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#german psych
plus-low-overthrow · 6 months
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ARTWORK: JJ Whitefield - Puzzled (Broc Recordz)
illustration by Jason Jagel, 2023.
Some standout tracks to checkout are 'Flute Punch' and 'Comin at Ya'! Limited LP.
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Ludwig von Hofer (German, 1801-1887) Psyche, 1835
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the-evil-clergyman · 1 year
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Amor a Psyché by Károly Lotz (1890)
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actual-changeling · 7 months
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okay but can we PLEASE allow crowley to have emotions? can we let him be angry, upset, bitter, frustrated, and NOT immediately want to forgive aziraphale? can we let him be a complex being with complex emotions and trauma who is allowed to be heartbroken over aziraphale choosing heaven instead of him?
yes, they love each other. yes, they both hurt each other in that final argument. yes, neither of them is completely wrong or right.
for six thousand years, crowley has done *everything* to accommodate aziraphale. he has swallowed his emotions, crossed his own boundaries, tried again and again to get aziraphale to listen to him so he can finally make him understand how the fall changed him and how deeply fucked up the entire heaven/hell system is. it is why i cannot see the apology dance seen as "cute" or "romantic" because it's crowley once again ignoring his emotions to save aziraphale from heaven and himself; he did NOTHING wrong! aziraphale should be the one apologizing, not crowley.
and while yes, aziraphale has been on his own journey and is struggling with his own trauma, he needs to start putting crowley before his personal comfort. he needs to stop expecting crowley to throw his feelings in the wind and come crawling back to him with an apology on his lips.
the final argument was crowley saying he's DONE doing that. he's done meeting aziraphale on his side, either they'll meet in the middle or not at all - and rightfully so. aziraphale hasn't been listening to him this season, he never has.
do you really think if crowley had given him the details of the trial in heaven, gabriel's trial, anything at all that aziraphale would have believed him? no! he wouldn't have! his entire schtick is finding increasingly insane explanations for the shit heaven pulls so it doesn't contradict his personal view of it.
their relationship has never been healthy, unconditional love is NOT healthy or good. it's simply not. crowley is allowed to have hard boundaries and conditions, he's allowed to not forgive him immediately (or at all, although we all know he eventually will). aziraphale is ALSO allowed to be upset. i know that we all want them to be together and happy, but trauma recovery and personal growth aren't that simple. they're both more than the relationship they have with each other.
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frankarcherhater · 6 months
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my bed in the mental hospital :3
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Human AU
Germany : "You brought a date to the crime scene ?"
Prussia, holding romano hand : " It was either that or ice skating"
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dolokhoded · 1 year
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i can't believe i've been led here by a tiktok post...
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diam0ndsayings · 1 month
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I hate that I have to heal from things that are not my fault.
- words I can't say out loud
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soda-can-enthusiast · 4 months
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LIN-MANUEL MIRANDA JUMPSCARE WHAT??
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zukoromantic · 2 years
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Lassie: Why does Spencer call you babygirl?
Gus: How about we stop talking for a while
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strange-daughter · 1 year
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essentials of a german coming-of-age movie
1. set in the summer
2. unrequited crush to kick-start the plot
3. a new unconventional friend/friend group
4. said teenage friends going somewhat feral over the course of a few weeks and causing general havoc and headaches for adults
5. main character has an unexplainably large, nice bedroom
6. (related to 5) neglectful parents or parents who try way to hard, no in-between
optional:
1. homoerotic tension
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hiramstolowitski · 2 months
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woe midterm season part 2 be upon me
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crplpunkklavier · 1 year
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was not prepared to hear justin mcelroy pronounce leitmotif like leetmotif today. is that how you all say it? please say seik
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forestlion · 3 months
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max i know you think die behörden are stupid but the selbstüberschätzung gleich nach freilassung wieder ein drogemporio armani zu starten.... bruder take a breather
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bpdamn · 1 year
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the mental health system and my bpd teaming up to ruin me:
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hetalia-club · 2 years
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I guess what I'm not understanding is why they wouldn't want to go back to Germany? I understand they had a pretty nice 'prison' but they were still prisoners.
You're not getting the level of manipulation we are talking here. They lived in houses. Like full houses not little cells. They could go to the store without guards following them around. cook their own meals, throw get togethers. They didn't feel like prisoners. In fact they were convinced they were American citizens. This is how they viewed it. America didn't tell them 'okay you're in big trouble and are in a labor camp but won't realize it is one'. They viewed it as. 'wow this is so nice, America gave us a town to run and live in. they must really like us. That's so nice of them, Americans are so nice, right guys?' Some men met girls and took them on dates, they could take English classes. They could get married to Americans. They were basically American. Most importantly they listened to the radio from the Allies perspective. Most German soldiers didn't know the horrible things the Axis were doing at the time. They were not told and were kept in bliss ignorance. They thought they were the good guys and the Allies were the bad guys. But how could that be? The Americans were so nice and friendly...right? The Germans didn't build towns for their captives. Listening to American radio and living with Americans they viewed Germany as the villain. They viewed themselves as American. They started to separate themselves like an us vs. them. 'America would never do those horrible things Germany is doing. America is the good guys. We're part of the good guys now. We're so happy they let us live here.' Are you starting to understand the mind set they had to be in? Think of it as Stockholm Syndrome if that helps. But the difference in that is they weren't abused at all. They were mad when they had to go back to Germany and a lot of them viewed it as unlawful deportation. They paid taxes and had lived here for years. That's why when they got on the boat to 'go home' they viewed it as a huge inconvenience and were even more annoyed at Germany for making them leave their lives for a few weeks. In their eyes they were American. Never mind the war, never mind they were captured by the British and sent here. This was their home.
In a few short years America had turned thousands of German soldiers into American patriots. It gives new meaning to the phrase "Now, ya'll come back now, ya' hear?"
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