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Witches, Werewolves and Vampires
Target audience: 13-18 years old.
Psychological storytelling. Horror genre. Dramatism with obvious interpersonal elements. [Sixty page limit per story.]
Allegories about these mythical creatures who also portray the human element as noted.
Witch: a falsely submissive woman who refuses to be direct and who instigates conflict that she will not be blamed for . . . Feminine
Werewolf: a womanizing man who does not care how much he hurts his romantic partners. He is predatory with his lies and overtly manipulative behavior . . . Masculine
Predatory: preying upon submissive women or creating submission for nefarious reasons.
Vampire: a person who feeds on the energy of others and does not allow a balanced emotional exchange in relationships . . . Androgenous
Feminine aspect: helplessness, insecurity, victimhood, inability to productively engage in conflict . . . torturous subtlety . . .
Masculine aspect: sugar daddy . . . how do I not say, "money"? . . . the "learned Asperger's"? . . . instigation of conflict to be won . . . torturous subtlety. . . reptilian
Vampiric androgenous: speaking about your ex.
Vampiric masculine female: holding breakup overhead.
Vampiric feminine male: speaking about feeling too poor to be with your partner.
Weak vampirism: mismatched gender and aspect. Strong vampirism: matched gender and aspect.
Help me delineate social vampirism until I can say something that both makes me seem intelligent and is inspiring to a writer.
Homework: watch Twilight series . . .
Too poor. Looked at cover.
Vampiric masculine: sugar daddy or mommy.
Vampiric feminine: sugar baby.
