#ive got two new ones ive never introduced in these doodles
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Danganronpa oc doodle dump
#my art#oc#danganronpa ocs#danganronpa#ame takumi#its me!#suguru shatou#shuusuke maruchi#uiji reikaidou#ive got two new ones ive never introduced in these doodles#kaho hitaki#(ultimate firefighter)#chii kyouji#also knowm as#calamity the clown#(ultimate clown)#note: their names in the tags are in english name order meaning first name first then surname#sometimes i will use the japanese name order instead in my doodles like in the height chart
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HI Just wanted to ask where u get all ur cute stickers from cuz I think I have a sticker obsession. Also to make this ask less boring, tell me something nice that happened to you lately :3
OHMYGOSHH RUBY THIS IS NOT A BORING QUESTION AT ALL????????? As a fellow stocker obsessed person I’d be more than happy to tell you where I got my stickers from ^_^ pretty much all of them I’ve gotten at Five Below!! Mainly my sanrio stickers because theyre all actually really adorable there and there’s so many cute sticker sheets/sticker books for like $3-5 dollars!!! The only ones not from there are these two sticker books I have (one is sea themed!) are from Walmart!! :D I HOPE THAT HELPED RUBY!!! This reminds me I really want more but my poor hello kitty tin i have them in is getting full again DBSBS
BUT IF THERES ANY YOU WERE EYEING @ SPECIFICALLY PLEASE LMK AND ILL DIRECT YOU TO WHERE A PARTICULAR STICKER IS FROM >:)) your fellow sticker obsessed friend’s got you hehe
AND RUBY OMG ONCE AGAIN NOT A BORING ASK AT ALL?? YOUR SECONDARY QUESTION IS SO SWEET 🥺💖💖💖 ERM I WENT TO UNIVERSAL ON THURSDAY! IT WAS FUN BUT GUESS WHO CAME IN THE MAIL WHICH MADE MY DAY BETTER
NATHAN CHARM NATHAN CHARM NATHAN CHARM + NATHAN DOODLE FROM THE SHOP OWNER ITS MY EVERYTHING. I got me and Lola charms cuz they made a new design of Rockso and I knew she needed him and it gave me a reason to also get Nathan ^_^ WHICH ADDS TO WHAT ELSE HAS BEEN NICE LATELY, which is m.etalocalypse. SO CHEESY I KNOW BUT IVE NEVER BEEN SO HAPPY OVER A PIECE OF MEDIA IN SO LONG.. dw guys I still love s.piderverse and I still love my beloved spotty dotty.. IT WAS JUST GETTING ☹️☹️ seeing so many people talk about him as somebody who was talking most about him before the movie was out.. ANYWAYS I STILL LOVE HIM ITS JUST NICE TO HAVE A PIECE OF MEDIA WHERE IT ISNT SUPER HECTIC especially one my best friend in the world introduced me to/one I didn’t expect being crazy for at first BUT HERE I AM. Omg Ruby I’m so sorry that ended up being a long ramble JDBSJS ONCE AGAIN TY FOR THESE QUESTIONS AND I HOPE MY STICKER ONE HELPED YOU 🥺💖💖💖
#📫 ask box!#poor Ruby walked in for the sticker talk and sat down for a m.etalocalypse PowerPoint presentation#BUT OMGG IF YOU EVER GET OR HAVE STICKERS PLEASE#DONT HESITATE TO SHOW ME 🥺🥺🥺
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Fully completed Doom Eternal’s first DLC, the Ancient Gods I.
I mostly enjoyed it. MOSTLY has a GIANT ASTERISK.
Slayer Gate 2 was miserable and unfair, BUT I’m not going to concentrate on that much because it is a challenge gate and I didn’t HAVE to complete it to progress, I just really wanted to. And eventually I did it! I didn’t even use up all my Extra Lives.
The only thing I’m going to say is that they need to check their geometry and fix a few glitches, because I constantly got stuck on walls and in one case I actually got punched INTO a wall and stuck until I was murdered.
And yes, parkour. Because jumping puzzles. Why so much jumping.
The two boss fights were such absolute garbage, though. And for both of them I ended up needing Sentinel Armor for the final phase. Not because I don’t think I could have done it, but because I was getting so mad at the game and I didn’t want to completely spoil it for myself.
