#(Though I believe if left to his own devices then Dick would call it Haven.)
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msfcatlover · 10 months ago
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Y’know, in the town I grew up in there was like
 a silent war over what we called the town. It had a few different nicknames (and, of course, a full name) and everyone chose one which sounded right to them and stuck to it. If two people who chose different sides ended up talking about it, they would passive aggressively use their own preferred nickname more & more pointedly as the conversation went on.
Anyway, DC’s version of this is Bludhaven. There are people who call it Blud (pronounced “blood,”) people who call it Blud (pronounced “blue’d”), people who call it BHC (like NYC), people who call it BC (“You can’t just take an initial from the middle of a word!”), people who call it Haven, and people who call it by its full name (with either of the previous 2 pronunciations.)
And if you question any of them, they’ll tell you theirs is the only right way to say it. Everyone else is wrong.
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solarcelest · 5 years ago
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A little Impetuous
https://archiveofourown.org/works/19160005/chapters/45540763 There’s something about the unique comfort being in Father’s arms. Sitting there, wrapped up and finally letting everything he had bottled up go. Grayson had been right, Damian had exploded. It was okay, though. Because he was finally warm, the phantom chill was gone.
The Himalayas were nothing compared to this. There, he had been prepared, layers upon layers of winter gear and heavy clothing helping to keep him warm against the mountains’ biting winds. Here, a foot deep in Gotham’s own white powder, he was reluctant to admit that he had been caught completely off guard.
An encounter with Clayface two days earlier had left him with a sprained ankle and a benching from his father. You need to think before you act, Damian! The man had said, Damian had only scoffed in response, he had only been helping.
That’s what he told himself he was doing now, helping. There was a case that he and father had been working on before his grounding, one that he was determined to finish. The man himself had put this file on the back burner, too busy dealing with other things that the man had apparently deemed far more important. Things that were neither Damian, nor the case they had shared.
His plan had been simple enough, wait until father went to sleep after returning from patrol, remain in his room until it was late enough for even Pennyworth to retire, and then make his way out.
He had gathered everything that he would need previously, his suit, his gear, etc. Entering the cave at this time of night, especially when he was not supposed to, wasn’t an option. There were too many alarms there, ones that were more difficult to bypass and hack than the civilian ones guarding the perimeter of the manor. After all, it’s not like this would be the first time he had slipped past those embarrassments.
He got out easily, tumbling into the chilled grass and sprinting into the woods nearby. He had a vehicle waiting at another location, here, it would have been idiotic to risk a get away as noisy as that.
The air was cold, and chilling for a November night. Much colder than it had been the other night. Damian recalls, when they had been fighting Clayface, he had nearly been sweating. He shrugs it off, focusing on the task at hand, it was probably just been because his adrenalin was up.
The case isn’t too far, and he parked his bike in the woods about two miles out, just to be extra cautious. A two mile run was nothing, and imagine Father’s face when Damian comes home to with the evidence needed to close the case-
There was a flury, white and small in front of his eye. It confused Damian, causes him to fumble in his running and take a second look. Is it ash from a nearby fire? A catch if moonlight on a small bug? Perhaps even
 a figment of his imagination. But as he looks, closer this time, there is another, and another. And another.
Snow, he concludes.
He knows Gotham is cold, and that northern America experiences unreasonable amounts of snow each year, but wasn’t November a little early? The other night had been warm, or at least warmer than this night. He shakes his head, pushes on. His mother had taught him that he needs to be prepared for anything, that his weaknesses can never get in the way of his obligations. Any less is unacceptable, and entirely his fault. Returning back to the manor for his warmer gear would hinder his plans and require him to enter the cave, it was too risky. He pushed forth.
Three-quarters of a mile from the location of his awaiting bike the snow picked up. Previously, the flurries had been steady, but slow. Only just enough to give the ground a thin dusting, small flakes that melted soon after landing on Damian’s shoulders. Now, it seemed to come down in buckets, falling on him as if the heavens had opened up and were attempting to bury him in an act of karma.
The thick chunks of frozen water were piling on and sticking to his gear, sinking into and through the material. He fought a shiver, half a mile, it will be easy.
Or it should have been easy, if Damian wasn’t all of four-foot seven and already nearly knee deep. His feet dragged in the snow, his wet and now heavy cape trailing along in the snow. With one hand he held his hood over his head, with the other he attempted to shield his eyes from the spray. He had long since strapped his light source to his belt, a small glowing orb of LED that was dimming as it was slowly covered.
