#it is not the author's fault
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have you ever read a fanfiction you disliked so much it put you off reading for the foreseeable future?
I feel bad because it wasn't even badly written, it just gave me such ending fatigue. In my personal opinion, it was four whole chapters longer than it needed to be, and not only did the author have many writing tics that kept showing up, up to five times in one paragraph, the plot itself got intolerably repetitive, too. But I guess there are only so many ways you can describe people boinking when you don't have much experience.
Anyway, I'm just letting it out into the void bc if I don't express it I'll explode, but I don't want to be mean to the author for no reason. Getting upset over too-long endings/epilogues/repetitive sentences is my issue and I don't want to accidentally discourage someone from writing.
#just venting#for my sanity#don't mind me I'm just whining#adhd problems#I get overly upset when a fic bores me#I am sorry#it is not the author's fault
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I watched Starship Troopers tonight.
#personal#dumb#my art#immediately after finishing i was pumped to watch some analysis vids on it#cuz i heard a lot of the drama about the original author being a pro military fascist and the director going “fuck that” and making a satir#scrolling through youtube search results was not promising. lots of male film buffs i would Not trust even on a first glance.#“The Critical Drinker” (pfp of a bearded man drinking alcohol) lol.#and then I saw cinemawins did a video on it and was like oh nice i haven't seen his stuff in a while but he's a pretty leftist creator#scrolled through the comments#second panel face#this sucks i'm outta here.#just leagues and leagues and leagues of anime pfps and right leaning people dogpiling on him for “not understanding what fascism is”#idk it's pretty alien and weird to me watching this movie and going “wow yeah that was pretty obvious huh” like literally the from opening#to the teacher preaching militance and only giving voting rights to “those who serve their nation first and earn it”#and then seeing droves of people online going#WHAT ARE YOU TALKING ABOUT? It's not anti-fascist and even if it was it's#the director's fault for desecrating heinlein's incredible sci-fi epic vision. ermm media literacy is dead.
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Question for the unexisting followers I believe I have,
What is John Green's official tumblr account, if he even has one? Because I've seen some weird schist about him on pinterest and I can't be fully sure about it now.
#is he fishingboatproceeds-blog?#Ive looked for it and that one cones up#but he does not seem legit#john green#quedtions#the fault in our stars#john#green#authors
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“I wasn't ready for my heart to be broken again before it had begun to heal. I wasn't even sure I had a heart anymore, just thousands of little pieces I kept trying to glue back together.”
— Culpa Mia
#culpa mia#mercedes ron#book quotes#my fault#spilled words#spilled ink#light academia#dark academia#love#feelings#literature#prose#love quotes#bookblr#author#dumblr
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warriors has a lot of cool deaths, but there are a lot deaths that are bad, poorly written or disappointing, but what’s an infinity times worse are the deaths that don’t fit with the narrative. obviously bristlefrost’s sacrifice was a big one, and a lot of us agree that it should have been shadowsight in her place, since that would have made more sense. and briarlight randomly dying because she “didn’t want to be a bother” is just terrible and ableist, especially after she had a whole arc about learning to love herself. but one of the worst, and honestly offensive deaths, is sandstorm. a strong character from the beginning, she helped firestar re-found skyclan, which is why she decided to go on the journey, despite being an elder, with alderpaw and the others. along the way she gets a scratch, i think on her shoulder from a fence post but i haven’t read the book in a long time. alderpaw knows the herb that would help stave off the infection but can’t remember the name, and spends his time freaking out and trying to find it.
so one of the oldest characters in the books, a main character from TPB, mother of the two arguably most important cats in the whole series, made the great journey, fought in the great battle, and outlived her husband who had 9 lives, and she fucking dies in a ditch from an infected scratch before they even get to skyclan. they can’t even bury her by firestar or hollyleaf, because she dies the most lackluster, inappropriate death far away from home and for what? for alderpaw to have some guilt for a few pages?? her death is hardly even dwelt on, everyone just goes, Sad, and moves on. she should have died at home, surrounded by friends and family. she should have spent her retirement chilling with graystripe and cloudtail and telling stories to her grand and great grandkits. or i’d even take if she died fiercely in battle, protecting her clan like she always did.just give her SOMETHING. but she dies a nothing death in a ditch cuz her useless grandson can’t remember a herb????? c’mon.
