Tumgik
#particularly
catboygretzky · 4 months
Text
The bottle of gatorade/water after sex in sports rpf is a liminal space no I won't elaborate
136 notes · View notes
lesbidin · 3 months
Text
podfic narrators are the underrated backbone to society.
56 notes · View notes
theangrypomeranian · 4 months
Text
Tumblr media
thinking about them again ❤️
43 notes · View notes
sadistic-softie · 2 months
Text
I want James Wilson to give me a checkup but he just keeps putting his hand on top of my head any chance he gets and pets my hair and ruffles it and scratches my scalp...or Lawrence Gordon...or nurse Redheart...or Leonard McCoy... [°^°]
Tumblr media
I just want to go to the doctor and be petted by medical staff...
16 notes · View notes
survivalove · 7 months
Text
people are so ship obsessed it’s crazy.
pledging allegiance to a ship everytime you express your opinion must be EXHAUSTING.
but i guess when you have no other identity outside of the false sense of belonging a discord server gave you 🤧
18 notes · View notes
wanderingmind867 · 2 months
Text
Stan Lee may have been the only person who understood the X-Men. Because I legitimately think no one else understood them but him. Stan Lee's X-Men hid their powers when in their civilian identities (at least initially), which makes sense! If they're meant to be so actively hated and feared, this makes sense! Nowadays, they seem to have mostly ditched this. Which is a shame.
Also, I wouldn't say the X-Men work great as a metaphor for race. You want to do stories about racism, ableism, whatever, make more characters of colour or characters with disabilities. Here's a quote from a person who wrote an online post critical of the X-Men. I won't speak to how good his whole article is. But I do want to share this quote: "The most appropriate metaphor for the original Stan Lee comics is probably invisible dimensions of power such as LGBT issues or religion." I think they're right on that one note, and so I wanted to share this quote.
8 notes · View notes
hjea · 10 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Star Trek: Resurgence - Jara and Tylas say goodbye.
24 notes · View notes
braingobrrr · 6 months
Text
writing a disgustingly sweet paragraph rn. this is so sick why are they so in love
13 notes · View notes
merlucide · 1 day
Note
Idk but noa speaking franch would kill me. Noa speaking German would kill me. HIS EXISTENCE IS WHAT KILLS ME HE IS SO FINE AND FOR WHATTTT (and besides that, as you know: daddy issues. If my dad was half of what noa is to isagi, my life would be easier fr)
- 🦈🦈
GIRL SO REAL, SO REAL
Like sir pls call me mon chérie or mein leibling
(fr bro like Noa wanna be my father? 😍)
4 notes · View notes
that-banhus · 1 year
Text
Ten Books To Know Me
Rules: 10 (non-ancient) books for people to get to know you better, or that you just really like.
Tagged by @landwriter​, whose list I am pillaging for reading tips. In no particular order: 
Paladin of Souls - Lois Bujold. Cordelia Naismith is still my favourite of her characters, but the World of the Five Gods series is so kind. Bujold does religion better than anyone, and in a deeply humanist way. The exact inverse experience of reading Maria Russell’s The Sparrow, though both are phenomenal. 
Labyrinths - Jorge Luis Borges. The short story collection version of someone leaning in and going “would you like to hear a fucked up thought about set theory? No? Time?”
Watership Down - Richard Adams.
I was (understandably, I think) leery of books with rabbits after my Mom insisted that the first time I’d broken down sobbing over The Velveteen Rabbit was a fluke, and I’d misunderstood the point of the book, and then tried reading it to me another two times. I cried every time. HER point is that the bunny became real at the end, so it’s a happy book. MY point is that to the boy, the bunny was real the whole time, and that from his point of view it was essentially one of those horribly moralising 19th century fairy tales where the main character’s best friend dies horribly half way through but they go to Heaven so you’re expected to be happy about it. Except in this case, they’re burned alive. Watership Down was the runner-up for most traumatic childhood book about bunnies, but it made no bones about what it was. It knew when it was being brutal, and did it on purpose and well, and I love it still. It also was one of several deeply formative books for introducing me to my favourite trope: stories-in-stories.
