I just image-googled "brain injury scar" and some good pictures came up -- it looks like they can get pretty unobtrusive, but I don't know how no one would have noticed before. Maybe previous haircutters were just more discreet?
The Great Write Way, Chapter Two: Twice upon a time...
A place for Buffistas to discuss, beta and otherwise deal and dish on their non-fan fiction projects.
Maybe she could have the wrong idea about where she got the scar from...her memories have been manipulated, too, so maybe she remembers it as happening from a childhood rollerskating accident, but it didn't. Because after I posted that, I went to the Google and while I was surprised about how small they can get, not quite *that* small, you're right.
I signed up for NaNoWriMo, username Laga. Who else is in this year?
Had a dream last night with a plot bunny. A hit woman is close friends with a woman, and is hired to kill that woman's husband. She is too professional to consider not taking the job. As an act of kindness she does persuade to couple to take out a large life insurance policy. She murder the husband a few weeks after the policy goes into effect. And of course that act of kindness eventually leads to her being caught, because the wife eventually grows suspicious, wondering why her friend was so insistent on their taking out that policy.
i'm registered as tskaredoff. Thursday.
I decided not to do NaNo after all--I've almost finished the first "act" of my WIP, and I'm in a place where I want to go back and do some rewrites rather than push forward.
The place my head is in, I could probably use NaNo to write this short story I promised. But deadlines and I are unmixy things, I get stubborn and think I'm proving something to the universe by saying, "I'm not going to get it done, and you can't make me!"
It is not helpful when you have authority issues with the inside of your own head.
Hee hee! I love the email I got from NaNoWriMo, especially this part:
leave ugly prose and poorly written passages on the page to be cleaned up later. Your inner editor will be very grumpy about this, but your inner editor is a nitpicky jerk who foolishly believes that it is possible to write a brilliant first draft if you write it slowly enough.
I *have* written brilliant first drafts. But that is more like something working through me than my great efforts. You can't predict that.
I can imagine writing a brilliant first draft of a poem, maybe a short story, but cranking out a perfect 175 page novel in one go is incomprehensible to me.