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The F1 driver who takes every opening he sees
A mechanic’s son, Esteban Ocon took an unlikely path to an F1 driver’s seat. Now he’s fighting to keep it.
MONTE CARLO, Monaco — The mechanic’s son walks past women in bright dresses and men in fine suits, many of them sipping champagne. He breathes in the salty air of the Mediterranean, its shoreline neither rocks nor sand but dozens of mega-yachts.
The Monaco Grand Prix, held each May, is the global peak of sports opulence, less street race than picture postcard from high society: A-listers and royals toasting the good life in the richest place on Earth. Several Formula One drivers live here, their plain-sight hideaway amid a Netflix-fueled fascination with their sport. Among them are Max Verstappen and Lewis Hamilton — champions, multimillionaires and household names in a sport Hamilton has called a “billionaire boys club.”
Esteban Ocon, though, is not of this world. When Ocon was a karting wunderkind, other drivers would sneer at him and scoff, whispering that the only child of a dumpster-diving mechanic doesn’t belong. That the Frenchman, now 28, will forever be a [wanderer] playing dress-up in a place such as Monaco. Even after eight years on the grid, he remains an outsider.
Then again, an impressive finish here would change minds. It might even change Ocon’s, convincing him it’s possible to be born into one end of the economic spectrum and, with enough talent and moxie, reach the other.
He changes out of his jeans and into an Alpine race suit. He stretches the muscles on his thin frame and climbs into a $15 million super machine. The green flag drops. Ocon accelerates, 0 to 100 mph in 2½ seconds, trying to position himself and his team for an early chance at points. Over the years, he has proved himself as a skilled and fearless driver, aggressive sometimes to the point of recklessness.
With Monaco’s narrow streets and hairpin turns, passing is dangerous. Three-time world champion Nelson Piquet once compared it to riding a bicycle in your living room. And trying to pass a teammate? It simply isn’t done.
Before the race, in fact, Alpine instructed its drivers to avoid each other. Whoever is ahead after the first lap should stay there; the driver behind him is to protect his blind side.
Midway through the first lap, the cars are clustered. Pierre Gasly, Alpine’s other driver, is immediately in front of Ocon. On the eighth turn, just before the circuit’s famed tunnel, Gasly eases off the accelerator. Ocon sees his teammate drift left, allowing space between Gasly and the wall, creating an opening.
FIVE HUNDRED MILES NORTH, there’s a small French village built into the lush countryside. People in Évreux raise chickens, recycle batteries, mow their own grass. And the locals tell of a man north of town who could bring back the dead, so long as the corpse had four wheels.
One of those locals, Marc Guillouet, still remembers the sound of Laurent Ocon’s air compressor bellowing at all hours as Ocon performed reconstructive surgery on another broken-down used car that had been towed through his gate. Then, hours later, another sound: the engine humming back to life.
“The way he refurbished it,” Guillouet says, “it was like new.”
Laurent was a self-taught mechanic who built his shop onto the back of the Ocons’ home, a single-car garage jutting out in yellow stucco. It was in the house’s rear, but it acted as the family’s entrance. Before school some mornings, young Esteban would see his father, grease up to his elbows, still trying to solve the previous night’s puzzle. When Esteban returned in the afternoon, he would watch Dad beamas he turned the key, listened and … there it was, that beautiful music.
“We live for that,” Esteban says now. “He wants to win, like me.”
Laurent’s passion was reviving machines. His son’s was maneuvering them. Esteban says he was 4 the first time he got behind the wheel of a go-kart, gliding around the track at an amusement park, through cones and around other karts as if it were second nature. His friend who came along drove straight into the wall.
Esteban kept driving, testing himself in bigger, faster, more complex machines. The families of some other 8-year-olds hired engineers, barked into radios and traveled with professional mechanics. But Laurent and wife Sabrina had no money for that. If Esteban’s carburetor failed or his torsion bar broke, it was Laurent who mounted a new one. Then they would return to Évreux from Ambourville or Rouen, often with Esteban cradling another trophy.
“We tried to protect Esteban from pressure as much as possible,” Laurent says, answering questions emailed by The Washington Post. “But unfortunately, the only solution is to perform.”
