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@migmit
@migmit 10 минут бұрын
There is something peculiar with your lighting. I understand you're going for cozy, and it does work, but since you're sitting in a narrow cone of light, every time you make a gesture and your hand leaves that cone, the difference in lighting makes your fingers look dirty. It's a bit distracting. Sorry, I'm no way a specialist in lighting, I just had to say this, otherwise I'd probably explode.
@migmit
@migmit Сағат бұрын
So... when I put on my self-evaluation form “too awesome” as a flaw, it wasn't actually a joke?
@boomsamson7418
@boomsamson7418 4 сағат бұрын
This video is a game changer.
@Charlottesbeautifulcult
@Charlottesbeautifulcult 12 сағат бұрын
Thank you for making this! Very informative and engaging
@grymcent
@grymcent 13 сағат бұрын
Wonderful explanation. You have solved something I've been struggling with since I started writing. I knew formulas felt false but couldn't place it or what to use instead. Thank you thank you thank you
@The-Second-Story
@The-Second-Story 12 сағат бұрын
I'm so glad my video could help you! There's nothing like that lightbulb-aha moment. I wish you the best of luck with your writing going forward, hopefully now your plotting can go more smoothly! Thank you for watching!
@TitoWinA
@TitoWinA Күн бұрын
I love these style of videos, breaking down concepts to make a character are always great. What would be cool is if your video uploads “follow” the creation of a story and characters leading up to a finished story. They are amazing either way, and I love how eloquent you are, it makes the video thoroughly enjoyable and engaging, thank you so much.🙏
@The-Second-Story
@The-Second-Story Күн бұрын
That would be such a fun series of videos, what a great suggestion! Now I want to find a way to do that... Thank you very much for this comment, and thank you for watching!
@miguelsanchez1111
@miguelsanchez1111 2 күн бұрын
De verdad que tu punto de vista me ha estado encantando. No he visto tu tercer video pero me gusta mucho tu manera de presentar las cosas. Considero que, aunque tu propuesta tiene más sentido en cuestión de narrativa, la estética se habría visto completamente comprometida. El ritmo con el que se presentan escenas tremendamente fascinantes tiene que ver con el orden de las escenas que propuso Nolan.
@The-Second-Story
@The-Second-Story 12 сағат бұрын
(I had to translate your comment, so I apologize if I misunderstood anything) It is true that the aesthetics were very particular. And I've seen films in which the plot was subordinate to the aesthetics in a way that actually worked. However, it's my belief that such a choice wasn't the right one for an historical biopic in which most of the tremendously fascinating scenes fall needlessly flat without solid facts to give them context. Perhaps Nolan should have sacrificed a little of his artistic vision to tell the story with more clarity. I believe he has enough skill that if he had taken more time with it, he could have found a way to serve both the story and the aesthetics equally. Thank you for watching!
@corndog8674
@corndog8674 2 күн бұрын
You're naturally funny, you're gorgeous, you give solid advice and you're articulate. If anything, you're like an underrated page-turner book. Now, I'm not saying this because your comment section says so, but I really mean it when I say to you to never stop making these videos. They're great, and I hope the algorithm shines upon your work. The way you explained character flaws is brilliant. I never thought of it that way, because I thought flaws were just stereotypical negative traits. I'll put into action what you've said to the next character I'm going to be writing. The only nitpick I have is that your style of making videos may be long and may sound you're rambling to some low attention andies. It's not a problem really, but perhaps you might consider KZbin shorts. As for the recommendation, I'm dying to hear what you have to say about worldbuilding now that you've explained characters and pacing very well. Sorry about the long comment lol, but I hope it could fuel your drive to continue KZbin. Overall, brilliant video and please continue pumping them helpful videos. That's all. Take care and good luck! Subscribed and made the notification bell white!
@The-Second-Story
@The-Second-Story 12 сағат бұрын
I'm very glad that my video could help you, especially with character flaws. I find that point to be particularly effective in making characters seem realistic. It's great for antagonistic characters, too, because then you can see in their personality or development where they went wrong. Which makes them seem more human and real without necessarily making them sympathetic. I understand what you're saying about my tendency to be long-winded. Unfortunately, my videos are what occurs after I've pared myself down quite a bit. It's just a tendency of mine. I'd rather over-explain than be unclear for the sake of brevity. Though I am aware of the tendency, yes. Maybe I can gradually work on it. That said, I don't think we should worry too much about people with low attention spans. I think more and more people are training themselves to a higher attention span and they enjoy longer content. Perhaps catering to those who can't sit still for two minutes at a time isn't the best policy in general. Worldbuilding is one of my favorite topics! I really hope to start a series of videos on that soon. I love worldbuilding and I hoped people would be interested in videos on that, so thank you for mentioning it! And thank you for watching and for taking the time to write this comment with your thoughts. It's very encouraging and helpful. Take care, and happy writing!
