Stay lowkey. Not everyone needs to know what's happening in your life. ❤️
0 notes
A Warm Embrace in the Cold Night
Different feelings swirl within,
Skin to skin, a gentle kin,
Innocent eyes, bright and bold,
Busy cities, stories untold,
And as the night turns cold,
A warm embrace to hold.
It begins by describing different feelings swirling within, as if there are many emotions at play. Then, the focus shifts to a tender moment of skin-to-skin contact, suggesting a close and intimate connection between two people. The innocence of someone's eyes is then described as bright and bold, perhaps contrasting with the hustle and bustle of busy cities that are home to untold stories. Finally, the poem ends by mentioning the night turning cold, but with the promise of a warm embrace to hold, a comforting and intimate moment to counterbalance the coldness.
0 notes
I am being real
I feel unsafe
You make me feel
Unsafe
Anxious
You have to go!
(These are the chronicles of the anxious)
0 notes
“It is not the bruises on the body that hurt.
It is the wounds of the heart and the scars on the mind.”
28 notes
·
View notes
I hate hate hate when I give the mild critique of “yes because a woman in this terrible situation would be very worried about upholding the beauty standards of modern society even though she lives in a Fantasy Realm” and people are like “yeah well maybe it makes her feel better that’s her choice 🙄” like no actually it’s not her choice because she’s not real
113 notes
·
View notes
it's because Mori is so good at manipulating the situation so that it's his way or no way. He's so heartless and conniving, but it's all for the greater good. the man is literally the definition of "the road to hell is paved with good intentions" he's one of my favorite characters. Hence, I obsessively thought about what if he actually acted on empathy AS WELL as his morals. ADA Boss Mori going through a self reflection/ growing a heart arc during the war and realizing how fucked up both the war and himself are, abandons the whole "Immortal Regiment" plan halfway though after seeing all the psychological damage it put on Yosano and the other soldiers.
And after the war he invites Yosano to stay with him as his ward and work at his underground clinic with the offer of never having to use her ability ever again if she doesn't want to. She takes the offer but only because he began treating her kindly in the later half of their service. So they have a really fractured relationship but Mori puts in a lot of legwork trying to repair it. Eventually they get a father-daughter sort of bond.
At some point they find Oda who wants to leave his assassin past and is being framed for a murder. So there's a mystery to solve! eventually the three of them (plus Elise ig) leave the Yokohama underbelly and start the ADA. To save people and solve crimes. Once Dazai joins the detectiving only intensifies.
153 notes
·
View notes
Twisted, and I say this without exaggeration, is honestly probably one of the most genius musical I’ve ever seen in my god damn life.
20 notes
·
View notes
My love for you was passionate and genuine but traumatizing.
0 notes
"TD-D9 hobbled back into the chamber carrying a tray that held plates covered by domed lids. The droid set the covered plates before the seated figures, then said, 'Are you finished with me, Master Sidious?' 'Most definitely,' Sidious said. Keeping his eyes on Maul, Sidious waved at the droid. TD-D9 lifted off the floor, flew across the chamber, and smashed into the wall." (Windham, 70).
And so Sidious looks directly into Maul's eyes as he kills his proto-mother.
I'd like to talk about the class + gender dynamics of this little scene.
Deenine is obviously a British aristocratic servant, if we use the domed lid as a reference. She has served as Sidious' butler throughout the text, with the expected stoicism of the role having morphed into actual faceless steel.
What is interesting here is that she naturally doubles as another role; a mother. She controls the domestic space of this fortress while Sidious goes abroad. She raises and tyrannises Maul, but they must both bow to the patriarch.
Like the stay-at-home-mum and the Victorian nanny, she is dismissed once the little bird flies the nest. All power she once held evaporates.
9 notes
·
View notes
Hey hey guys this is a really important clarification here and I'm hoping someone can help.
In the latest episode, which I was... just able to watch (😔) there was a sharp discrepancy in the subtitles from the book. I was only able to find Yen Press' translation of Untold Origins, which can be... a little eh, sometimes. I don't have the original Japanese and I can't find fan translations to check.
In the scene with Oda, he describes V as an organization that kills "as a ritual" in the anime. In the novel, he says they kill "for justice". Those are two very different things with very different implications, both for V and for Oda's character.
Could someone help me figure out which is more accurate? Was the line in Japanese actually changed?
131 notes
·
View notes