After one of Esteban’s races, a representative from a management company approached. The boy had the talent to make racing his career, the man said, but it wouldn’t be easy. Or cheap.
Thousands of European kids grow up dreaming of the Formula One life, waiting to pilot a rocket at circuits such as Monza and Silverstone and Monaco. Most never make it, and even those who only come close do so after millions have been spent on equipment, travel and engineering.
The families of many drivers commit hundreds of thousands before their child becomes a teenager, largely to get noticed by top feeder programs and driver academies. Among the hopefuls are the kids of billionaires and oligarchs, able to bankroll the pursuit of a nine-figure dream. A few even pay their way onto the F1 grid, with cash-strapped teams agreeing because it transfers the financial responsibility.
Most, though, spend years working their way up.
“Even if you are talented,” Esteban says, “if you don’t have the right people, you don’t manage.”
But all he had were his parents.
“If he really wants to do it,” Esteban remembers hearing Laurent say years ago, “we’ll give him everything we can.”
LAURENT AND SABRINA SOLD THEIR HOUSE and the family business, leaving behind anything that didn’t fit in a 21-foot motor home. They stuffed Esteban’s mini-kart into the rear of a van, surrounded it with tools and Esteban’s toys, then hitched the motor home to the van’s rear.
“Prepping,” Esteban’s parents told him, “for the rest of your life.”
With Évreux in the rearview, home now was a parking lot in Lyon or a roadside in Le Mans. Ten-year-old Esteban had his bicycle and the family border collie to keep him company. Sabrina outfitted the motor home with a fake fireplace and told friends it was their mobile chateau. Le Palais des Ocons had a living room and shared sleeping quarters, with views that were a mountain some days, a vineyard others.
Sabrina and Laurent convinced their son that each day was an adventure, each morning a chance for Esteban to open the door so he and their dog, Viper, could breathe in a dramatic new backdrop. He and Laurent sometimes went on long bicycle rides, where they talked about engines, racing, the future. Then the convoy headed to a nearby track, where the soft-spoken Esteban slid on a helmet, climbed into his kart and transformed into an assassin. There wasn’t an opening he wouldn’t hit, a pass he wouldn’t attempt, a throat he wouldn’t cut. Esteban wanted to win races, yes, but victory was about more than bragging rights.
In his 9-year-old mind, he says, it was the only way to repay his parents.
“I had weight on my shoulders very early,” he says. “There was never a Plan B in my head.”
In 2006, Esteban, then 10, won the regional mini-kart championship, which qualified him for a spot in the French Cup’s “Minime” division. He reached the final heat, and he and another young star, Charles Leclerc, angled for positioning on the last lap. Esteban went inside, trying to overtake Leclerc, and their tires touched. Leclerc spun out and hit the wall; Esteban recovered but finished outside the top five. The two boys spent the rest of the day crying.
The family returned to Évreux each winter, staying with family so Esteban could attend a few months of school before the new season. Otherwise, they kept moving, rarely in the same place for more than a few days.
Esteban won the French Cup in 2007, the “Cadet” title a year later, the junior championship in 2010. With every promotion came longer trips and more expensive gear. An entry-level “baby” kart costs about $3,000, not including registration fees and fuel, and a used mini-kart engine and chassis can be twice that.
By 2011, with a promotion to Winning Series Karting, the chateau was crossing borders so Esteban could race in Spain, Italy and Portugal. Entry fees alone were upward of $5,000 per race, with fuel and spare parts pushing the cost higher. All youth sports have their own unique cultures, and in this one, there is an established taboo: Kids don’t talk about their parents’ wealth.
But chatter happens anyway. Jos Verstappen, father of 14-year-old Max, used to drive in Formula One and spent $1 million bankrolling his son’s career. Leclerc grew up among the yachts and Ferraris of Monaco, and Lance Stroll’s dad, Lawrence, was a fashion billionaire.
Esteban’s folks?
Homeless, the other boys murmured. Sometimes, they said, they even saw his dad lurking near the circuit, waiting to pull other drivers’ used tires out of the trash.
IN 2014, OCON, THEN 18, won nine races and finished in the top three in 21 of 33 races to claim Europe’s Formula Three championship. But it was 17-year-old Verstappen, who had finished third, who was promoted seven months later and became the youngest driver ever to appear on the F1 grid.