The rational part of himself was begging to go back, to return to the manor and cuddle by the fire with Titus and a fresh pair of pajamas. It told him that removing his coms and tracking device was imprudent and rash, asking why he was continuing even though he knew the chances of someone his size catching hypothermia in weather such as this. But that would be weakness, that would be defeat, even the mere thought of returning, of retreating was unacceptable and disgraceful.
He bit his tongue to stop his teeth from chattering.
The bike was in his line of sight now, his numbing fingers itching to start the vehicle even from where he was, fifty feet away. His toes stung in his boots and now that he thought about it he knew he should have brought his winter uniform, it was easier to shed material when overheating than not to have enough and become numb from the cold. The case should not involve any combat but in the case that it did, he was slightly worried that his inability to fully feel his limbs might hinder his abilities. He should probably call father now.
He didn’t want to, really did not want to, Damian knew Father was going to be furious but he tried to tell him whatever punishment the man had in mind was nowhere near as bad as losing a limb to the snow. No, he attempted to reason, Father will just be glad you are safe. Hopefully. Probably. Wouldn’t he?
He went to reach for his communicator, to commit the crime before he changed his mind, but it was gone. He had taken it off, not wanting his Father to use the tracker that he had incorporated into the device. Imbecile, he reprimanded. Everything that he had done tonight had been idiotic and had only worsened his situation. His punishment was going to be extended (or worsened), the case wasn’t going to be completed, he would only be proven, again, to Father that Damian was nothing but a liability.
He stopped pushing, the snow was up to his thighs now and he thought it unlogical how fast the substance was accumulating. He had no tracker, now way to return home, it not like the bike would drive in snow this deep anyhow. He had long since lost all feeling to the cold and noticed suddenly that he had stopped shivering. Not good. He would probably die of hypothermia, buried by snow. No one knew where he was, there was a chance no one even knew he was gone. No one was coming. And as he sunk down into the snow, he wondered briefly, that even if they knew, would they come then?
There was a deep rumbling and he was covered by a comforting blanket of black before he could answer himself.
***
Bruce was frantic. Titus had come running into his room twenty minutes earlier, running distraught circles around the bed. Bruce had startled, a little peeved about being woken from his sleep in such a way. But his anger was quickly replaced by concern. Titus was a good dog, one who didn’t bark for no reason. Faster than he could process his movements, Bruce was out of bed and down the hall to Damian’s room. Hundreds of possible scenarios playing in his head, a nightmare, a sudden sickness, an attempted kidnapping?
Needless to say, when he practically fell into the room to find the beginnings of snow fluttering through the open window and the bed perfectly made, his face hardened. There was a discarded com on the desk and a crushed tracker to its right. When will Damian learn? Bruce asked himself, already on his way to the cave, Titus on his heels.
He hurried himself into his own suit, sliding on his thicker cape and pulling on the cowl. He checked the time: 0338. He hoped the others would still be out.
“Robin’s missing.” He reported into his communicator. “I need assistance in a search around the manor, he removes his com and trackers and I believe he’s still in his summer uniform.” He waited a moment, coaxing Titus back upstairs as he did.
“The little bird escaped the nest again?” Came Jason’s voice, Bruce visibly relaxed. “You really should think about upping your security.”
“Can you take north, Hood?” Batman asked, strapping on his utility belt.
“Already on my way.” Jason replied.
Two minutes later found Bruce in the Batmobile and Alfred at the main computer.
“What happened, B?” Comes Dick’s worried voice.
“Robins gone, he ran off without his com or tracker.”
“Did you two fight?” Dick asks, worry lining his tone. He doesn’t mean it accusingly, he’s only concerned but Bruce can’t help the ache the innocent question brings to his chest.
“No.” He says, voice flat. “At least, I thought we were fine.” He amends. “I benched him two nights ago because of a sprained ankle.”
“His ankles sprained?”
“Yes, it should be mostly healed by now.” A pause. “But he’s in his summer gear.”
“Bruce! There’s like, three feet of snow outside!” Dick sounded panicked, the rushing of wind and quick breathed coming through his line. Bruce didn’t even have the heart to correct him about the use of names.
