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#day 3 spree face wildcard
hoeyon · 24 days
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rintarous · 4 years
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how they spoil you
BAKUGO KATSUKI
bakugo is like a wildcard
you never know what the fuck he’s planning to do 
gets you the most unexpected gifts
and its probably the ones you’ve been looking for but you never got the chance to buy it or something
and u’re like: how did you know i wanted this
“idk, it looks so shitty but your eyes kept looking at them so eh” 
since his parents are both in the fashion industry,,,,, expect a shit ton of clothes as gifts
and if he’s really whipped for you he’d ask either mitsuki or masaru to make you something special 
and his parents are just like: are you our son
but anyway
he gives you gifts every like 6 months
so expect that those gifts are extravagant 
“why the fuck would i waste a shit ton of money on you every month” he grunts, as he hands you a well wrapped gift 
and when you open the gift its the shoes you’ve been wanting
bakugo sees your reaction and lets out a smirk 
hes also the type to buy you branded shit just because
“quality over fucking quantity alright? plant that in your fucking brain” 
but if he doesnt plan on giving you gifts cs he doesnt feel like it,,, 
he means well dont worry
its just bakugo being bakugo jsakjhas
the end !!
KIRISHIMA EIJIRO
kirishima is the man who can do both things at the same time
gifts? he got that
love and affection? he came prepared
ever since he got in a relationship with you,,, he’s determined to do whatever it takes bro
even if it meant he’d had to miss a few crimson riot figurines cs he bought u something that week
expect a few gifts and trinkets every other week
“i bought it because it reminds me of you, my baby 🥺” - kiri
and if he didn’t feel like spending his $$$$ for the time being,,
he’d straight up just make you feel loved (again and again)
which means, he does physical affection literally every day
hold ur hand, kiss ur cheeks, cuddle sessions late at night
the cute shit we expect kiri to do
but if its a special occasion, expect kiri to go all out
like he’d buy you a dress with his matching suit and shit
and you’ll be out on a date
those type of shit
he says he does it cs its “manly” 
but we all know you got this man is WHIPPED
the end <3 
MIDORIYA IZUKU
you see,, deku isn’t really fond of giving material things
cs he’d rather save money for limited edition all might merch that he might’ve missed along the way
so instead he’d spoil you with his time, love and affection
but there are times he’d buy you stuff like when it’s your birthday or your anniversary w him,, those special moments he’d never want to forget yk
so he’ll arrange stay at home dates where all his attention is all on you 🥺
deku u sweet cute piece of shit
and once that stay at home dates start, theres no going back
prepared to be attacked with his attention, his love, his care, everything izuku has to offer 🥺
he’d hold you like there’s no tomorrow and treat you like a baby
phones are off when its stay at home dates
and fuck you never felt so loved til you met midoriya izuku
even if he doesn’t spoil you with material gifts, he’d definitely spoil you with his never ending love for you 🥺❤️
a lot of pepper kisses all over ur face
“just because”
and probably he’d rant about his notes on other people’s quirks
next thing you know you two are napping together
legs entangled with one another
he holds you tight, almost as if he’s going to lose you
AND FUCK DEKU YOU CUTE SHIT
the end <3
TODOROKI SHOTO
when spoiling his s/o.. todoroki would do anything and buy everything to make you the happiest
since he is relatively new to shit like this,,
he’d go all out on a damn shopping spree
with endeavors credit card ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
he’d go to this one fashion district yaomomo told him about and go crazy
ahh go stupid
probably ends up buying a whole store if you mentioned you liked this one specific store
buys bags, jewelry, clothes, etc. anything he can get his hands on
and gives it to you in one go
like,, “y/n i got something for you” he says after he disappears for like a whole day
and poof you’re drowning in paper bags
everyone in the dorm are like: ???!!!!!!!!!! what the fuck
you want him to return the shit he’s gotten you but he just says “why will i? they remind me of you”
yeah right todoroki,, those gucci bags u bought definitely remind you of ur s/o
but dont tell anyone,, if he got u like clothing items,, he’d buy two pairs each so you two could be matching 👀
overall, he’d spoil you ENDLESS with gifts/material shit
but each item he got probably holds a reason why he bought that specifically for you
the end!
bonus: endeavors card got declined when he tried using it to pay for groceries thus resulting him into screaming “sHOUTOOOOOOO” in despair in the middle of the cashier line
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flauntpage · 7 years
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I Kicked Oxy During a Pro Boxing Bout in Tijuana
On the shelf in front of me burned two prayer candles. The pre-fight ritual. One read, "Calm and Professional, Box-Box-Box." The other candle read, "Clean and Sober."