“My dad always said it’s not going to be easy,” Ocon says now. “I didn’t really know what my future would be.”
He spent the 2015 season with Mercedes and Lotus — discussed alongside Verstappen, George Russell and Gasly as the sport’s next generation of starsbut still toiling in its minor leagues.
The next season, another young driver, Indonesia’s Rio Haryanto, won a spot with Manor Racing, a fledgling F1 team from Britain. F1 teams today operate under an annual maximum budget. Back then, though,the annual cost for a two-car team could reach nearly $200 million per year. Some teams have lucrative sponsorship agreements and investments from engine manufacturers, but others rely only on prize money and the potential share of a year-end financial pie that is distributed to the teams that finish in the top 10 in points.
Haryanto started the first 12 races that year before Manor dropped him — and not just because he never finished better than 15th. It was because Haryanto, initially backed by a $16.65 million investment from an Indonesian oil and gas company, ran out of money.
Manor’s own survival depended on performance, so in August 2016, it contacted the most talented driver available and told 19-year-old Esteban to get to Belgium. A management company had agreed to underwrite Ocon’s career, so with the motor home now retired, the family traveled by plane.
“A lot of emotions and relief,” Laurent recalls. “The culmination of 16 years.”
FOUR MONTHS AFTER ESTEBAN’S F1 DEBUT, with the sport itself at a crossroads, Manor Racing announced it was broke.
It was January 2017, and this was the first of several dominos to tumble.
The next was that Force India, a well-funded team and a new contender, offered Esteban a multiyear contract after its No. 2 driver, Nico Hülkenberg, defected for Renault. With an elite car, Esteban finished seventh in Russia, fifth in Barcelona, sixth in Montreal — valuable points for his team and proof he belonged.
Then, in Azerbaijan, Ocon saw an opening. He tried to pass Sergio Perez, his Force India teammate, before their wheels touched. A moment later, he went for it again, contacting Perez’s car and damaging both vehicles.
“What did Esteban do, guys?” Perez said on his headset radio. He later called Ocon’s behavior “unacceptable.”
Three races later, Ocon again collided with Perez in Hungary, and a week later in Belgium, Ocon tried to pass his teammate on the inside. The cars made contact, Perez’s front wing flew off, and the veteran driver’s anger exploded.
“Honestly, what the f--- is this guy doing?” Perez said. “F---ing idiot.”
High drama — which, considering the sport’s new ownership, was undoubtably welcome.
Long owned by a European private equity fund, Formula One had recently been purchased by Liberty Media, an American entertainment titan that parlayed its ownership of struggling assets, from satellite radio to the Discovery Channel and QVC, into ownership of the Atlanta Braves. It wasalready planning the all-access Netflix docuseries that would debut in 2019 — less than a year before the pandemic. When the sports calendar ground to a halt, “Drive to Survive” became a massive hit that sent each team’s value soaring.
Sponsors and investors were fighting for a piece of a sports gold rush. Not everyone could keep up, though. Force India’s owner, Vijay Mallya, defaulted on more than $1 billion in loans after his airline failed, before numerous banks accused him of fraud. (Mallya has called these accusations “rubbish” but, after fleeing India for England, is still considered a fugitive.) He sold his team to a group of investors led by Canadian billionaire Lawrence Stroll, who had made his fortune on the threads of Tommy Hilfiger and Michael Kors. And who happened to have a son, Lance, who drove, if not very well, for Williams Mercedes.
Just like that, it was Ocon being bumped, his dream blown to pieces by his own team. When the 2019 season started, he was out of a job. He blamed “politics.”
He joined Mercedes as a reserve driver, and during race weekends, he says, he would climb into a racing simulator and go through scenario after scenario until 4 a.m. On no sleep, he would go to the airport and travel to wherever F1 was because that’s also where Ocon could meet with potential investors, sponsors and engineers. Then, a week later, he would do it all again.
“I didn’t care because I said, ‘Let’s give it a full go,’ show the people how hungry I am,” he says. Failure, he told himself, would mean that his parents’ sacrifices had been in vain.
“I didn’t do all that just to sit on the side,” he continues. “Teams saw how much I was willing to give, how much I was willing to suffer. I wanted to show everyone that I’m willing to go further than anyone else. No sleep for three straight days, simulator day and night, I’m going to do it. And, yes, I’ve lost four kilos in that year and got sick seven or eight times, and the reality is, yes, I’ve suffered and it was tough. And I don’t want to be suffering forever.”