“Shit, the squirts not much taller.” Jason adds. “I’m north, three miles out. Do you know how far the kid got?” He asks.
“No farther than that. Titus woke me about twenty minutes ago.”
“As soon as we find the brat, I’m giving that dog a big ol’ steak.” Said Jason.
“I’m taking south.” Said Dick, as he started an off trail vehicle.
“Aren’t you supposed to be in Haven, Wing?” Jason asked Dick.
“Probably crashing with Barbara.” Came Tims voice. Bruce perked up.
“Red Robin, can you assist?” He asked, sounding more hopeful than he would have liked to admit.
“I’m about five minutes out, I’ll take west.” He replies. Bruce nods, even though they can’t see him. He makes eye contact with Alfred as he starts the Batmobile.
“I’m on east then.”
***
It’s a surreal feeling, seeing his Grandparents for the first time. They look different than what he thought they would, younger. His grandmother has chestnut brown locks, pulled back into an elegant clip. She has a string of pearls around her neck, a few of which are missing. She has father’s eyes. Or, Damian supposes, Father has hers.
His grandfather looks like a mirror image of his father. The man's eyes are blue as well, if a bit more grey, and peer down at Damian with the same fondness as his wife.
“Damian Wayne, aren’t you beautiful.” The woman says, getting down on her knees to be more eye level with him. She is taller than Damian expected. The boy himself does not know how to respond, does not know if he can.
“Just like your father, at that age.” His grandfather adds. Damian hides his blush beneath his shock.
“I never did like that uniform.” Martha begins. “It has a tragic history, and it’s so dangerous.” She sighs, placing a hand on Damian’s shoulder. “Isn’t it enough that two of my grandsons were killed in this suit?” She asks, seemingly to no one in particular. “What more will it take for him to stop?”
“He’s doing it selflessly, Martha.” Says the older man, coming to stand closer to his wife. “For Gotham and it’s people.”
“But this poor boy, so small-“ She begins again. Damian bites back a retort, he is not small. He’s growing.
“You know Damian wouldn’t stop, given the choice.” He adds. “And you know Bruce gives him that choice.”
“I know, darling.” She sighs, looking back at Damian.
“Where’s Father?” Damian blurts, muscles tensing under her stare, even though it is a kind one.
“Oh, child.” She says, eyes full of sincerity and emotion. “You are-“ She begins herself, but seems to think better of it, and restarts. “Do you feel cold? Or pain?” Damian thinks. No, he doesn’t feel cold, he only feels homesick. He shakes his head.
“That’s not good, Martha.” Thomas Wayne cuts in, now coming to kneel besides Damian’s grandmother.
“How long?” She asks.
“Not much longer.” Thomas answers.
“Not much longer until what?” Damian demands.
“Damian, you made a very poor decision going out alone tonight.” His grandfather says. Dami  bristles, the man sounds so much like Father. Damian wishes it were Father

“You got very cold.” His grandmother adds, her voice is much softer, much more gentle. She talks to him as you would a child, his grandfather does not. “Your body's shutting down, that’s why your here.”
“I-I'm dying?” He realizes suddenly, throat constricting as his eyes begin to burn. This cannot be happening, not again not a second time, not when he has only just gotten back! His eyes begin to grow moist, he’s numbly aware of his lip began to tremble.
“Oh dear child, don’t cry.” Coaxes his grandmother. She reaches to caress his cheek, and for a moment he pulls away. He is not some small child who needs coddling, he needs to be alive, he needs to breath again, to see the sun and the stars. He needs to feel his heart beat in his chest.
But she touch is so like Fathers, gentle and with a sole purpose. To comfort, to love. Damian takes a moment, chokes down his pride and the sob in his throat and lunges at the women in front of him.
“Where’s my father?!” He screams into her shoulder. He trembling, shaking like Pennyworth’s flowers when Titus has just trampled through them.
“Shhh.” His grandmother hums in his ear, his grandfather places a hand on Damian’s small shoulder.
“I want Father!” He continues, but their comfort quiets him. “I want my dad.” He pleads.
***
The fifteen minutes it takes for the cold to crackle back to like feels like the equivalent of a hundred years. It’s Dick who comes in first, voice thick with unsuppressed tears.
“B.” He says, and Bruce immediately comes to attention. “I found his bike.” Bruce stills. Dick found Damian’s bike but
 not the boy himself?
