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Fanfic idea
Since Gravity Falls has been resurrected, I want to share my fic that has been sitting in my head for almost 3 years🫡
!!!!DO NOT STEAL AN IDEA!!!!
The end of the 60s. It all begins with the fact that the reader (I perceive her as a oc) moves to New Jersey with her parents. At school, she moves to the class where the twins study, but she does not immediately make friends with them. She has the image of the same cool girl who dates cool guys (her parents don't know anything about it). But all because of not the best relationship with her parents, because her father wants her to be a lawyer (the reader's father is a policeman). And she dreams of becoming a writer.
Once in class, the reader notices that her strange neighbor Stanford has 6 fingers on his hands. Of course, she did not remain silent and in a rather intimate context asked what these 6 fingers could do. And of course Ford panicked. Then, at the end of the lesson, Ford ran out of the classroom.
Briefly what happened next. Then she befriended the twins and broke up with her boyfriend (let's omit how). Everything is ok!
Then we cut to when she and Ford got married. In "Gravity Falls" she works as an English and literature teacher (she managed to get where she wanted) and simultaneously writes her novel. At first everything seemed normal, but suddenly he began to withdraw more and more into himself. She was a bit excited and started looking for the reason for this. One day she overheard Ford talking to himself, and he mentioned a certain muse. The reader suspected him of treason, but she could not believe it, because he is not capable of it. One day she couldn't stand it and asked Ford who this muse was. Of course, Ford did not want to answer, and the reader persisted. And then Bill moves on to Ford. The reader is in such shock that she needed to drink wine. But there is a "cute" dialogue between them (I haven't come up with it yet).
Why did she break up with Ford? But because Bill is still the geek. It was in Ford's body that he tried to do terrible things to her so that Ford would activate the portal. The reader could not stand it and broke up with him. She understands that Ford is not guilty, but she could not tolerate such an attitude either, especially since it is a demon in your husband's body. Ford didn't mind, at least his lover would be safe, even if he felt even more alone.
There is a continuation, but it will probably be in the second part.
Do part 2?
Sorry for mistakes, I don't speak English👉🏻👈🏻
#gravity falls#stanford pines#oc#x reader#gravity falls stanford#bill cipher#the book of bill#stanley pines#fanfic#fantasy
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I'm currently writing a Thorin fanfic. I hope that everyone will like it. However, it will no longer be Thorin x reader, but Thorin x oc
#lord of the rings#lotr#thorin x reader#books & libraries#funny#writers#writing#writers on tumblr#oc
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If the hit in the lotr was a samurai woman? I think it would be pretty epic. She would also compete with Legolas and Gimli who will slaughter the most orcs. I NEED IT!!!!
(I don't speak english so sorry for mistakes)
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What you wrote is pure truth!
I love Eowyn, my women, my mistress🫶🏻
Eowyn's Will
"May I not now spend my life as I will?'
'Few may do so with honour.' "
Eowyn's one driving wish in a nutshell, to live her life as she will. To live as a being with a will of her own.
Eowyn having a will of her own is perhaps the crux of her character, her conflict with the patriarchal paternalistic men around her, and the expectations and limitations of her society.
Aragorn gently chides her for wishing to spend her life as she will, stating few have that freedom. And yet while Aragorn may be pressured and pushed by such things as honour and duty and conscience, how these influence his choices is essentially up to him. He can choose, he does have a will of his own. Often he chooses to act against his own inclinations (hide away with Arwen) but he can choose.
Eowyn cannot.
Aragorn; as a noble man in this patriarchal society, has a completely different understanding of what it means to live life as you will to Eowyn. Aragorn sees it as living life selfishly, seeing as his own sense of right and wrong is what causes him to go out and face hardships. Eowyn sees it as simply living as an autonomous being. A right Aragorn has rarely, if ever, been denied.
Both of them have had to act in a way that opposes their will on occasions, but for Aragorn it's because he personally feels a duty towards greater things. For Eowyn, it's because the very existence of her own will has been denied by those around her, and in authority over her.
'Where will wants not, a way opens, so we say,' he whispered; 'and so I have found myself."
The first time we see Eowyn putting her will into action is when she sneaks into battle, and brings Merry with her. This is in defiance of her uncle, and Aragorn himself. Once she looked to Aragorn to set herself free, now she's doing it alone. Back when she was begging to ride with Aragorn, she was still half stuck in the cage, looking to be freed by another, looking for permission from another.
She deserts her post, she fails in her duty, she acts out of bitterness and a longing for death as well as out of courage and a love for her kin and her land, and she's rewarded for it.
When she finally goes to battle, it is by her own will and her own will alone.
That is why I think the narrative awards her a victory (albeit a bitterly won one), that is why it vindicates her decision by having her slay he who wouldn't be killed by hand of Man, and has her win greater renown than she could ever have dreamed of. Because it was an act of freewill, riding to battle, bringing Merry, facing the Witch King, she does all this on no one's orders, but her own.
The narrative rewards this. it rewards freewill.
Now here's this line, from Faramir, after Eowyn reciprocates his love.
" Yet I will wed with the White Lady of Rohan, if it be her will. And if she will, then let us cross the River and in happier days let us dwell in fair Ithilien and there make a garden. All things will grow with joy there, if the White Lady comes."
Compare this to Eowyn's first introduction, when Eowyn is sent away by Theoden and Gandalf, where she waits on her uncle and her brother and their guests, pouring drinks while they sit and speak of weighty things, and even when she is being honoured, she is ordered to go to Dunharrow without consultation. An order that makes her feel as though she's in exile. She is silent, she stays on the side, and she serves. She has great value but no will.
Faramir speaks of Eowyn's will twice.
Eowyn's has been kept in a cage, kept on the side-lines, and denied choices. And here, when Faramir describes a dream of their future, he twice spells out it all depends on Eowyn's will, and he has them dwelling in a land known for its beautiful landscape, and building a garden together.
He speaks of of "us", showing he thinks of himself and Eowyn as a partnership, yet at the same time he also gives importance to Eowyn's personal will, and at the end speaks of Eowyn alone, Eowyn's influence and Eowyn's presence and Eowyn's special title, also showing Eowyn as independent being.
She is his partner but not his adjunct, and her personal will is valued enough to be spoken of twice, and his whole vision depends on her being willing.
She is neither side-lined as she has been in the past, left behind while the men join together to do great things, but her individuality isn't consumed by Faramir either. They're a team.
"Faramir, Steward of Gondor, and Prince of Ithilien, asks that Éowyn Lady of Rohan should be his wife, and she grants it full willing."
When Eomer announces Eowyn and Faramir's betrothal, he also describes Eowyn as agreeing to marry Faramir as being "full willing." This suggests a change to me, a small but significant hint, coming after Gandalf's speech, where Eomer is described as looking over their life together. He doesn't grant Eowyn's hand to Faramir, as might be expected in a patriarchal society. She does.
"May I not now spend my life as I will?'
Yes Eowyn, yes you may.
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