@milo8177
@milo8177 2 күн бұрын
"There is no formula. Anyway, here's the formula" 😂
@mtm272727
@mtm272727 2 күн бұрын
This is the single best piece of advice I have heard. I write for fun and luckily this is how I naturally break it up. Thanks for the encouragement.
@odinohuaman4320
@odinohuaman4320 2 күн бұрын
Please, keep posting more videos.
@The-Second-Story
@The-Second-Story Күн бұрын
I certainly intend to! Thank you for watching!
@odinohuaman4320
@odinohuaman4320 2 күн бұрын
👍👍👍
@thequietkid1548
@thequietkid1548 2 күн бұрын
Not sure why this was recommmeded to me and i'm soo glad it was.
@afternoonbears6989
@afternoonbears6989 3 күн бұрын
Where have you been???? It’s like I’ve had the body of storytelling but not the heart to pump the blood. THANK YOU FOR SHARING THIS GOLD!
@The-Second-Story
@The-Second-Story 2 күн бұрын
I hope now you can pump all the blood you need! Thank you for watching and for your comment! I wish you the best of luck with your storytelling!
@RobynLeigh111
@RobynLeigh111 3 күн бұрын
This makes so much sense. I'm a beginner writer and plotting stifles me. And I find discovery writing leads me to waffle. And I believe this is the missing piece for me. Would love more in depth videos on story techniques.
@The-Second-Story
@The-Second-Story 2 күн бұрын
Plotting was really tricky for me for a long time, too. I always felt like I was groping in the dark and if I got it right it was just because I got lucky. Learning things like this helped me so much, I hope it can help you, too. I do want to make a lot more videos on plotting and more in-depth videos on building stories. Thank you so much for watching, and good luck with your writing!
@Mpsieber
@Mpsieber 3 күн бұрын
I just started my first novel and, man, was this helpful. Thank you!
@The-Second-Story
@The-Second-Story 2 күн бұрын
I'm so glad my video could help you! Good luck with your novel!
@solfolgarait3745
@solfolgarait3745 3 күн бұрын
A video about Character development and Character arcs would be incredible!
@The-Second-Story
@The-Second-Story 2 күн бұрын
I'm very much looking forward to making multiple videos on both topics in the future, hopefully soon! Thank you for watching!
@ctarantinophoto
@ctarantinophoto 3 күн бұрын
This video was extremely helpful, thank you.
@fatalsyn
@fatalsyn 3 күн бұрын
Character creation has always been a bit of a difficult subject for me, but you explained it in a digestible way and broke it down into actionable steps that I'm going to be using as a template for all my characters. Thanks for the awesome content!
@The-Second-Story
@The-Second-Story 3 күн бұрын
I'm so glad that my video was so helpful to you! I wish you the best of luck in your future character creation. And thank you so much for your support! Happy writing!
@cat2118
@cat2118 4 күн бұрын
The mini arch paradigm is great, no doubt. If pacing is crucial and rhythm is elemental to storytelling then we're talking about beats aka a beat sheet.
@The-Second-Story
@The-Second-Story 3 күн бұрын
That is true, though as I understand it "beat sheet" is more of a screenwriting term and doesn't necessarily convey the shape of beginning-climax-end. I personally like thinking of these as arcs because picturing the arc shape really helps to reinforce in my mind the idea of what I'm trying to accomplish. Thank you for watching!
@PedeCoelho19
@PedeCoelho19 4 күн бұрын
This video reminded me of my school days, when a great teacher would explain something I’d never understood so clearly and at such a comfortable pace that I could almost feel my neurons connecting, building the pathways that finally satisfied my need to understand. Thank you!
@The-Second-Story
@The-Second-Story 4 күн бұрын
Thank you, I'm so glad it was such a help! And thank you for watching and for taking the time to comment!
