake topper, toasting glasses, and other fiddly odds and ends), so everything is coming along nicely.
I haven’t even looked at the Internet most days except in passing, and forget blogging or reading blogs. I have a lot of catching up to do, sorry guys.
Mom gave me some more pictures of the squirrels she practically tamed in their backyard, so I shall use those to break up my text.
I keep telling myself I won’t be this busy forever, but I also know that after I come back from my wedding, I will be immediately involved with preparing to move.
Last night my fiancĂ©e got his final confirmation from the Federal Aviation Association that he starts training July 30th. Yep, you read that right. We’re getting married June 19th and a month later he leaves for Oklahoma City. I am going to move in with my parents during this time, because the money they give him to train at school is a joke, and we’re going to have to pay for his living expenses out there. He will be gone for about 4 months or so.
But the great news is that when he comes back, he’ll be working out of a large radar center a few towns over, and making good money doing something that he loves.
So yes, it’s going to be a busy, busy summer.
My writing, in the meantime, has screeched to a halt. I haven’t edited in a week, I haven’t even LOOKED at my book in a week. I goofed around on the Internet yesterday doing some preliminary research for my next novel, but mostly I haven’t had the mental capacity to write or edit.
Strangely enough, I don’t feel weird. Usually when I go this long without writing, I go through withdrawal, but I have been so busy I think it’s made up for that. I have WANTED to write, however. I look longingly at my computer and manuscript and give a little whimper. My muse is going crazy. He thinks I am on strike or something, because he’s frantically throwing book ideas at me.
I read a book yesterday, and it was a little disappointing. The beginning, middle, and end all felt like they were from different books, and the character development was uneven for the main character, and nonexistent for the rest of them. I could have cared less when they all started dying off like flies.
So yes…there you have it. I am alive and doing well.
How is everything else doing? I miss all of you guys. How are all of your summers going?
Tuesday, June 1, 2010
Hiatus
Okay guys. In case you haven’t noticed, I have been blogging sporactically at best. So instead of feeling guilty when I miss a blogging day, I think I am going to let you all know that through the month of June, I will not be blogging on a regular basis. It’s just too crazy between work and trying to finalize everything for the wedding.
I will try to update with prompts and pictures, but I just don’t have the time for much of anything right now. I haven’t even been checking other people’s blogs, something I miss.
So in the meantime, have a good summer, and I will see you around!
I will try to update with prompts and pictures, but I just don’t have the time for much of anything right now. I haven’t even been checking other people’s blogs, something I miss.
So in the meantime, have a good summer, and I will see you around!
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