Like, I get it. Precision testing. And I have my auto-lock turned off because it feels like cheating to me, but that obviously would have made it easier - so don’t give me ‘git gud’ when you assholes aren’t doing full manual aiming - but doubling the charging demons at the last round of the fight just makes it tedious. And does it have to again be on a platform above a giant abyss?
And the eye attacks slow you. Why is this a thing they felt was necessary? I get it. The enemies “work together” to kill you - eyes slow you, fast demons catch up - but it makes it feel unbalanced by the third round of the fight because you get tapped, and you literally can’t escape. It would be one thing if the eyes stayed in sync with each other, but they don’t.
Getting rid of a single eye, getting rid of the slow effect, not doubling the demons, hell, even just putting a small delay on their respawning, that would make it all far less tedious. My complaint isn’t even the difficulty, really, it’s just that it kills the pacing of the game: I spend more time trying to run away than I do shooting at anything.
Spirits are FRUSTRATING, but I’m not going to say they’re entirely unfair or even an unwelcome addition. Same goes for the Blood Makyrs. I think the deficit with both of them is that they suddenly decided they wanted these new enemies EVERYWHERE, so encounters end up unbalanced and lopsided because ‘hey what if we threw them in here too?’
Which brings us to the final boss.
Because of COURSE they had to find a way to work in the brand new enemies.
Like, here’s a thing about boss phasing. Checkpoints between phases? Excellent!
Making it so that in an autosave game you can whoopsie-doodle and end up saving at a checkpoint with only a few hitpoints? Not so great.
And four phases? Like. Phase I, fine, introduces the boss. Phase II, something different .Phase III, frustrating, but still relatively fair. Phase IV? Extremely frustrating when you combine everything into a messy potpourri with two of the most-loathed enemies in the game, further buffed by Spirits you have to kill.
And that’s not even counting the annoying intermission phase where he just runs away and sends Cacodemons after you which... feels. Really out of place.
Why and how is he summoning demons, anyway? He’s not a demon himself.
I know, it’s DooM, don’t try and think about “sense” or “story” elements.
Which I’m not going to comment on because, again, I’m not playing the game for lore or story and I don’t want to try and defend why I enjoy it, as dissecting the storyline will make it sound like I really hate it.
I think the thing that really throws me off is that this whole game is about the “combat loop,” and these new enemies and the boss fights are designed around interrupting your loop as much as possible. And people have defended this by saying “well the game can’t just do the same thing over and over again” but like. Why not?
I’m not playing a strategy game. I’m playing a game specifically catering to my desire to RIP and TEAR. I want to shoot demons. That is literally what I’m playing the game for, and the enjoyment of slaughtering my enemy in a variety of different ways.
Again, it’s not the difficulty I’m criticizing, at least not entirely. I got really frustrated with the Slayer Gate but it was always with the glitchiness. If I can overcome a Spirit-enhanced Marauder at the end of three cruelly-designed waves I can goddamn well say I am decent at the game and I don’t mind a challenge.
It’s the fact that this design works against the tenets the game has established and, in a DLC - not the game proper, on top of everything else - it wants you to do what you haven’t done for the entire game. And don’t tell me “Well the Icon of Sin” or something like that because that final battle was based around surviving the chaos of the mobs of demons rushing you and the Icon itself is largely an afterthought that you pump some rounds into now and then.
I enjoy the game. I enjoy the challenge. And I think they had a lot of good ideas. But there’s a fundamental difference in what makes some of these ideas good that leads to these unbalanced challenges and problems with pacing, where you’re being asked to try and handle too much at once and it makes things tedious rather than enjoyable.
It was mostly fun, though, and in spite of how mad it made me at times I never felt like just giving up or stopping entirely. But I absolutely did just run out patience with those fights in particular, and I think some encounters might need some reworking.
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heart of stone (6/?)
AO3
Janis ditches the tights and jean shorts by Wednesday. There’s a slight look of ‘I told you so’ on her mother’s face, but she spares Janis the lecture out of politeness. Janis never thought she’d miss them, but here she is.
Sitting cross-legged on her bed, she scribbles another flower on the page, a twin for the one next to it. Not an exact twin, it’s thinner and its petals are more spiked and sharp than the one she drew before it. It’s less inviting, more dangerous. Angry, even. Like if she picked it up she’d cut her finger on it. She hadn’t intended for it to happen; in fact, she’d set out to doodle some pretty little flowers in an attempt to brighten up her sketchbook. But the pencil, as it often does, did what it wanted. She turns it on the side, trying to find a way to like it. It’s not bad work, not her best but certainly not her worst. Maybe she could like it if she had drawn it earlier, but she had really been hoping to get something nice into her book today.