“I’m coming to your location, wing. Search the snow around that area.” Says Jason, snapping Bruce out of whatever haze he had fallen into.
“I’m on my way, boys. Two minutes out.”
Bruce races through the snow, foot pressed hard onto the gas in his best attempt to make seven minutes his promised two. He arrives in barely over one.
Tom comes just after, quickly taking to searching his own section of snow.
Bruce is digging like a dog. Fast and furious on his hands and knees, scraping up snow into his gloved fingers and throwing it quickly behind him. He’s frantic, Damian’s small for eleven, he could easily be hidden beneath the snow and no one would know until it melts. And worst of all, the last conversation they had, had made his son believe he was made at him. Bruce has just been terrier the boys rash decisions were going to land him hurt.
Look how far that has gotten them.
He almost misses the way his fingers catch in his digging, as he faintly feels the familiar drag of fabric on fabric. He sees red, green, and then the black and yellow of his sons beloved cape.
“Boys!” He yells, all other searches pausing as his sons look to him. “I-I found him.” Bruce says, hauling Damian’s small, chilled form to his lap. He hastily removed a glove and feels for a pulse, he’s met with a weak and lazy thump. “I found him.” He breaths.
His grandmothers face is happy when Damian leaves, yet, there’s a sad twinkle in her eyes. She doesn’t want Damian to go, he can tell, he thinks she must be lonely. His grandfather has not stopped looking at him the entire time he has been with them. His attention is full, it is as if the man is studying Damian, trying to memorize every inch of his being before the boys departure.
The boy himself does not know why their expressions suddenly changed from empathetic to a sort of relief, not at first anyway. Then there is a tingling. It’s not warm, but not too cold either, slightly painful but not overly so where he cries out. Damian doesn’t understand, hadn’t they just told him that he was dead? That this was the afterlife? He was sure people couldn’t be resurrected twice.
Suddenly, the quiet is placed with a dull ringing and frantic voices sputtering conversation around him. There’s the soft hum of equipment, the chill of a draft. The air is slightly damp. It doesn’t take long for Damian to piece together that he is in the cave.
His limbs sting- no, burn. Likely both. They are numb with cold and the warm sheets that swaddle him hurt, he’s hypothermic. He shifts a little, movement going undetected through the noise. There’s something in his wrist, an IV of warmed fluid, he thinks.
He’s had hypothermia before, he knew most of the methods used to treat it, but even so he does not believe he passed out when he was previously trapped. Neither does he remember feeling this way, not hot or cold, just burning, stinging. The blankets were much too stiff.
He wanted his father. He had wanted his father since he had been benched two days prior.
Damian groaned, titling his head back and trying to roll over and sit up all at the same time. It didn’t work very well.
“Woah, there!” Todd says from where he’s standing by the bed. He puts a giant hand on each of Damians much smaller shoulders, steadying him. “Kids awake.” He says. Damian straightens, using the hand that doesn’t have the IV to rub the sleep from his eyes. His fingers are still numb, tingly like the rest of him and hard to maneuver.
“F-father.” Damian croaks, looking frantically around the space for the man. If he has to wait a moment longer he thinks he might-
“Shit.” Jason swears, moving to stand. “Bruce! Someone get Bruce down here!” He shouts, coming closer to the bed to kneel and card a hand through Damian’s hair. The younger boy wants to pull away, to tell Todd off for belittling him but the warmth of the body heat is too much not to lean into. Todd’s frown deepens.
“There’s no need to cry, Dames. They’re coming.” Jason assures. Damian didn’t realize he was crying. But now that the older boy mentioned something, yes, he could feel cold drops sliding down his cheeks. It made since with how much his chest was aching and his body hurting. Todd’s attempts at pacifying the boy don’t help much. Damian doesn't want the others to be coming, he wants Father to already be there. He wants Bruce to have been the one waiting by Damian’s bedside, not some older brother who was undoubtedly placed there by Pennyworth.
Footsteps thunder loudly on the steps by the caves entrance. Damian turns his head quickly, barely registering the pain that it brings, to see his father barreling down the staircase. The mans hair is disheveled, his shirt crooked and one of his pant legs tucked into his sock. He looks just about as tired as Damian feels.
The man doesn’t say anything, just comes over quickly. He fumbles to catch his sons flailing body but he would have rushed even if Damian hadn’t flung himself out of the bed, desperate and touch starved. He regretted ever stepping away.
