Randomly thinking about grrm’s deconstruction of knighthood in asoiaf and how ironic it is that the Night’s Watch - an organization known to be half full of murderers, rapists, thieves, and all sorts of criminals - is essentially in charge of defending all of humanity when shit hits the fan. Like westeros just scrambled ‘the lowest of the low’ together into a penal colony in the far north and is totally fine depending on them for their survival; though tbf, i guess part of it has to do with expecting these societal ‘others’ to give their not so valuable lives for the good of the realm, who really cares if they live or die because they’re out of sight and out of mind. And it’s kinda funny too when we factor in the kingsguard because it’s a far more respected institution than the NW presently, but it too has its fair share of monsters. Quite a few men of the kingsguard have been morally bankrupt individuals, and we even see how the men of the KG sometimes forget other people they should be responsible for because their one priority is the king (we see what happens when you put the people of the realm first and then are ostracized by it a la Jaime tho there’s more to it). Missing the forest for the tree is something both institutions share, making them quite similar. So it’s interesting how grrm flips the fantasy classic of the black knight vs the white knight. The black knight is often anti-heroic, if not straight up villainous, and is often made to be diametrically opposed to the valiant and ever good white knight. But asoiaf has white and black knights both be shown of great virtue and great vice. The white knights in this story really are no better than the black knights. I’d love to see how these two entities could intersect, i.e., what happens when a white knight eventually changes his cloak for a black one (*cough* Jaime *cough*) and how that falls into grrm’s deconstruction of the romance of chivalry, the extent of personal heroism, and perceived knightly virtue. Welp I don’t even know what point I’m trying to make anymore, I just wanted to talk about the KG and the NW because they’re really cool.
448 notes
·
View notes
I’m discovering an important part of aging. If I have a problem that I’ve never found help for, I have to manually ask myself, “How long has it been since you tried?”
If it’s been 3+ years, there’s sometimes new tools or strategies or knowledge, and it is crucial for me to periodically check for new help for old problems. Otherwise I will just suffer needlessly. Even 1 chronic thing is fucking exhausting and it’s so cool to finally finally finally get it fixed, even if there isn’t help for all of my Health Stuff.
65 notes
·
View notes
DO YOU PLAY
Dead By Daylight (?) 🤨
I personally do not play it myself but I’ve watched ppl play it and I like it 👀
9 notes
·
View notes
exciting find for people interested in Buddhist lit: found a PDF of Patrick Olivelle’s translation of Asvaghosa’s Buddhacarita.
it’s one of my favorite versions of the Buddha’s life and that translation is the best imo. Much more significant reasons to give it a look: Asvaghosa was the premier Sanskrit language poet/dramatist pre-Kalidasa, who offers a lot in homage to him, and Ambedkar notes him specifically as an influence for his “The Buddha and His Dhamma” (from his preface: “I would particularly like to mention Ashvaghosha's Buddhavita[=Buddhacharita], whose poetry no one can excel. In the narrative of certain events I have even borrowed his language.”)
this translation is ime difficult to find and is expensive and shouldn’t be locked away to academes. I’m grateful to an old teacher for leaving it to me. It’s rare to have an opportunity to recommend it when I can’t physically loan my copy out so
(it looks longer than it is, it’s a bilingual edition and it’s poetry. really lovely)
66 notes
·
View notes
From the pilot when vaggie was talking about Alastor and the other overlords you can see husker behind him in like a shadow, and I never noticed this till now 
18 notes
·
View notes
I need someone to explain to me in small words and crayon drawings the plot of Reverse: 1999.
It’s a cool game and I enjoy playing it a lot, but I do not understand what’s happening at all.
9 notes
·
View notes
How did they gets this makeup?
7 notes
·
View notes
HIIIIII remember meeeeee????? i was the person a few months ago (i think) that asked you to draw me and you in mcdonalds at 3am <3333
Oh yeah, I remember you!! What’s up dude?
7 notes
·
View notes
This is probably totally not what you had in mind but hear me out: what if before wild lost his memory he had started to show signs of another power that relates to totk somehow. After the memory loss, that other power is completely forgotten and replaced by the super speed and it’s like that for a few years. If he has another memory problem when he’s older, he could forget the super speed and while he tries to figure out what to do with himself, he discovers that other power, leading to the events of totk. He re meets Flora who tells him of whatever she knew about him, which leads to him relearning his super speed, but only in short bursts, like in botw. Idk, I know it’s probably straying to far from what you’ve established but I still thought it was cool
Ooooh, oh that is really cool!
You’re right that it doesn’t quite work with what I’ve established, especially with powers (I don’t know that Wild would just be able to forget his super speed; it’d be kind of like forgetting he has an arm or a leg) but I do like the idea.
Though actually giving Wild another power along with the super speed actually came up at some point a few months ago, but I decided then that I didn’t really want him to have another since it might be verging on making him overpowered.
But it is a cool idea. Maybe I could tweak it... maybe Flora’s the one with the power? And she doesn’t realize? (Sort of like Four?) And Wild’s grandpa knew about it, so Wild did too, but he forgot, and Flora doesn’t know for some reason, so Wild’s the only one who would know but he forgot so nobody knows unless he remembers...
Idk, I’m just spitballing ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
8 notes
·
View notes