With a sigh, she sets the book on her lap and swings her body around so that her feet dangle over the edge of her bed. Her next round of chemo isn’t due for a few hours, a long stretch of time to attempt to fill with activity. While she’s only been in the hospital for two full days, she’s decided that the worst part is the waiting around for the next thing to happen. Granted, much of that can be put on her as she’s spent more time in her room than she has anywhere else, distracting herself with TV and art and her parents and texting her friends every chance she can get. It all comes together and forms some kind of routine for her, one that’s built with as much familiarity and comfort as possible woven through it. The only downside to it is that the room’s been getting progressively smaller since two days ago and it wasn’t long before it started choking her.
She left the door slightly open and peers into the hallway, the brightness of the walls striking against the cool tones of her room. She can hear the faint sounds of half-conversations that overlap with each other; nurses gossiping with each other while fiddling with IVs, the inhabitants of the longue talking and laughing about who knows what, doctors prescribing new rounds of medicine. The ward is much more alive than she had Janis ever thought it could be, a constant hum in the background of the day to day life keeps the place awake.
She taps her nails on the cover of her book, her swinging legs gaining momentum as she debates following the pull in her chest, compelling her to maybe leave her room for more than five minutes at a time and follow the sounds of conversation. Maybe talk to people who aren’t her medical team or her parents. Make some friends, because as everyone knows, cancer wards are prime social hotspots. She may not be here forever, but she’ll be here long enough to justify getting comfortable.
What’s the worst that can happen, logic had asked her that first night.
Literally so freaking much, she responded. Friends aren’t exactly her strong suit. Regina was a mistake, Damian was luck, and Cady was a gift. She could indulge her inner loser and tell herself it’s because she’s special and tailor made to a few specific people, but the thought of that makes her roll her eyes. So she faces up to the truth and all it entails; that she’s merely been unlucky in the friendship department, something that can be boiled down to one terrible experience and everything that came after it and lingers long after the smoke has cleared.
You’re being ridiculous she tells herself. If there’s a Regina George clone here, she’ll be thoroughly impressed. So she pulls her boots on and pushes herself off the bed, quickly explaining to her mom that she’s going to hang out in the longue for a bit.
“You need me to come with you?”
“I’m fine,” she says, a small smile on her face as she pulls on a cardigan. She nods at the intense competitive cooking show her mom has on the TV. “Tell me who wins. And don’t leave out any details.”
“Well we both know it’s not going to be Leticia judging by the look of that beef,” she says seriously. Janis clicks her tongue before turning and heading down, her steps smaller than normal and her sketchbook held against her chest like a shield. Her stomach twists uneasily, not from the chemo or anything like that, just from good old-fashioned anxiety. In an odd way, it’s a relief to feel ill in that way.
When she pushes herself past the open doors, all eyes turn to her and only look away to talk with other people. It’s far more populated than the last time she was here, people sitting in groups of two and three, most in pyjamas and some with hats. But all of them in groups, belonging with each other. Is this how Cady felt all those months ago, when she and Damian spotted her heading to the bathroom? Maybe her girlfriend had the right idea that day. A bathroom stall is a way better alternative to a room full of strangers.
Unfortunately, she knows better by now, and so she settles in an armchair as gracefully as she can, her legs tucked beneath her, and tries to shake off the discomfort she feels by opening her book and giving her hands something to do.
“You’re new,” a girl sitting on the floor states. She’s one of the few that actually has hair, dark brown and curly, and it makes Janis feel a little more at ease. Is that bad, she has to ask.
“Third day,” she explains, offering her a small wave. “I’m Janis.”
“Melissa,” she says. She leans back on her arms and exposes a little bandage inside her elbow. Janis pulls her own arm a little closer. Melissa doesn’t seem to notice, instead gesturing to her with her chin.
“What’s that?”
“Oh, this?” she asks, her cheeks growing warm. “Oh, just some drawings I do.”
“Cool,” she says. “So you do art?”
“Sometimes it’s like the art does me," she says dryly, earning a chuckle. “But you know how it is.”
“My best friend says that all the time,” Melissa sighs. “She says she wants to go to art college but I’ve watched her cry over trying to hand in assignments.”