In late summer 2019, with the first season of “Drive to Survive” being filmed, Ocon’s phone rang. Renault was parting ways with Hülkenberg. The French team wanted the kid from Évreux to come home.
“A crazy moment,” Ocon says. “This was it. The tough times are over now.”
LAST YEAR IN MONACO, something happened that was highly disruptive: Ocon finished third. It was his third appearance on the podium and his best result since he won the Hungarian Grand Prix in 2021. In one of Europe’s nightclub capitals, the 27-year-old celebrated. Hard.
Fatigued, dehydrated and emotionally drained, Ocon again got sick. He was nonetheless due back on the grid in Barcelona four days later. He finished eighth in each of his next two races, then 14th, then didn’t finish the two after that.
Nobody weeps for the motorsports rock star, but a life spent in constant motion does take a toll. A year after signing with Renault, which rebranded as Alpine, Ocon was reportedly paid $5 million per year. He put Laurent and Sabrina on the payroll of “Team Esteban,” he says, assigning his mother administrative tasks and his father responsibilities such as renovating Esteban’s house. He could also hire a performance coach to keep his body and mind sharp — or as sharp as possible in a sport whose schedule features two dozen stops around the globe.
Now, years after Laurent and Sabrina tried shielding their son from many of racing’s pressures, it is Tom Clark’s job to act as Ocon’s conscience. To tell him it’s okay to sleep in on weekends, to grab a nap after practice, to avoid media and fans because more interactions mean more exposure to pathogens.To urge him to eat more lean protein and complex carbohydrates, stay ahead of time zones by wearing sunglasses to simulate darkness, use a light therapy lamp or glasses that emit a bright glow above the eyes. To encourage him to take it easy sometimes, especially when it comes to challenging teammates, and maybe to even think about gearing things down a tad.
“Let’s really just put a bubble around you,” Clark says he tells Ocon.
The problem is this is in conflict with the instincts that got Ocon here. Without deprivation and exhaustion, would he have ever left Évreux? If not for aggressive racing and a ruthless competitive drive, could he have even reached the grid? Especially when it comes to challenging teammates, can’t he gear things down a tad?
ON THE FIRST LAP at this year’s Monaco Grand Prix, there’s Gasly in 10th place. Ocon is 11th. Points are awarded to only the top-10 finishers.
The Alpine drivers have known each other since childhood, their hometowns just 20 minutes apart, friends scratching and clawing for better footing. When they were 12, both were in the same championship race. Gasly overtook Ocon on the last lap to win. “I kicked his ass,” Gasly told the Netflix documentary crew, “and he didn’t like it.”
Not long after, the French racing federation had an opening at its sports academy in Le Mans, a kind of Hogwarts for kid racers. It was Gasly who got the invitation, not the mechanic’s son. The friendship crumbled, just one more thing Ocon left behind as he boarded the motor home once more, looking to win races, yes, but also in search of acceptance.
“But look where I am now,” he says. “That has helped me to get through a lot of steps in my life. That’s what made me so competitive, I guess, from so early on.”
Ocon and Gasly hadcollided in 2023, too, in Australia, with both cars taking race-ending damage. After that, tension between the teammates boiled over when Gasly accused Alpine of coddling Ocon. Before Monaco, the team told the pair to cool it.
And they did, for all of 40 seconds. Now, seeing that narrow opening, Ocon goes for it.
His rear tire connects with Gasly’s front wheel once, then a second time, sending a bitter cloud of burned rubber into the sea air. Ocon’s car goes airborne before turning sideways, and though it lands on its wheels, the impact causes catastrophic damage.
“What did he do?” Gasly says into his radio.
Pieces of carbon fiber fly off Ocon’s car. The tire is punctured, the gearbox fried, the suspension arm broken.
“That’s it, guys,” Ocon tells his team. His Grand Prix is finished.
Needing repairs that will cost tens of thousands and with Ocon’s car due in Montreal in 10 days, Bruno Famin, Alpine’s team principal, publicly admonishes Ocon and vows “consequences.” F1’s governing body, the Federation Internationale de l’Automobile, penalizes Ocon after ruling he initiated the collision.
