Question: If someone is holding you emotionally hostage four hours out of every day, but they’re fine or downright pleasant for the rest of the day, does that count as an abusive relationship?
Answer: YES. FUCKING YES, ANY CYCLICAL HARM IS A PROBLEM.
can you make a dnd campaign with yourself and only yourself. like u have a bunch of different characters and you play all of them and you’re also the dm
That’s called writing a book
“and uh, i’m stuck at this plot point, lemme roll a d10″
The Unofficial Official Tables For Stuck Writers
All tables (except the first) use 1d10. If a result won’t work in your setting/genre, feel free to sub it out for another result, or come up with your own. These tables are not suitable to be used as a replacement for outlining, planning, creativity, and/or sitting down and writing. Please use responsibly 😉
Characters identified as:
M = Main Character
L = Love Interest
S = Secondary Character
V = Antagonist
R = Rando/Stranger
If no character is specified, or you want to randomly pick which character to use, roll 1d6
Main Character
Love Interest
Secondary Character
Antagonist
Rando
Roll Twice (i.e., situation applies to two characters)
I see your “romantic relationships shouldn’t be more important than platonic relationships” and raise you “romantic relationships shouldn’t be rooted in anything but strong, healthy, and mutually rewarding friendships anyways”
i haven’t stopped seeing notes for this since I posted it and I just wanna reiterate: it’s really important that you don’t get romantically involved with people you can’t be friends with. Separating a romantic relationship from a platonic context is unhealthy. Your romantic partner/s should always be your friend/s.
to clarify, these are two different young girls pulling two different swords from two different lakes, about a year apart. strange women in ponds will continue to distribute swords
Listen maybe Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is a good basis for a system of government.