“You sound like my mom,” Janis replies. “Literally every time I bring up doing art in college she tells me how stressful it is.” She shrugs lightly. “She’s not wrong, but it’s the only thing I want to do.”
“Is your mom here?”
“Yeah, she’s back in my room,” she explains. “I left her watching some cooking show on TV.”
“Wow, and you’ve only just here. I’ve been here for a month and I only just got my mom to let me out of her sight,” she sighs, a resigned smile on her face and her eyebrow raised in a silent ‘you know how it is’. “Want to play some Scrabble? We’ve started keeping a scoreboard so we can add you in. We have a whole tournament going.”
“Sounds fun,” Janis says, pushing herself off the chair. “Although I should give you warning, I’m dyslexic, so I kind of suck at it.”
Janis follows her across the longue, slipping her hand into her pocket when she thinks she sees the other girl reach out to her. There’s a pang of guilt in Janis’ chest even though Melissa doesn’t seem to care, and she does her best to work through it. She exchanges names and smiles with other kids, all introduced by Melissa. It’s an odd feeling; she’s not used to being the one who’s introduced. She’s either known people so long she doesn’t need to or she’s the one making the introduction, but today her mouth feels dry and her tongue tied so much that all she can do is say ‘hi’ and try to keep up with the rest of the little group. But despite this, and despite the fact that she does supremely suck at Scrabble, they aren’t half bad. They welcome her in with no problem at all, asking her about school and life and art as they set up tiles and she knows the right questions to ask them. She laughs at their jokes and nods along to the conversation, even adding in her own take now and again as it builds into a steady flow.
It’s not entirely perfect; she can’t help but feel slightly on the outside when they bring up a nurse or a patient she doesn’t know and she’s much more quiet than she’s used to being, unsure which, if any, topics are off-limits, where the lines are. But she’s enjoying herself enough to drown out her earlier worries even if it can’t make them fade entirely, and her mood only picks up when she hears someone behind her say (squeal) her name, followed a flash of pink and rainbow appearing in her vision. How times change when a pink sweater can make her smile instead of grimace.
“Maddie!” The younger girl leans into her side, eyes bright and sparkling, and Janis puts an arm around her shoulders. “Hey kid, where have you been?”
“Where have you been more like,” she replies. “I haven’t seen you since Monday.”
“Been busy,” she says. No one presses, likely because they all understand. They’ve all been where she is before. “And now I’m busy losing at Scrabble. Badly.” Maddie chuckles and when her arms wrap around Janis and chin rests on her shoulder, she can’t say no to it. There’s nothing uncomfortable about such a gesture and it almost feels as natural as hugging Damian or when Karen rests her head on her shoulder, despite her only knowing the girl for two days.
“Oh hey, did they tell you about the photography thing yet?” she asks.
“That what now?”
“Oh it’s this thing the cancer centre started,” Melissa explains. “Basically they want us to take pictures of stuff that matters to us. Us doing hobbies, us with our friends, the whole shebang. It’s meant to be about our cancer not defining us or whatever.” She gives a casual shrug. “It’s fun anyway. You should do it. Especially since you have your art thing.”
“Sounds like fun,” she says before poking Maddie in the ribs. “Now come on, kid. Help me make a word out of these.”
And maybe it’s Maddie’s presence or just time passing, but Janis suddenly finds herself a lot less anxious. She even gets to the point where she trades playful insults with another kid, a boy around her age, and form a team up of sorts against him with one of the other girls. They can’t replace her real friends and she wouldn’t try to, the bonds she’s formed with Damian and Cady are too important and were put through too much to be replicated, but she suspects that they could quickly become new friends.
What’s more, treatments and diagnosis come in and out of the conversation with unexpected ease, and when Janis talks about her own, it’s the same. She hadn’t realised how much of this she’d held back, even in her texts and calls with Damian and talks with her mom. And while she feels bad for it, it also feels so, so good to talk to people like this. People who aren’t her parents or her doctors. People who are, well… like her.
And as it turns out, her next round is scheduled the same time as Melissa’s, and so they head down the hallway together. While Melissa continues to make conversation, Janis’ responses dwindle the closer she gets to her room. It doesn’t take long for the good feeling from the longue to fade, and the image of the needle in her vein becomes sharper in her mind.
“Hey, can I ask you something?” Janis asks suddenly.
“Sure.”
