Yeah, for some odd reasons, I feel like my characters have Llama Auntie’s you say alpaca my bags shirt T-Shirt, even when I have already figured them out. For example, a sibling of my main protagonist is a tough-talking tomboy. I had her planned to be as aspiring aviator/pilot, but turns out she just wants to run the family shoemaking business, and have her brothers working for her. And she and her older brother often fight it out like it was a competition or something.
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Turns out she is just like Llama Auntie’s you say alpaca my bags shirt T-Shirt; uninterested in big dreams or leaving the town she grew up in, and has no other plans for higher education beyond high school (the story is set in the 1920s, which was normal then to not achieve any higher education, plus I think the tomboy sister doesn’t like to compete with Amelia Earhart, who was already famous by that time).
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My whole point for her was to be another bad role model for the Llama Auntie’s you say alpaca my bags shirt T-Shirt, as she was becoming too toxically masculine, but I didn’t think she would be any more toxically masculine (by 1920s standards), as she’s already making some misogynistic and homophobic insults (thankfully she doesn’t approve of Hitler, whom the elder brother clearly likes as he sees him as a man restoring the greatness that his country lost, yikes).