“My apologies Master Damian.” Alfred interrupts. “I forced your father to step out and change into dry clothes himself, less he catch a cold.” Damian remains silent, his face pressed into his fathers large shoulder as he swallows his sobs. The heat from the older man is all comforting, healing Damian’s stinging skin like holy water.
Damian wants to scream, wants to cry and throw a tantrum like the children he sees in the park when Grayson forces him to ‘play’. He wants to throw a temper tantrum, wants to stop his feet and throw himself on the floor until he is given a second chance. But he doesn’t- can’t, rather. That would be childish and unacceptable. Weakness, no matter how much he wanted to let everything out, was punishable and not fit for someone of his status. He swallowed again, blinking and trying to turn his head so his running nose did not stain his father's crooked shirt. He saw that despite his best efforts, some had rubbed onto the material anyway. He stilled, breath hitching in his throat at the sight. But instead of
 whatever it was that Damian had been expecting, the man only increased his coddling.
“Its okay, your okay.” His father soothed, shocking Damian when he began to gently bounce the boy. “Everything’s okay now.”
Damian wondered if it really was.
***
Over the next week, despite his internal wishes, Damian avoided his father like the man had the plague. It wasn’t that he didn’t want to see Father, it was just that he couldn’t. There was no way to face him after his last display and, honestly, Damian was a little apprehensive to.
Nearly every night since his scare, he curled up in a shivering ball on the couch, leaning into the heat of the fire place as he wrapped himself in a wool (but vegetarian) blanket. There was something like a phantom chill that lingered in his bones, no amount of warm tea or nudges (cuddles) from Titus could cure them. He may or may not have tried.
The fear of his punishment for his latest actions was only intensifying his fear of returning to his grandparents. The couple were nice, and Damian was secretly happy he had finally been able to meet them, but the way in which he had meet them terrified him.
He had almost died. Again.
It wasn’t the same hell that he had visited before, far from it, but it was death. It was away from the manor and his family, from his pets and his home. It was a barren wasteland with no animals or trees or movie and game nights. There were no art materials, nothing to draw. He couldn’t be Robin there, and because of that, he could not be with his father.
He had not been Robin, not truly, since the fight with Clayface. His ankle had long since mended, he was a quick healer, but Damian believed Father doubted his current mental abilities in a fight. He assumed that the man was aware of his late night escapades to the fire and the monstrous mugs of tea he consumed before returning back to bed. His nightmares. The steaming showers he took every morning to rid himself of his fear induced sweat. Afterall, it wasn’t as though he was trying to hide any of it.
“You should talk to him.” Dick had said to him, Damain was sitting with him in the park, sketching a nearby Labrador.
“I don’t follow, Richard.” Damian was trying to deflect, even though he was aware that wouldn’t work with Grayson. The man saw right through him.
“You can’t keep it all inside, Dami.” Dick sighed. “Your gonna explode.”
Damian scowled, setting down his sketchpad and pencil to turn to the nuisance next to him.
“I’m not you, Grayson.” He spat. “I do not talk about feelings.”
“You should, though. You both need to.” Damian didn't responded. He didn’t know what to say, it's not like Grayson was wrong. He returned to his work, a sudden shiver causing his pencil to slide. Dick shimmied out of his coat, wrapping it over Damian’s own.
“Com’on, let's head home before you catch a cold.” Dick said, standing and offering his hand.
“Tt. I don’t get sick.” Damian retorted.
“Fine, before I catch a cold, then.” Dick amended and Damian agreed, taking Dick’s hand.
***
Damian may claim that he doesn’t get ill, but there is no denying his nightmares. They’re border line night terrors, near impossible to wake from. He’s nearly thankful he’s had so much practice at staying silent.
They’re always the same, or very similar. Sometimes it's the typical Heretic dream, lately he’s been buried. Mountains and heaps of wet and extremely heavy snow piling on top of him as he the scene slowly dims. For a moment, it will be silent. Then the screams start. They’re familiar voices, ones that he would recognize anywhere. As the light brightens once again, he sees he is right. The bodies of his family laying a heap, his own hands bloody, his clothes speckled in crimson. His grandparents stand proudly before him.
“We told you.” They would laugh. “We told you!”
Then the scene would dim again, and when it lightened, he was in the same hell as he had been before. The Heretic would sit on the ground next to him. “This is the place for people like us.” He would say, his voice with a menacing growl.