Yeah fucking right. Three days into detox, even my tears tasted like a pharmaceutical.
My eyes glazed over as I watched the flames slowly flicker and melt into the floor. In them I saw a highlight reel of all the mistakes that led me here.
I was sitting in the dusty coffin sized back room of what must have been an old military bunker, now corroding on the outskirts of Tijuana, waiting for my 13 th professional boxing bout, just days after my latest attempt to quit OxyContin.
Trembling, I pulled myself up and started to shawdowbox in tiny circles, trying to a get a decent sweat going. In reality, I had been profusely sweating all day. According to WebMD at the 72 hour mark is when the body goes into full opiate withdrawal. Seeing that I had flushed the last of my dope three days earlier, I was right on the money.
+ + +
Coach grabbed the Vaseline out of his bag and walked up to apply the pre coat. He smeared the grease across my eyebrows as I clenched my mouth shut, gritting my teeth to hide the stench of three-day-old tequila, still decaying on my breath.
In the past, this moment had been everything. A crucial point of contact between my coach and I, not to mention the reason I started fighting to begin with—human affection. The bond between a fighter and his trainer is deeper than anything most people will ever experience. I trusted him with my life. I closed my eyes and tried to gather what was left of my spirit, but I couldn't form a single thought.
Photo by Scott Leon
Outside the window I could hear wild dogs howling at the moon, scavenging through the streets of Tijuana for a fix to quiet their hunger. My eyes opened to a fogged mirror that scaled the locker room wall. I looked like a shell of the boxer I used to be.
+ + +
I wasn't your run-of-the-mill California beach kid. My early life consisted of acting out in Special Ed so I could spend the afternoon in detention. Detention kept me hidden from my abusive stepfather. At 13, I was shipped off to military school in south Texas. This was where I first learned how to box.
Being so unsure, unsettled and unsatisfied, three-minute intervals of requited brutality became a state of grace—free from sin. Boxing became my first safe space. A space where all the shitty cards I'd been dealt in life could be put on the table.
Poker face in full effect, evading you with a shit-eating grin, I'd circle the square. Sly as a fox, I became sugar coated in the sweet science—pickpocketing you with jabs, disappearing before you ever knew what happened. Besides, slight of hand was my second nature, to box was to lie and for me growing up, lying meant surviving.
I returned to LA with a new skill set and refused to let my stepfather put his hands on me again. But as much as boxing had given me confidence, my problems continued. I dropped out of high school at 16, not long after reconnecting and moving in with my biological father. He was in between prison sentences when we rekindled. Less than a year later, my dad and I were arrested together for going full Bonnie and Clyde on a crystal meth induced crime spree.
I remember the detective peering over his shoulder taking a mental note of the father/son duo in handcuffs. Cruising down Sherman Way, hog-tied in the back of a patrol car, another sad song of growing up in the Valley. The officer looked me in the face and said, "Son your father's been in and out of prison his entire life. After you get outta juvie, you may want to consider a different line of work."
When I got out of juvie about a month later, I didn't even have enough quarters to take a bus across the valley from Sylmar to Woodland Hills. But the driver let me slide, and I arrived at my father's abandoned apartment and peeled the eviction notice off the door as I picked the lock. I walked past the chaos the cops left behind and went straight for the bathroom. Lifting the top lid off the toilet, I desperately peeled away little pieces of tape that were glued to the bindle hiding the oxy and the eight ball. Using my fathers declined credit card, I swirled together beautiful blue and white lines.
+ + +
What I had realized, finally, was that I could no longer hide behind the masks I wore to survive my childhood. Three days earlier, I kicked oxy. The drug addict had to go, even if the boxer in me had to leave with him. But I still had to box.
I took my trunks out of my bag, white and speckled with the blood of my last five opponents. Never washed, I used to wear them like a badge of honor. That night, in that dark back room, I didn't feel that same confidence.
I pulled up my trunks and immediately threw my shirt back on—it wasn't the night for pre fight-flexing. I was fighting at Jr. Middleweight that night. That's a full weight class higher than I'd ever been. And there was no training camp—remember, I was just three days off the shit. I literally puked my way through a weight cut.