A week after Monaco, Alpine announces that, in 2025, it will replace one of its drivers. Neither had gotten a podium, and only Ocon had won a point for Alpine. But the team chooses to keep Gasly, meaning Ocon again will be set adrift, the [wanderer] seemingly destined to forever roam.
A FEW MONTHS AGO, Esteban and Laurent went for a long bike ride. The old man still lives near Évreux, operating a shop his son bought him. He still likes to work on cars and make music, albeit as more hobby than job, andprefers to traverse the countryside on an e-bike.
Even against his dad, Esteban can’t help himself.
“I still pull away,” he says.
First, though,during a quieter moment on a recent ride, Laurent told his son a story.
There was once another boy with talent and ambition, the story went, hoping to someday become a professional cyclist. He was as skilled as anyone, but the other kids had access to training and coaches that this boy’sfamily couldn’t afford. So lying in bed one night when he was 16, he succumbed to these economic realities and abandoned his dream, diverting his attention and passion into becoming a mechanic.
So, he went on, when that boy became a man and a husband and a dad, he and his wife agreed to do everything possible to position their son for success. To tell him about possibility, not limitation, and raise him in an environment that would eliminate regret.
“He had never told that story,” Esteban says. “That moment, basically, when he was lying on the bed like that, probably changed my life. They clearly gave more than what they could, and without them I wouldn’t be here.”
Esteban says he occasionally fantasizes about what it would be like to stay in one place: to stop moving, inhale, feel settled. Maybe someday, he says, but not just yet. In July, after Ocon was two months adrift, Kevin Magnussen announced he would be leaving Haas.
Haas, as it happens, is run by Ayao Komatsu, a former F1 engineer who had met and encouraged Esteban when he was just a teenager. A decade later, Komatsu came through. Haas offered Ocon not only a seat for 2025 but acceptance for all the things he is and is not.
“Esteban, he needs an environment that he knows the team is behind him, supporting him, listening to him,” Komatsu says. “No politics. I believe we can provide that.”
But what about the suggestion that Ocon doesn’t play well with others? That you can never take the Évreux fully out of the kid?
“If I was worried about that,” Komatsu says, “I wouldn’t sign him.”
After their bikeride, Laurent and Esteban turned around but kept talking over the wind. Farmland and hills blurred past, same as they did years ago, and a favorite memory of Esteban’s sprung to mind. It was morning, and the 12-year-old awoke in the motor home again with no idea where he was. So he opened the door to see blue sky, the slopes of great mountains, the shoreline of the Mediterranean.
Laurent had parked the van and motor home in Monaco, where yachts are moored and the best drivers live. Esteban remembers the feeling of that moment, the possibility, and his dad stepped out and said there was nothing to stop his son from racing here someday. Whatever came next would be determined by Esteban.
“There was no guarantee,” Esteban recalls his dad saying. But the boy had a chance to prove he belonged. Picturing the momentyears later, he inhaled, kept pedaling and let Laurent catch up as the two of them headed home.
#used a site to remove the paywall#so here is the whole article for those interested! <3#esteban ocon#f1#btw the things i put in brackets is bc the author used the g slur and while i get the implication#of este always being on the move in the caravan and now as adult as well#i still think it is a bit in poor taste#also be aware that this author has zero wheel knowledge bc he mentions incidents that were simply not este's fault#and feed into the dumb bad teammate narrative
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source: The Little Butch Book by Lesléa Newman
#i'm sorry i keep posting her stuff#as if it's my fault#there's a number of femme writers i go crazy for and every time i see more#of lesléa's stuff i lose it#i'm not sure why i would be surprised that she's just hanging banger after banger over here but still goddamn#lesbian#butch#femme#butch dyke#butch lesbian#dyke#femme dyke#femme lesbian#lesbian literature#lesbian poetry#femme lesbian poetry#femme poetry#femme4butch#butch4femme#the little butch book#author: lesléa newman#year: 1998#publisher: new victoria publishers inc#archived#also i will work on getting alt ids in but i am currently on mobile so my confusion is great
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Sit down when I tell you this because some of you are dying on this hill and it’s just wrong.
Harry Potter is, under no circumstances, the Regulus Black of the Lightning Bolt Era.