@johannageisel5390
@johannageisel5390 4 күн бұрын
Helen sounds like she could be me in 20 years.
@johannageisel5390
@johannageisel5390 4 күн бұрын
Actually, I _love_ archetypes (or "cardboard cutouts" as I like to call them). The characters I like most have come into being when I took an archetype and then combined it with something seemingly contradictory. For example: The pretty, dress loving, naive court lady .... Who trains very hard to become a markswoman because she needs that to protect her family. Or the hunky, sexy, physical strong half-orc boy ... who loves drawing/painting and writing poetry and wants to enroll in the royal academy of arts. I have more issues to flesh out characters that come to me only as a name and description but do not really fit an archetype.
@The-Second-Story
@The-Second-Story 4 күн бұрын
For the characters that give you trouble, try this method. Maybe it will work for you! Be careful with your contradictions method. It sounds like it's working really well for you, but it could become a little predictable or formulaic over time. Maybe you'll have no problems like that, though! Thank you for watching!
@Pre-Retired
@Pre-Retired 4 күн бұрын
Great Video! I'm just about to go through your videos now, but if you don't have one on organizing your work, I'd really be interested in hearing about how you do it. Things like, how do you keep track of your ideas so that you can come back/find them later, where do you keep the research you do, software that you might use etc. :)
@The-Second-Story
@The-Second-Story 4 күн бұрын
Thank you! I hadn't thought of doing a video on such a topic. Thank you for the suggestion! I'll add it to the list. Thank you for watching!
@BigToody
@BigToody 5 күн бұрын
11:23 On the topic of character motivations, would you consider using a pseudoscientific personality theory such as The Enneagram as a tool to help you define a characters’ core urge? A KZbinr I like called LocalScriptMan made a bunch of videos on this. He said “Even if you've never heard of the Enneagram, you will still write characters belonging to the nine types. I would even go so far as to say that a significant character in your narrative cannot be consistent if they fall outside of the Enneagram, because it's a simple but very comprehensive model that accounts for the full range of human motivation.” Wanna check him out? Wanna drink the Kool-Aid? 11:12 "Understanding the Enneagram is about getting to the underlying drives behind why people do what they do, but identifying a character's type is only half the battle. To really utilize the Enneagram in writing, you have to understand the spectrum of health within each type, because if you know what the healthiest and unhealthiest versions of your character would look like, then you have the makings of an arc." 15:25 You two seem to be on the same track. On this point, he said “any positive trait or skill associated with a given number is a secondary side effect of that number's core issue. Take a Three, for example. Threes tend to be very good diplomats and salespeople, but that's not a part of threeness. That is a skill they picked up during a lifetime of system-pleasing. Yeah, Threes tend to be good at those things, but why? Because they developed those skills in pursuit of maladaptive ends.”
@pm6828
@pm6828 5 күн бұрын
This is S-tier advice. I've seen a lot of creators, and it's a rare few who stand out as exemplary like this. Really looking forward to seeing more content. And you know what? It's for the same reasons that you've outlined. It's deep and insightful, but also tinged with the color of your own identity. Although I'm looking forward to whatever you make next I know that that's an utterly unhelpful suggestion. I'd take anything in regards to characters, especially the relationship between characters and the self. I feel like my own identity is rather multitudinous, and as I attempt to express myself through characters I realize that there's still much that I don't understand about myself. It's a very interesting study, but not at all conducive to getting writing done.
@The-Second-Story
@The-Second-Story 5 күн бұрын
Thank you very much for your support and your kind words! I hope to be able to continue making helpful videos. What you've said about character and self is very interesting. I remember examining this link myself along my writing journey. At the time, as an experiment, I wrote a kind of prose poetry faux journal. The situation was fictional, the life was fictional, but the "I" writing the journal was meant to be me. And the aim was to examine myself and come to understand myself better. I, myself personally, wanted to avoid making the characters in my regular stories into too much of an examination or expression of self as I've found that this can limit my creative decision making. So I let this exercise be entirely that. I spent about two years writing this and I learned a lot about myself and about how to convey emotional identity with literary economy. It was also an excellent writing exercise as I forced myself to do at least one entry a week and focused a lot on my actual writing. I also saw my skill improve as I went along, both in terms of understanding myself -- and therefore other characters -- and in terms of my prose. I do intend to do a lot of videos in the future on characters, but I thought this suggestion might be helpful food for thought for you. Perhaps you could give it a try, if you're so inclined. Maybe it will be as helpful for you and is it was for me. Thank you again, and happy writing!