“Does it…” She swallows past the lump in her throat. She finds a loose thread on her cardigan and toys with it until the question comes out. “Does it ever get easier? All this?”
“Well…” Melissa stops in their tracks and Janis almost trips as she does the same, immediately regretting asking. The other girl bites her lip, searching for the right answer. It feels like hours before she says “I don’t really know. I can’t speak for you. We’re all different here.” She tucks her hair behind her ear. “I mean… I guess you get used to it. So it starts getting less scary, I guess.”
Janis only nods and then Melissa reaches out and taps her arm.
“It doesn’t stop sucking,” she sighs. “You just get used to it sucking.”
“And then we all bond over it sucking?” she asks, smirking.
“You get it,” she replies with a laugh. “See you later, Janis.”
“Bye.”
After Melissa leaves, she lingers in the hallway for a minute, pressing her finger into the spot where her IV goes. The problem is exactly what Melissa said-you get used to it. And she really, really doesn’t want to get used to it. Getting used it to means that she’ll be here for a while, that something else replaces her old life. Especially now, after the year she had last year, she wants to get used to good stuff, not stuff that ‘sucks’. The idea of this, medicines and hospitals and doctors, becoming normal to her sends a shiver down her back.
But she learned a while ago how to live in reality, even when it’s not what she wants. And it’s with that attitude she walks into her room, where she finds not only her IV set up, but a text from Cady detailing something funny from her math class and how much she misses her.
Even if she gets used to everything else, she knows she’ll never, ever get used to missing Cady.
*****
Friday morning, she wakes later than she normally does. It’s a slow process at the start, sleep pulling her in and begging her to stay, the hospital-issue sheets softer than soft around her and forming a cosy cocoon that she’s so tempted to remain in.
That is, until she remembers what day it is, and then she’s jolted awake.
Friday. Or as she’s called it, Damian-and-Cady day.
It was an unspoken agreement that the two of them were visiting her in here. Just like her father, they were insistent on coming over every moment they could, with Damian jokingly suggesting he could hide under her bed and they could have a sleep over (which they had considered in seriousness and attempted to plan). But thanks to a little thing called school, and another thing called distance, today was the first day she could see them, which is why now she’s wide awake, bright eyed, bushy tailed, everything. Because she’s finally seeing them again and filling the hole in her soul being away from them had carved.
“Morning, kid,” her mom says cheerily, entering the room with a cup of coffee in one hand. “They’re still serving breakfast downstairs, or if you want it brought up to you-”
“Sounds great, Mom,” she replies, only half paying attention. She turns on her phone, her leg bouncing anxiously as she waits for it to load. Has it always been this slow at turning on? She swears it hasn’t been. It takes an eternity for her lockscreen to come up, the time written across it in thin white numbers.
“Ten thirty?” she reads out loud before her head snaps up. “Mom, why didn’t you wake me up?”
“Why would I?” she asks. “You need all the rest you can get, and you’ve still got time before you’re due a round.”
“I know,” she sighs, rubbing her eyes. “But Cady and I text good morning to each other and it was my turn this morning. I don’t want her to think I forgot.”
“Well, I’m sure Cady understands. You know, with all that’s going on, maybe she’s not expecting good mornings right now.”
“Course she is,” she replies quickly. In what universe would Cady not wait for a good morning from her? “It’s our thing. Didn’t you and Dad have a thing?” She types out the message and sends it quickly, although Cady probably won’t see it for at least another two hours.
“Oh, you think we did good morning e-mails back in those days?” she says, laughing a little. She sits on the bed next to her on the bed. “So are you getting some breakfast? Someone can bring it up if you don’t feel up to going down, I’ll just tell them what you want-”
“It’s fine, Mom.” She reaches under the bed and pulls on a sweater before slipping into her boots and raking a brush through her hair. “I might as well go down. Someone might take the last yogurt while I’m down there.”
Truthfully, she doesn’t really feel like eating. Not anything bad, she’s just not hungry, but it’ll put her mom’s mind at ease. Just as she thought, the tension fades from her mom’s shoulders, and when she pats her shoulder, there’s more relief in her smile than just breakfast warrants.
She eats in her room, with the TV on, like she does when she’s sick at home. She could eat in the dining room, but despite the new friends she’s made she prefers eating in private, especially away from the buzzing nurses. As she flips around the channels, her phone buzzes on the plastic table, the screen lighting up to show her a new text that makes her smile and roll her eyes at once.