Wrapped up, gloved up, I started warming up on the mitts. Combinations that used to silence the room, echoing like a thunderstorm, were now drizzle, dissolving into my coaches hands.
"Come on kid, come on son, you got this," he said to me. But his words were hollow. He knew why my hands were shaking, and neither of us wanting talk about it. Not tonight. Not again.
+ + +
A man from the commission banged on the door. "Gringo, your up."
If ever boxing had a grim reaper, it was that guy. Coach tied a knot in my robe and I pulled the hood over my head. My body ached so badly, I could feel the silk sinking down the back of my skull. One foot in front of the other, in little pigeon-toed steps, I stuttered down the hallway, feeling uncontrollably sorry for myself.
"Fuck this sob story I tell about my father,," I said to myself as I walked in slow motion, the fans on each side of me cheering my opponent into the ring.
"Fuck my probation officer for introducing me to Freddie Roach.
"Fuck my coaches for loving me unconditionally, there's nothing worth saving here.
"Fuck bottle service girls, fake tits and bumps of cocaine.
"Fuck my fans for believing in this "All-Class" bullshit. I'm a junkie.
"Last but not least, fuck whatever cheese-dick DJ thought it'd be a good idea for my walk out song to be 'Eye of the Tiger.'"
Through a silver curtain, I entered the arena. Still hiding underneath the hood of my robe, I wasn't quite ready to be unveiled.
+ + +
I climbed through the ropes, coach following behind me. He pulled the silk knot from my waist, undressing my robe. I felt vulnerable, naked, and soft but there were no more drugs to hide behind. For the first time in long time, I was truly exposed.
Pulling the Vaseline out of his pocket he applied the final coat over my eyebrows. One final moment to just shut my eyes and feel loved. His arms wrapped around me as he gave me a kiss on the cheek. "This is it son, go get what your worth."
"Seconds out!" the ref yelled.
Coach slid between the ropes, waiting for the time-keeper to buzz the opening bell. Looking down at the floor, I could feel my opponents' eyes burning a hole through me from across the ring. I was too heartbroken to look him back in the eye.
I'm not a big puncher so I usually box gracefully, working off the jab, setting things up, picking my spots, but there was no way I could have pulled it off mid-withdrawal. I was going to have to hit that motherfucker with bad intentions if I wanted to make it out of the ring.
Ding! Ding! My opponent slid up to me, hands high in a poised stance. Fingernails digging into the leather, fists clenched, with every ounce of self-hate in my entire being, I started punching.
Punching for every time the dealer texted me at 2AM saying, "I got blues."
His nose splattered blood as his body crashes against the canvas. He gets up.
"Box!" yelled the ref!
I sent off another barrage of punches.
Punching for every time I put my hands in my own vomit, searching for a chunk of OxyContin that hadn't fully dissolved yet.
He dropped to his knees and the ref began the count. "Don't get up!" I thought to myself. I didn't have enough gas in the tank to get through another round.
His nose poured out a violent red waterfall, and he got up again. The official ordered for the fight to continue and I threw one last combination.
Punching for my coaches that loved me though all this, even when I put them through hell.
Punching for the years I lost, nodded out, and cried behind the curtain in my bathtub.
Punching for the countless overdose attempts, each time coming-to in front of friends and family, fucking humiliated.
Punching for every time I gave up on myself.
+ + +
And suddenly it was over.
Smearing blood from my gloves onto my trunks, I looked back at my coach, I said, "It's okay, I'm okay."
I had 3 days sober and if I made it to midnight, then that would make four. I made a promise to myself that I meant to keep. Even if meant this had to be my last fight.
Photo by Scott Leon
The ref grabbed my wrist, walking me to center ring. The microphone repelled down from the rafters and he leaned in to shout, "Winner by first round knockout... Fighting out of Hollywood California… Representing Wildcard Boxing Club…. ZACHARY "KID YAMAKA" WOHLMAN.
+ + +
Today is my 120 th day clean and sober. The kick is long gone but the memories of my drug use vividly remain. I wish I could sit here and tell you that was my first crack at the whole sobriety thing but that wouldn't be true. What I am hoping is that this is the last crack.
The fight in Tijuana changed me. Sick and miserable, punching through my addiction, I was able to leave the drug addict behind. And for now, I was able to keep the boxer in me alive.
I Kicked Oxy During a Pro Boxing Bout in Tijuana published first on http://ift.tt/2pLTmlv
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