@sikles
@sikles 5 күн бұрын
How much is too much traits for a character exactly? Would it generally be a good rule of thumb to not go over 5? I find myself getting a bit carried away with adding them, and I can't exactly tell if I'm being excessive
@The-Second-Story
@The-Second-Story 5 күн бұрын
I really don't think there's a specific maximum number. So much of that depends on the story you're writing, your style, how relevant all the traits are to the plot, and so on and so on. And also, of course, the character. Five is good number in general, if you want to start with that. But some characters might need more, and some more minor characters might not be written with as much detail. Rather than focus on a certain maximum number, I think it would be better to be on the lookout for signs that your character is too complicated. These can include: as you're writing the plot and trying to determine how your character would react to a certain plot point, you find that many, many of his or her traits are required for this reaction, and that writing it would result in a scene that comes across like a psychological breakdown. Another point: if you have so many traits that a character might react one of several ways to a plot point depending on their mood or depending on your mood, this leads to an inability to establish consistency. You limit the traits so that the picture you paint for your audience is fairly clear. That's the ultimate goal: an interesting character that's still comprehensible to your audience. If you have too few traits, the character won't be interesting. If you have too many, the character won't be comprehensible. If YOU find that your character is too complicated to understand then that's a pretty good sign that you might have given him or her too many traits. (Another idea: if you have a lot of traits, but they're all necessary but hard to wrangle, consider drawing up a kind of trait hierarchy. Give the character two or three dominant traits that show up the most often and govern most of their decisions. Then have two or three more that occur less often or only under certain specific circumstances. Like someone who gets short-tempered only when he gets tired.) I hope that helps. Let me know if you have any other questions! In the meantime, happy writing!
@sanjayvarma-u4e
@sanjayvarma-u4e 5 күн бұрын
Can you tell me any sources that leads you to these amazing knowledge?? like books or videos or any formal education.Thank you
@The-Second-Story
@The-Second-Story 5 күн бұрын
Unfortunately about 99% of my formal education on the topic of writing was focused on style. How to write pretty sentences and paragraphs and how to paint images with words and how to convey emotion with brevity, framing a scene, theme, etc. etc. Which, while helpful, did nothing to help me understand plots. Ultimately, when it comes to plot structuring and characters, etc. I am entirely self-taught. A very long, hard journey of self-education that took me about two decades. I wish I had sources I could provide that others could use to educate themselves. But the hard truth is that almost everything I learned about plots and characters I learned by endlessly studying plots and characters. (Endlessly.) I love storytelling and tend to be a little obsessive about it. I'm also very analytical and I have a hard time letting myself take shortcuts and do things halfway. My aim with this channel is to share the knowledge I learned during those two long decades of endless study so other people don't have to take that same hard path just to learn how to tell stories. And hopefully what I provide with these videos can help other writers and storytellers. Thank you for watching!
@sanjayvarma-u4e
@sanjayvarma-u4e 5 күн бұрын
@@The-Second-Story Got it.Thank you for posting amazing stuff.Also there is an indian filmmaker called "sandeep reddy vanga".he is one of the most famous filmmakers.His films also don't follow structure but follows something like a beginning,climax and cooldown for each scene like you mentioned.You can checkout his films.Maybe you will find more.If you found anything interesting in his films please do a video :)).All his films are more than 3 hours but will engage you a lot.Also if you want more views you can do a video on his films as he is extremely popular in india.
@Mr_Danny9
@Mr_Danny9 5 күн бұрын
Thank you for this amazing video lesson! I think I could try to write my own characters now
@The-Second-Story
@The-Second-Story 5 күн бұрын
I'm glad it could help you! Good luck, and thank you for watching!
@sarahpark8391
@sarahpark8391 6 күн бұрын
I have tried to wrap my head around creating characters, but I still have trouble understanding complexity, contradictions/ interplay, and consistency venn diagrams. If a flaw conflicts or contradicts another trait, how do we keep the character consistent? Is this what makes their actions surprising? In a given moment, does this mean one trait makes the character act?