The Lord of the Rings - JRR Tolkien. Yes, I know, everyone’s favourite, etc etc. Still, I read it young enough to sort of grow up along it as a trellis. I can’t put any of my favourite medieval works on this list per the rules, but Tolkien’s the reason I could read them as an adult and go oh, but you’re familiar. Also, the older I get, the more the whole ‘no kindness is ever wasted’ element makes me verklempt. 
Jackalope Wives - T. Kingfisher. I know, it’s not a book, but you’ll forgive me for that once you’ve read it, for free, right here: https://apex-magazine.com/short-fiction/jackalope-wives/
How good was that? Right?
Gaudy Night - Dorothy L. Sayers. I’ve never related to anything or anyone more than Harriet Vane as I read this, belly down on the grass in the Oxford botanical gardens this summer, in the middle of having a Bad Fucking Time romantically. Sayers’ characters are complicated and human, a little too smart for their own good sometimes, and prone to self-sabotage and overthinking. This book is so profoundly good at capturing the absurdities of love, and the negotiations of self that requires, while still being very tender about the whole thing.
American Gods - Neil Gaiman. I’ve never been in the US for longer than three months at a stretch since I was three, and growing up, it was largely mythological to me. America was Where Stories Happen. I read Stardust first, and possibly like Good Omens best of Gaiman’s, but American Gods put words to a lot of the experience of looking at the US from a one-foot-in-the-door-one-foot-out perspective.   
Caedmon - Denise Levertov. Once again cheating, this time it’s a poem:
http://www.southernhumanitiesreview.com/denise-levertov-caedmon.html
I’m also a tremendously basic poetry person in terms of liking Donne, Blake and Eliot. Mmm, weird feelings about God and/or WWI.
The Lacuna - Barbara Kingsolver. Possibly my favourite ending in anything I’ve read ever? I can’t say anything concrete without spoiling it, but the book starts out big, and then, at the end, gets narrower, and narrower down to a fine point, and - look, it’s very good. It has opinions about how we tell stories. The Bean Trees is also very good, though it’s been near a decade since I read that one, and I remember it less.
Frankenstein - Mary Shelley. Look, it has stories within stories, and a big, gothic, sweep of thought and emotion. It feels big, and deep, and bigger and deeper every time I go back.
Special mention because almost everyone who follows me is into Sandman: Doomsday Book - Connie Willis.
Would you like to CRY about the middle ages, and how people were people always and how no kindness is wasted? I bet you would. Maybe only read this if you’re feeling stable about pandemics again, though. I’m giving it another few months personally before going back.
-
I am, as usual, a tiny bit late to the tagging game and have lost track of who’s already been tagged. HOWEVER, I have a bunch of lovely amazing mutuals and new followers and if you want, please consider yourself tagged (that way I can also see who’s interested in maybe being tagged in the future, and get to know you better?)
17 notes · View notes
faunthekid · 1 month
Text
Tumblr media
2 notes · View notes
lewmagoo · 1 year
Text
not to complain but living within a religious community is so miserable lol
11 notes · View notes
meganalexandradesign · 3 months
Text
Hey everyone! Haven’t been on here in a year or so. I haven’t posted a lot of my art lately but if you have Instagram you can feel free to follow me I post all my art on there! @ meganalexandradesign and if for whatever reason it doesn’t pop up for you my tattoo page is hippyymegtattoo - update I’m a tattoo apprentice very close to being a full time artist! So much has happened since I’ve been inactive on here. I hope everyone’s happy healthy and safe and having a lovely new year! Thanks for following me still! -meg
5 notes · View notes
allo-frouto · 4 months
Note
Do you enjoy being watched having sex?
It hasn't happened but maybe I would enjoy it.
3 notes · View notes
typicalopposite · 2 years
Text
What’s my favorite part of any given fandom? Connecting with a group of people who are like… nope that doesn’t fly… click drag and drop it in the delete file! Fanfiction and fanart literally give me life and can fix even the worst endings!
22 notes · View notes
amymarch-defender · 2 years
Text
gold rush by t swift reminds me of byler specifically mike’s thoughts about will what do ya’ll think
13 notes · View notes