Lanvin-Castillo evening ensemble, spring/summer 1958
From Les Arts Décoratifs
Category: Uncategorized
Places where reality is a bit altered:
• any target
• churches in texas
• abandoned 7/11’s
• your bedroom at 5 am
• hospitals at midnight
• warehouses that smell like dust
• lighthouses with lights that don’t work anymore
• empty parking lots
• ponds and lakes in suburban neighborhoods
• rooftops in the early morning
• inside a dark cabinet
- playgrounds at night
- rest stops on highways
- deep in the mountains
- early in the morning wherever it’s just snowed
- trails by the highway just out of earshot of traffic
- schools during breaks
- those little beaches right next to ferry docks
- bowling alleys
- unfamiliar mcdonalds on long roadtrips
- your friends living room once everybody but you is asleep
- laundromats at midnight
what the fuck
- galeries in art museums that are empty except for you
- the lighting section of home depot
- stairwells
•hospital waiting rooms
•airports from midnight to 7am
• bathrooms in small concert venues
I just got the weirdest feeling I swear
OK LISTEN THERE ARE REASONS FOR THIS!!!
A lot of these places are called liminal spaces – which means they are throughways from one space to the next. Places like rest stops, stairwells, trains, parking lots, waiting rooms, airports feel weird when you’re in them because their existence is not about themselves, but the things before and after them. They have no definitive place outside of their relationship to the spaces you are coming from and going to. Reality feels altered here because we’re not really supposed to be in them for a long time for think about them as their own entities, and when we do they seem odd and out of place.
The other spaces feel weird because our brains are hard-wired for context – we like things to belong to a certain place and time and when we experience those things outside of the context our brains have developed for them, our brains are like NOPE SHIT THIS ISN’T RIGHT GET OUT ABORT ABORT. Schools not in session, empty museums, being awake when other people are asleep – all these things and spaces feel weird because our brain is like “I already have a context for this space and this is not it so it must be dangerous.” Our rational understanding can sometimes override that immediate “danger” impulse but we’re still left with a feeling of wariness and unease.
Listen I am very passionate about liminal spaces they are fascinating stuff or perhaps I am merely a nerd.
I, for one, appreciate your passion for liminal spaces and thank you for explaining it to the rest of us.
Leesha Hannigan – http://leeshahannigan.com – https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC6jq-d1tdYHdxz2WvOl9KzA – http://leeshahannigan.tumblr.com – http://leeshahannigan.deviantart.com – https://twitter.com/leeshahannigan – https://www.behance.net/LeeshaHannigan – https://plus.google.com/118203461340112564773 – https://drawcrowd.com/leeshahannigan – https://www.instagram.com/leeshahannigan – https://www.inprnt.com/gallery/leeshahannigan – https://es.pinterest.com/leeshahannigan

At the end of every year, the team at Writers Write looks at which posts were viewed most over the previous 12 months. This year, however, we were curious to find out which of our writing posts were the most popular of all time.
So we decided to start 2017 with the 25 posts you’ve viewed most on our blog over the past five years. (The number of views indicated here are from 31 December 2016.)
Our top post has almost 2 million views, and we’ve seen it used in varying formats across the internet. The second and third posts have more than 1 million views combined.
The posts vary. They include reference sheets for writers, longer posts on grammar and creative writing, a selection of excerpts from poetry, business writing tips, writing prompts, and quotations. We hope you enjoy them.
Our Top 25 Writing Posts Of All Time
1.
45 Ways To Avoid Using The Word ‘Very’2.
Cheat Sheets For Writing Body Language3.
155 Words To Describe An Author’s Tone4.
Synonyms for 95
Commonly Used Words – A Mini-Thesaurus for Writers5.
123 Ideas For
Character Flaws6.
Persuasive Writing – Emotional vs Intellectual Words7.
The Daily Word Counts of 39 Famous Authors8.
17 Of The Most Powerful Excerpts From Poetry9.
15 Questions Authors Should Ask Characters10.
The 12 Common Character Archetypes11.
350 Character Traits – A Fabulous Resource for Writers12.
209 Words To Describe Touch13.
Body Language Reference Sheet14.
20 Myths To Use As Writing Prompts15.
Eight Commonly Misused Words16.
37 Ways To Write About
Anger17.
30 Examples To Help You Master Concord18.
Psychopath Or Sociopath – What’s The Difference?20.
16 Types of
Government – A Writer’s Resource21.
5 Incredibly
Simple Ways To Help Writers Show And Not Tell22.
6 Sub-Plots That Add Style To Your Story23.
Write Your Novel In A Year – Week 35: 3 Must-Have Scenes
That Reveal Character24.
The Top 12 Literary Love Quotes25. Show! Don’t
tell. – 10 Verbs That Make You Tell~~~
The posts were mostly written by Amanda Patterson, Mia Botha, Anthony Ehlers, and Donna Radley. Thank you for your brilliant contributions.




