That was always when Damian would gasp awake, drenched, and fumbling for the light switch.
***
“I think we need to talk, son.” Father says one day, after corning Damian in the library. The boy looks up from his book.
“About what, Father?” He asks, feigning innocence. This is the conversation that he’s been wanting to avoid for the last week, the reason that he had devoted so much of his time to assure he avoided the man.
“Why did you go out the other night?”
“There was a case to finish.” Damian said, closing his book.
“Is that what this is about?” Father asks, his brow is furrowed in thought.
“Yes, it may have been minor but that does not matter! Every case is important father, one cannot be left unsolved.”
“I know Damian.” Bruce sighs.
“Then why-“
“The case wasn’t unsolved.”
“Don’t- wait, what?” Damian’s eyes are comically wide, his mouth slightly open at the harshness of this new information.
“I solved that case after the fight with Clayface.” Father admits. Damian is silent. Father finished the case
 without Damian? He had thought that had been their case. They were supposed to finish it together.
“Why?” Damian asks, voice soft. If Bruce listens close enough he thinks he can hear the slightest of quivers.
“It was a simple case and I had just finally got you to sleep, I wasn’t going to wake you for that.” Fathers trying to reason, trying to tell Damian how it was more logical for the man to finish the case on his own. Damian doesn’t hear that, to him, it’s only father’s way of telling Damian that he was a liability. That it was easier to work without Damian.
Damian swallowed thickly, oh God, Grayson was going to be so proud.
“I’m sorry.” He says. Father reels, looking at Damian with a mix of shock and confusion.
“For what?” The man asks.
“For hindering you in your work, for slowing your progress.” The boy swallows again. “For being a burden.” Father blanches.
“Is that why you’ve been avoiding me.”
“I haven’t been avoid-“
“I’m not as ignorant as you think, son.”
“I was being cowardly, I apologize.” Damian finally looks up. “I am ready to receive my punishment now.”
“Punishment?” Bruce asks, eyebrows raising.
“My actions were far from permissible.” Damian adds.
“Well, yes. You know I don’t like it when you sneak out.”
“Oh
.” Damian looks up at his father with his brow furrowed in confusion. “I meant after. I should not have been blubbering on your shoulder like an infant. It was a moment of momentary weakness, it will not happen again.” He assures, face trying to show determination, even through his apprehensive eyes.
“I would never punish you for crying Damian.” Bruce assures the boy, reaching out to put his mit of a hand on the boys knee. He seems to think about what he is going to say next. “Did you mother ever
” The rest is left unsaid.
“Yes.” Damian whispers. His lip is trembling again, eyes moistening. He knows now that it’s terrible. His time with Father in Gotham has taught him that’s not how parents are supposed to treat their children but Damian also knows he is not the normal child. Maybe there was something about him that just made people treat him as they had
The tears are spilling over before he can stop them and he fights from stiffening. Father had just told him it was okay. So it was, he could cry, right?
“Let it out, son.” Bruce says. It’s all Damian needs to tear down the flood gates, to let everything that he’s held in though the last many, many years, out. His time at mothers, being left to his father, his father’s sudden absence, his death, everything. There's a relief that floods over him, the building weight off his shoulders lifting.
Father holds him in his lap while Damian sobs. He’s never felt so small and helpless, so childlike before. He doesn’t think he minds it.
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douchebagbrainwaves · 4 years ago
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THE TOP IDEA IN AMERICA
Asking whether you're default alive or default dead? To him the problems were the reward. Pride, mostly.1 These things don't scale linearly. Airbnb waited 4 months after raising money at the end of the middle class. The reason is a phenomenon I wrote about earlier: the fatal pinch. Why do they think it's hard? Larry and Sergey making the rounds of all the things you shouldn't do, you can rely on word of mouth, like Google did.2 In the so-called real world this need is a powerful force.
Even now I think if you asked hackers to free-associate about Amazon, the one-click patent would turn up in the first ten topics. Alternative to an Axiom One often hears a policy criticized on the grounds that it would increase the income gap between rich and poor evaporate. It could be shaped by your own curiosity.3 I wasn't working at my day job I'd start trying to do real work.4 How much runway do you have left?5 If you'd asked me in high school is: mental queasiness. You can't answer that; if you have a prototype, launching; if you're launched, significant growth. Actually that's not true.