‘Good morning, babe. Can’t wait to see you today. Also, ik I can’t really change it now, but what do we think of the outfit?’
Beneath the message is a picture of Cady in her bedroom mirror, clad in a black vest and blue flannel shirt with white skinny jeans, her hair held back in a high, loose ponytail, soft curls framing her round face, her eyes looking up at the mirror as she gives an open, toothy grin. And Janis can’t help it, she squeals. God damn it, her girlfriend is cute.
‘Love it, love it, love it. You’re the queen of cuteness. And apparently, texting during class. Stop doing that. If I get a text from you between now and lunch I will not cuddle you later.’
‘I’m not texting during class, it’s study hall.’ Wow, what on Earth has happened to the ever-studious, rule following Cady Heron? Not even Plastic Cady texted during study hall. ‘Besides, you have to cuddle with me. It’s legally required and I’m deprived of Janis cuddles.’
‘Only if you be good and don’t text during school hours.’ She fires back, chuckling under her breath. ‘And you remain that freaking adorable.’
“Well someone’s in a good mood.” She looks up and sees Doctor Wiley standing in the doorway, and her smile dips a little, the perfect bubble she was sitting in with Cady ruined. Not enough to ruin her mood, nothing could do that, but it shakes it.
“It’s her girlfriend,” her mom explains.
“How do you know that?”
“Your smile,” she says. “It’s your ‘Cady smile’.”
“I don’t…” Her voice trails off and her mom simply shrugs. Well look at that. She’s that girlfriend now.
“Well, that’s nice to hear,” Wiley says, striding towards her. Under the table, Janis crosses her fingers that this is a normal good morning visit. She’ll take bad news on any day that’s not Damian-and-Cady day. “So, Janis, a lot of us on your team have been talking and we’ve decided to ask if you might want to get a port inserted.”
“A what?” she asks.
“Think of it like a little reservoir put underneath your skin,” he explains. “Just to make receiving the chemo easier on you. A lot of patients have one put in.”
“Oh, wow.” Way to bring the mood down, Doc, she thinks. Sometimes she envies the younger patients who have their parents making all the hard decisions. Still, one word sticks out in all that. “It makes it easier?”
“Quite a bit easier,” he agrees. “For one thing, it’s a lot more comfortable than an IV.” There’s a plus. “And a lower risk of your medicine leaking out-”
“Sounds cool,” she interrupts quickly before he can bring up an image she doesn’t want. “Um, can I think about it? I mean, is it urgent?”
“No, of course not,” Wiley replies with a stiff smile. “I’ll let you and your mom discuss it.”
He leaves them after an uncomfortable silence, nodding to her and her mom and reminding her that he’s around if she has any questions.
“So what do you think?” her mom asks.
“I don’t think.” She picks her phone back up and jumps off the bed. “Where did you put my clothes?”
“I put everything in your bag, it’s under the bed,” she replies. Janis pulls out her bag, sorting through the mass of denim, cotton, plaid and leather, all while her mom hovers behind her with anxious eyes that drill into her back. "Janis, you should consider this.”
“And I will,” she sighs. She pulls out a shirt she’s always liked and throws it on the bed. “Just not right now.” She shakes her head, trying to clear some of the smoke in her brain. Still sitting on the ground, she looks up at her mom and sighs. “Mom, I just want to not think about cancer stuff right now. I just want to see my friends and think about that.” She toys with the shirt in her hands and bunches it into a tight ball, her arms tense and shaking and her grip tight. “Is that okay?”
Her voice sounds impossibly broken on that question. And while it wasn’t intentional, it works on her mom, who nods and comes over to pat her hair.
“Okay, sweetie,” she says, and that’s the temporary end of it.
The day passes even slower than it normally does in hospital-time. Hours stretch on and on with no end in sight and she can’t distract herself no matter what she tries to do. She can’t focus long enough to read or settle on one TV show and even games in the longue can only get her so far. She tries checking her social media when on her IV, but she’s hardly there a minute before her anxiety peaks again after seeing pictures of her friends. Besides, it’s mostly dry now, everyone else is in class.
Finally, finally, it comes to the afternoon and it’s close enough that she can justify beginning to get ready. She stretches, grateful for the little power nap she took earlier, and fishes her make-up out of her bag. It’s not everything, but it’ll have to work, as will the tiny mirror in her bathroom.
“What’s going on in here?” The voice makes Janis jump six feet, even though it’s the honey-toned voice of one of the older nurses. “Little makeover.”