@The-Second-Story
@The-Second-Story 6 күн бұрын
Don't let the complexity part of character complexity overwhelm you. Start simple, with two or three traits and one flaw. Create a little bit of interplay and makes notes in your character sheet about specific instances where the contradictions will occur. A very brave hero might have a phobia of water. So he's brave until water is involved. The hero in my video who is sensitive about goat herders is probably not going to lose his cool about other things. He can be calm and level-headed mostly, but is very sensitive about that. If the writer shows the audience these contradictions consistently, then inconsistency is impossible. Contradictions won't randomly occur all over your characters' personalities. They will be only in a few, clearly defined (by you) places. So you can have control over them and you have the freedom to showcase them regularly so that the consistency of these contradictory traits is clear. What makes a character act depends on the character and the situation. Sometimes it's one trait, sometimes it's a combination. But if you've planned your character well and you understand their personality, the choices they make will be comprehensible to you. I think it's possible that picturing Venn diagrams might not be helpful. Trait lists with detailed notes might serve you better. A character won't be able to be charted crisply. Understanding a character is like understanding a person. You have to leave a little room for simply understanding why a person is the way they are. I hope that makes it a little easier for you to get your head around it. If you have any other questions or need anything else explained, let me know. I'd be happy to help!
@2o4tom
@2o4tom 6 күн бұрын
Please tell us how you really feel.
@NaDa-kw2fu
@NaDa-kw2fu 6 күн бұрын
Let your characters jostle your elbow when writing. Sometimes their personalities overrule your precise planning and provide a startling dimention.
@christianknickerbocker604
@christianknickerbocker604 6 күн бұрын
I think the three act story structure exists for a reason for certain types of stories... it seems most useful for stand alone stories but far less so for series. I think that if you wanted to simplify your plotting mechanism to the max you should simply make a list of plot moving characters and consider what they would do at every point. As long as it makes absolute sense to their mind and creates an interesting situation, you have found a way to move the plot forward. For example, if one character debuggs his apartment, how might the psuedo fascist organization who bugged it in the first place respond? It should be something interesting and in keeping with their methodology... like sending a femme fatale to explain to the mc why he shouldn't do such things.
@christianknickerbocker604
@christianknickerbocker604 6 күн бұрын
Man! Was paying attention until I started thinking about what's gonna happen in my next chapter. 70 seconds went by in which I didn't hear a word. 😂
@milomazli
@milomazli 6 күн бұрын
Thank you!! Ver helpful!!
@typreegamingtpg2198
@typreegamingtpg2198 6 күн бұрын
22:00 Saw the South Park writers talk about this once. I didn’t fully get it at first, but I think the longer explanation given in this video helped me understand it.
@yo.johnson
@yo.johnson 7 күн бұрын
When I first decided to start writing my book, I looked up structure. Although I found it to be a comforting guide to plotting a story. The three act structure has been really limiting. And I found myself changing my story to fit it. As I am now figuring out the ending to my story, I struggled to fit it into "industry standards", but I also have NO DESIRE to be traditionally published. So why am I creating a product? I have been slowly stepping away from the structure and releasing myself from its constraints. But as someone who is new, I thought, how dare I? What do I know? Who am I to approach writing in my OWN way when others who are more skilled and actually published have accomplished more than me. (I won't get into how poorly written many published stories are. Nor how predictable.) But once again, thank you for this video. It is what I needed to hear to fully take a step back and free myself from the three act structure and just allow my story and creativity to breathe. I am now focusing on studying principles and techniques. Thank you, I look forward to your next video! There is something about your personality or overall voice/ style of video that allows me to focus and think. I have watch countless writing videos on KZbin that are all essentially saying the same thing--- no one has said this. Radical!
@yo.johnson
@yo.johnson 7 күн бұрын
Although I used the 3 act structure as a map, I did break down my chapters/ scenes based on pacing---as described in this video. However, I focused on Active/ Reactive scene method. I am still new to all of this. Thankfully, creativity isn't my problem. The story is alive. It's just the first story that I have ever written. Anyways, THANK YOU! *runs off to study writing principles and techniques*
@The-Second-Story
@The-Second-Story 6 күн бұрын
Your path sounds like a lot of writers I meet. Especially the part about having to change your stories to fit into the three-act structure. I'm really glad my video was able to help you take a step back and reassess your approach. Just don't forget: structure is very important, we don't want to thrown that away completely. The aim is to build our own structures to fit our stories. Every writer isn't just allowed to build their own structures, I believe they should be encouraged to do so. Good luck with your writing! And thank you so much for watching, and for your comments!