#they have next to nothing in common 😭#harry is so infinitely better than regulus could ever hope to be i’m not sorry#if you want a hot take#harry is more like sirius than he is anyone else#abused? check#neglected? check#unfairly blamed? check#incredibly strong moral compass? check#loyal to a fault? check#insanely intelligent? check#doesn’t tell people shit about himself? check#independent? check#the traumatized one of the friend group? check#runs away to his best friend? check#queer coded? check#damn near fearless? check#hate authority? check#regulus is very few of these things#harry potter#regulus black#sirius black#marauders era#harry potter marauders#maraudersera#the marauders#the marauders era
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getting tired of people being butthurt that Tolkien didn't include a token female dwarf in the Hobbit company or a girl member in the Fellowship or whatever. Tolkien fought in World War I okay, he fought alongside and in the company of other men and his stories are going to reflect that. The book wasn't written in a vacuum and it can be gender-unbalanced without being problematic or sexist, and I don't see why we have to "acknowledge" that it's sexist "by today's standards" because it's literally not even sexist by TODAY'S standards, it just so happens that not everything is about you all the time. "Today's standards" can and should include being intelligent enough to discern the difference between values dissonance and just having a justifiably different context for writing in
#lotr#lord of the rings#and ultimately I'm also tired of people acting like it's a fault in older authors when their work has unmarketable aspects#because that's ultimately what all this fixing and patching is about#it's about marketing#well guess what#Tolkien never wanted his work to be a franchise#nor did many others
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will NEVER agree with blaming ford for stan getting kicked out
how does a child in a high stress situation whos still living in his abusive dads house get assigned more responsibility than their mom? like there was a whole other parent present
#not that im blaming caryn vut i dont think we know enough about her to just assign her a saint#ford was a full ass child he was not at fault even a little bit idc#like he could have called after obv but the thought that ford had any authority in their house just bc filbrick saw he could make money#is wild#i think u guys r just making up reasons for stan to be a victim ngl#stanford pines#filbrick pines#caryn pines#gravity falls#srry for being so negative the famdom is just pissing me tf off😭
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i believe that shipping tentoo/rose and recognizing that the way it happened was fucked on the doctor's end and traumatic on the end of rose herself can coexist. saying both of these things do not contradict each other.
i can say that the metacrisis is still the doctor and say that rose was right at first to say "he's not you," because of the context rose has in the moment and the work rose had put into finding the doctor that she conceptualized as the doctor.
i can also say that he tried to manipulate her into choosing the metacrisis because that is what he believed was best for her, even though i can also say she did choose to kiss the metacrisis in her own right.
and finally, i can say, that it was fucked up he left her in norway, solely because, bro, that's a long way away from where they need to go lol.
#i have a lot to say about the authority over her own narrative that is stripped from her here#at fault primarily due to rtd's shitty writing and wanting to wrap her character up in a way that he felt gave her a happy ending#but i think it's foolish to argue that this wasn't a fucked up way to have the end of this story start#do i think they're happily together and that she sees him as the doctor? yes. do i think they were in love right off the bat? no.#ALSO imagine what the metacrisis himself had to work through like ... but alas#they are not black and white but a secret third grey optoin#rose tyler#the doctor#timepetals#tenrose#metacrisis doctor#tentoorose#doctor who#also don't get me started on the big finish audios and how rose's narrative almost always centers on the doctor#when in those audios she explained that it wasn't just that it wasn't just him but she did not FIT in that world#she didn't feel like she belonged#and that's a large part of the feelings she was fighting the entire time
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Well, shit.
Uhm, i keep making fanart???? At like, a rapid pace in comparison to fanart i do for most other fandoms,,,, please help
#lego monkie kid#lmk fanart#lego monkie kid fanart#fanart#art#traditional art#lmk red son#red son fanart#monkie kid#qi xiaotian#lmk mk#decided to start signing my traditional pieces too#but anyway-#i have no idea why i love red son so much#but i feel like i cant find much fanfiction about him that i#like#genuinely enjoy#its not the authors fault#im just a specific gal sometimes i guess
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the thing about jujutsu kaisen is that it’s a story with a big, hulking, heaving child exploitation machine in the center of it. all of the grownups are well aware it’s there, they matriculated from the damn thing, and even the children are fairly certain something is grinding up their bones for porridge, but no one can stop it so they all just adapt. “how do you react to the child exploitation machine” is in fact one of the defining character questions on the human side. some people, like nanami, take the high road and refuse to enable the machine and always treat the children inside it as if the machine is nonexistent—this is very noble but does nothing to ultimately slow the machine down. lots of adults go “well, i will be a firm but fair authority figure to the children in the child exploitation machine and get them ice cream.” yuki and gojo are very sure they have the juice to ultimately stop the child exploitation machine… but it turns out that bitch is hard to dismantle so they’re left going “hang in there, children! you’re doing great! mommy’s proud of you! i will definitely save, if not you, then one of the next generations of children!”
