25 Very Specific Moments Every Writer Has Experienced At Least Once
When you’re born a writer, you can’t really escape it. It’s part of you forever, and you have to set your fingers to a keyboard or scribble down stories to feel complete.
When you’re born a writer, you can’t really escape it. It’s part of you forever, and you have to set your fingers to a keyboard or scribble down stories to feel complete.
When men are hungry, they prefer larger breasts. Biology is weird, man.
‘Poor people lose. Poor people lose all the time.’ That quote should always be shocking – as in it should jolt you, shock you to your human core – until it’s no longer true.
I’ve always read that your teens are an important time in your life, that during the teenage years you really learn…
Make a snowman in your yard. Who cares if your neighbors stare? They’re just jealous.
When I quit believing in God, my mom said I’d start again when someone I really loved dies.
Send Christmas cards. Nothing makes me feel happier at the end of a long day at work than finding my mailbox stuffed with sweet little cards from my friends and family come holiday-time.
I used to watch him dress, and it was something I loved. I’d lay in bed sipping at my little cup of coffee and watch him decide who he was going to be that day, and then he’d kiss me goodbye and I’d be there still, quietly shellshocked by that easy kind of love and routine.
For our first anniversary (paper), [my husband] scanned in all of the post-it love notes that we had left for each other and turned them into an ebook, which I found on an iPad he gave me. HEART EXPLOSION.
It had snowed the day I told you I didn’t love you anymore.