@FinnedUp
@FinnedUp 7 күн бұрын
Very helpful and super informative. Take my like and subscribe!
@The-Second-Story
@The-Second-Story 7 күн бұрын
Thank you very much for your support! I'm glad you found it helpful, too!
@yo.johnson
@yo.johnson 7 күн бұрын
This was incredibly useful! Thank you!
@jiruaky
@jiruaky 7 күн бұрын
This is a life saver video. 🎉
@jaylin5152
@jaylin5152 7 күн бұрын
This was extremely helpful
@mrshade810
@mrshade810 7 күн бұрын
Please keep this up. I find your videos among the best I've come across. Your previous video, as well as this one, opened up a whole lot of potential and possibilities for my fantasy story. I particularly thought the advice on characters' flaws was brilliant. Once you explained that, I instantly came up with much better flaws for my main heroes. The multiple mini-arcs advice also helped a lot, and it makes the writing/story more complicated, but more manageable at the same time. Definitely more interesting too. In short, your approach/advice feels out of the box, but at the same time it makes so much sense
@The-Second-Story
@The-Second-Story 7 күн бұрын
Thank you very much for this comment! It really does mean a lot to me to know that my videos are helping other writers. That's one of the things I really like about the approach of mini-arcs. I feel like I can create something a little more complex but that I've got a strategy to plan it well. I'm glad the note about flaws was helpful. When I realized that myself, I found that it made defining and understanding my characters so much easier. Thank you again for watching! Good luck with your story, and happy writing!
@Tarazed609
@Tarazed609 8 күн бұрын
Thank you for sharing your expertise!
@mavwacanada
@mavwacanada 8 күн бұрын
Great video, especially the mini arcs building up to the big arc. Thank you.
@ven7345
@ven7345 8 күн бұрын
Thank you sm this video is so helpful for me
@The-Second-Story
@The-Second-Story 8 күн бұрын
Thank you for watching! I'm really glad it was able to help you!
@sheridansherr8974
@sheridansherr8974 9 күн бұрын
Thank you! 💖 I discovered your channel and really love it! Subbed. 💖 I had similar feelings but was never able to pin it down where is the problem in the common book writing advices.
@The-Second-Story
@The-Second-Story 9 күн бұрын
Thank you so much for your support! I think a lot of people have similar feelings. But the common approach, the formulas, the strict guidelines, are so frequently presented as the only proper approach. I hope more writers start to realize that it is possible to use other methods or, even better, to develop their own methods to perfectly suit them and their own stories. Thank you again for watching!
@sheridansherr8974
@sheridansherr8974 9 күн бұрын
I love your approach! 💖 So refreshing! I'm so tired of the "copycating" everywhere. Cars, movies, all similar and soulless... Products and "content" . Thank you for pointing this out in literature.
@The-Second-Story
@The-Second-Story 9 күн бұрын
That is exactly how it feels when so many writers use the same pre-made formulas over and over, like copies. Thank you very much for watching!
@johnnyguzman6888
@johnnyguzman6888 9 күн бұрын
thank you so much <3
@bewithangely
@bewithangely 9 күн бұрын
This actually so good, if you watch one piece anime. The author do arcs to introduce a progress of the story, it’s great way to tell story
@The-Second-Story
@The-Second-Story 9 күн бұрын
It really is! I've noticed the same thing in Attack on Titan. Their use of arcs to move us through the story is so smooth and wonderful! Thank you for watching!
@CashmanWantsGorilaCoffeQueMarc
@CashmanWantsGorilaCoffeQueMarc 8 күн бұрын
It’s probably how James Gunn conceptually got so good at film direction. He enables easy and simple strait to the point good vibes and clear to understand story so that by the time serious complexity MUST BE explored it absolutely then can. One Piece is warranted humanitarian storytelling and is very much character driven… but they also are professionals at layered historic elements. Remembering how Luffy and his ten crew mates made it BEFORE the trail out follows over years down the line is not as impossible as you would think. There’s a logic to patience and resilience that many kids and adults and indeed even teenagers and youngster men and women don’t necessarily see at first. But if you stay convicted on your progress, you will find a way in your very very real personal stories AND story creation.
@dharmvirbharti1037
@dharmvirbharti1037 9 күн бұрын
bold take