meanwhile the beast just keeps on chugging.
#jujutsu kaisen#you also have ie mei mei Who loves child exploitation so much she’s going to do it more and better than the standard#and Geto who thinks he is blowing up the machine but is in fact recreating an artisanal version of it#the curses barely recognize the child exploitation machine running in the background#except to occasionally go ‘hey there’s kids here!’ in the tone one might take#finding chocolate in trail mix#tasty little crunchy bit for them#the author is very clearly most supportive of nanami’s approach which I cannot fault him for
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The metal is as cold as his skin was the last time she touched it
and as she lifts his silver urn
engraved with his name, ashes carefully sealed within
she realises
he is just as small
as the first time
she held him
—-
context
#not pictured: sebastian turning himself in to the authorities because he will be executed for his crimes and he doesn’t want to live#in a world without leander#they’re like caitvi#in every universe they’re together and in love#except for the one where they both die#marie blames herself partly for sebastian#since she tells him directly to his face that it’s his fault leander dies#and it probably influences his descision#leander prewett#sebastian sallow#marie prewett#prewlow#pirate au#hogwarts legacy#hogwarts legacy au
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I absolutely HATE when people see their favourite character making a bad decision/messing up/having questionable morals in a fic and go
“that’s not my sweet little -name- they’re perfect and can’t do any wrong and this fic is now horrible because I don’t agree with how you wrote the characters”
like your right that’s not your sweet little -name- it’s theirs!! It’s the person who wrote the bloody fics characterisation and if you don’t like it then don’t read it omg
#also characters making bad decisions does not reflect the authors morals#and please for fucks sake stop saying that because they can write characters that believe immoral things means that they must believe that#some people just have an imagination#and are good at writing#but I don’t expect you to know what that’s like if that’s what you come to after reading something#it’s made up!! fiction!!! fake!!!!#this may or may not be because of a TikTok comment section#I have so many angry rants in my drafts because of tiktok comment sections#I could just not open them#but I do every time#it’s my fault#i guess#but not my fault people are stupid#that’s there own#marauders#marauders era#fanfiction#fanfic#characterisation#marauders fandom#the video might have been on choices just a little bit#so you can imagine the comments#i haven’t read it#but isn’t the whole point that people make good and bad and questionable CHOICES??#yk like the fucking name of the fic??#no? idk#mcd scares me#jegulus#choices#regulus black
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wait i thought i’d seen the full extent of the silm fandom’s misogyny but i guess the silm fandom can always hate female characters more because apparently?? people believe indis the manipulative malicious bitch came onto and cajoled and stalked finwe until he relented and married her all while specifically aiming to make it so that miriel could never come back and she could have finwe's dick for all of eternity and abuse poor helpless feanor to her black shriveled heart’s content??? apparently that is a take that exists and has shooters??? yall are truly smoking that good stuff
#congratulations silm fandom on once again making the sexist catholic author born in 1892 look like a diehard women's right activist#canon: indis is a joyous person who bore her feelings for finwe in silence and only when he showed his willingness and interest did she#become involved with him#you guys: indis is a scheming BITCH and a SL*T who spread her legs for a WIDOWER and did everything in her power to make feenor miserable#she caused sooo much death and pain for abusing poor feenor beyond what his limits could take :(((((( she pushed him sooo far#everything he did is her fault if you really think about it :((( that horrible woman is the cause of everything that went wrong#indis#finwë#finwe#míriel#miriel#míriel þerindë#míriel serindë#miriel serinde#tolkien tag#lotr#lord of the rings#the silmarillion#jrr tolkien#tolkien
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