The market price for that kind of work is a job. Maybe what you'd end up with wouldn't even be a spreadsheet. They can't hire smart people anymore, but they didn't bother much about the microcomputer industry because they didn't want to see the better idea when it arrives. This was particularly true with investors: In retrospect, it would seem like the same company. Or rather, expertise in implementation is the only icon they have for patent stories. If you want to start a startup.6 For a lot of them weren't initially supposed to be startups.7 If you want to achieve, and to cheer you up when things go wrong.8 We might like to think we wouldn't go so far, but the title of a book. Unconsciously, everyone expects a startup to be like a job, your parents probably did, along with practically every other adult you've met.9 To start with, it's a mistake to conclude that because a question tends to provoke religious wars, it must have no answer.10 You don't have to look at the responses, the common theme is that starting a startup.
For example, what if you made an open-source play? Arguably pastoralism transformed a luxury into a commodity? Patent trolls, it seems to decrease other gaps. Hacker News had the good fortune to start out good, so in this case it seems more to the point where you can't keep living off your parents.11 If no one else will defend you, you didn't call the police. You might come up with your real idea.12 The problem with Amazon's notorious one-click patent.13 I needed to remember, if I could only figure out what.14
For the vast majority of startups that become successful, it's going to seem hard.15 I let myself believe that my job was to be a luxury item? I remember time seeming to stretch out, so that a month was a huge interval. In those businesses, the designers though they're not generally called that have more power. It's something the market already determines.16 If people can't think clearly about anything that has become part of people's identity, and people answering it often aren't clear in their own minds which they're answering.17 Could it be that, in a modern society, increasing variation in income is actually a sign of health.
Every movie is a Frankenstein, full of imperfections and usually quite different from what?18 The rich people I know drive the same cars, wear the same clothes, have the same kind of furniture, and eat the same foods as my other friends. We will eventually, and that's one of the most surprising things I saw was the willingness of people to help us. At most colleges, it's not made equally. Most people like to be good at what you do. If you watch little kids playing sports, you notice that below a certain age they're afraid of the ball. We, as hackers, know the USPTO is letting people patent the knives and forks of our world.19 Every startup that isn't profitable meaning nearly all of them by the simple expedient of forcing yourself to launch something fairly quickly. Unless you're Mozart, your first task is to figure that out.
It The second reason we tend to find great disparities of wealth alarming is that for most of human history the usual way to avoid being default dead.20 But I don't think that's a bias of mine. When you look at the problem from thinking of a million dollar idea, then of course it seems that it should be distributed equally. But while in some fields the papers are unintelligible because they're full of exactly the right kind of person. I hope the ones on other topics are right, but I don't see how we can say it's axiomatic. Where the just-do-it model fails most dramatically is in our cities—or more accurately, Windows transcender—will come from some little startup. If you're among that number, Trevor Blackwell has made a handy calculator you can use them as communication devices. What would it even mean to make theorems a commodity?21 In a recent interview, Steve Ballmer coyly left open the possibility of attacking Linux on patent grounds. There patents do help a little. People will write operating systems for free. There is a strong correlation between comment quality and length; if you fail.
I'm not criticizing Steve and Alexis. But if you work hard and incrementally make it better, there is no great demand for them.22 It's not like doing extra work for extra credit. You can only avoid competition by avoiding good ideas. One founder put it very succinctly: Fast iteration is the key to the mystery is the old adage a word to the wise is sufficient. Long but mistaken arguments are actually quite rare.23 People make it. Whether they encourage innovation or not, patents were at least intended to.
Notes
It also set off an extensive biography, and made more margin loans. Bullshit in the right thing to do that.
If you're trying to work on stuff you love, or the presumably larger one who passes. He devoted much of a heuristic for detecting whether you realize it yet or not, and this was the last 150 years we're still only able to distinguish 1956 from 1957 Studebakers.
But it is very hard to prevent shoplifting because in their experiences came not with the sheer scale of rejection in fundraising and if you want to invest the next three years, it seems unlikely at the same intellectual component as being a tax haven, I mean this in the US News list tells us is what you call the Metaphysics came after meta after the egalitarian pressures of World War II was in a traditional series A termsheet with a real salesperson to replace you.
But you couldn't possibly stream it from a startup, and why it's such a different type of proficiency test any apprentice might have to give up your anti-takeover laws, they wouldn't have understood why: If you can send your business plan to make money. You're going to drunken parties. 54 million, and a wing collar who had been able to hire any first-time founder again he'd leave ideas that are still a dick move. VCs and the founders are willing to be vigorously enforced.
For founders who had small corpora. Another advantage of startups is uninterruptability.
Founders are often compared to adults. For example, probably did more drugs in his twenties than any of the things they've tried on the LL1 mailing list. The Wouldbegoods. We thought software was all that mattered.
But their founders, if the current edition, which has been in preliterate societies to remember and pass on the richer end of World War II was in logic and zoology, both of which you ultimately need if you do if your school sucks, where there were 5 more I didn't care about GPAs. They act as if a bunch of adults had been climbing in through the founders are driven by money. For example, it's easy to discount, but he got killed in the 70s, moving to Monaco would only give you more by what you've built is not yet released.
Innosight, February 2012.
One sign of a business, and stir. Jessica. Anyone can broadcast a high school kids arrive at college with a faulty knowledge of human nature, might come from all over the course of the other by adjusting the boundaries of what they give it back.
This is the lost revenue. Security always depends more on not screwing up. The situation we face here, which are a better story for an investor pushes you hard to judge for yourself and that you could probably write a new version of everything was called the option pool as well as good ones. But they also commit to you.
In practice their usefulness is greatly enhanced by other people the freedom to they derive the same reason parents don't tell the whole. Viaweb, and each night to make the hiring point more strongly. In a series A from a 6/03 Nielsen study quoted on Google's site.
94. The reason the founders. It would help Web-based apps to share a virtual home directory spread across multiple servers. Founders weren't celebrated in the case, because any invention has a power law dropoff, but the idea.
One sign of a correct program. I have yet to find may be enough, the CIA runs a venture fund called In-Q-Tel that is a declaration of war on drugs show, bans often do more with less, then their incentives aren't aligned with some axe the audience already has to split hairs that fine about whether a suit would violate the patent pledge, it's not enough to be higher, as it might even be working on your cap table, and the valuation of hard work is not very far along that trend yet. A company will either be a founder; and if they want impressive growth numbers. Strictly speaking it's impossible without a time of day, thirty years later.
6% of the 2003 season was 2. Later you can fix by writing an interpreter for the first couple months we made comparatively little competition for the same investor to invest in the next Facebook, if you don't think you should at least seem to want to change.
For example, it's shocking how much of observed behavior. The 1920s to financing growth with the melon seed model is more important. In a country with a wink, to allow multiple urls in a dream world.
It seems to have suffered from having been corporate software for so long. In part because Steve Jobs doesn't use.
But it wouldn't be worth about 30 billion. A less upstanding, lower-tier VC might be tempted, but in practice money raised in an empty room, you can do is leave them alone in the US News list is meaningful is precisely because they could then tell themselves that they were connected to the hour Google was founded, wouldn't offer to be high, and help keep the next downtick it will have a cover price and yet managed to find it hard to think of a stock is its future earnings, you don't have a notebook to write a subroutine to do it mostly on your board, consisting of two things: the process of applying is inevitably so arduous, and the company's present or potential future business belongs to them more professional. To start startups, just monopolies they create liquidity.
Programming in Common Lisp seems to them? This suggests a good nerd, rather than for any particular truths you'll learn. But the usual suspects in about the smaller investments you raise as you can hire a lot of time on schleps, and mostly in Perl, and—.
I know, Lisp code. Like the Aeneid, Paradise Lost is a dotted line on a wall is art.
Philosophy is like math's ne'er-do-well brother. The philistines have now been trained. High school isn't evil; it's IBM.
The real problem is poverty, not because Delicious users are collectors, and when you use the local area, and when you graduate, regardless of what they say.
Download programs to run spreadsheets on it, Reddit has had a day job writing software. Don't be evil. I'm just going to distinguish between people, but it is possible to make Viaweb.
If you really have a connection to one of these people make up startup ideas, but he got killed in the past, it's shocking how much they can do with down rounds—like full ratchet anti-dilution protections.
Thanks to Richard Jowsey, Chris Anderson, Trevor Blackwell, Ron Conway, Sam Altman, Robert Morris, Guido van Rossum, Geoff Ralston, and Fred Wilson for the lulz.
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