“Just wanted to look nice today,” she explains as she unscrews the foundation. She’s a little bit surprised to see that she’s not out of practice since she’s been bare-faced for well over a week now. Bigger priorities and all that.
“Her girlfriend’s coming over today,” her mom says in a low voice.
“It’s not just that,” she says, even though it might be. “Damian will also be here.”
“Oh you kids and your relationships,” the nurse chuckles as she takes the empty bags out. In the mirror, Janis sees her point sternly in her direction as though she were her mother. “Just remember Janis, if she really cares about you, she won’t care how much muck you have on your face.”
“I’ll keep that in mind,” she says as she applies a coat of eyeshadow, deep indigo and sparkling under the low lights. She adds a generous amount of purple lipstick next, a shade that’s always been a favourite of hers, and four coats of mascara. Some say that’s overkill, she disagrees. Bigger, bolder, better after all.
She takes a second before looking at herself properly, and when she does it makes her happier than it has any right to be. She looks like herself again. Not a girl with cancer. A girl who is perfectly healthy and happy, the dark circles around her eyes and the pale tint to her face deliberate. Not only that, she feels stronger, even though she hadn’t been aware of any weakness before. She can breathe easier now. She’s herself again. A little winded but it was worth it.
When she’s done, Cady and Damian should get out of school in about ten minutes. They worked it all out; they’ll get the first bus from school up to the hospital, which should take about twenty-five minutes. She offered to pay their bus tickets and her mom had offered to pick them up, but neither one of them would hear any of it. Damian in particular would die before accepting money from anyone.
So she has just over half an hour. Maybe closer to forty minutes when factoring in waiting for the bus and various stops…
She probably should have left the make-up to later just to give herself something to do.
No, it’s fine. The last thing she wants is them walking in on her doing her make-up. Besides, there’s plenty to do for half an hour. She’s waited this long after all. She checks her outfit again, first in the bathroom mirror, by bouncing repeatedly, and then by using the camera on her phone. This morning she was sure about this outfit. Now she’s not sure about this skirt. Maybe if her mom had woken her up earlier she’d have had more time to plan it. The shirt is fine, it’s something Cady loves, so she won’t trade it, but the skirt… it’s not working. She grabs more stuff from her bag and lays it out on the bed, debating each one carefully. There’s a pair of studded shorts that she doesn’t think looks right with the shirt, a pair of jeans that would be far too uncomfortable, and a dark grey skirt that she’s not worn that much and is a little short-
“Holy crap,” she sighs. She shakes her head at herself. She hasn’t obsessed this much over her looks since middle school. “You’re insane, Sarkisian. You’re fine.”
They’ve both seen her look worse, surely.
She forces herself to sit on the bed and just watch some freaking YouTube like a normal person. She gets a text from Damian telling her they’re on their way, and she takes a deep breath and sends a response. She then has one eye on the phone and one eye on the window, all the while counting the minutes until they should be here.
Twenty five minutes. One video later, it’s twenty one. Another video, eighteen. Another video, plus a sip of the coffee her mom got her, fourteen. Another video, plus re-checking her make-up, ten. Another video, six. Another video, three.
And now they should be here. They probably are; they’re probably walking through the lobby. Maybe the elevator’s a little slow, maybe they got lost. This is a big place and they don’t even know where they ward is. Do they? Did she tell them? She grabs her phone and checks their groupchat, scrolling through the week-
“Janis?” Her name is accompanied by a soft knock on the door, and when she looks up, Cady is standing in the doorway, looking even more beautiful than she did that morning with a breathless smile and dimples in her cheeks. And everything else she was feeling melts away.
Janis doesn’t care about dignity, she runs over and throws her arms around her. As Cady hugs her back just as fiercely, Janis fights the urge to pick her up off the floor.
“I missed you,” Cady whispers into her shoulder.
“I missed you more,” she replies, certain that she’s correct.
“Well I’ll just go then,” Damian jokes. “If you two need a moment alone.”
“Don’t even think about it,” she tells him seriously, jumping into his embrace. He runs his hand through her hair and even rocks her and everything about his embrace feels right.
“Got you these,” he says when they eventually pull apart. He presents her with a bunch of white flowers wrapped in silver paper. The scent is just like the gesture; so sweet it makes her well up.
“Oh you losers,” she says. “I love them.”
“Hi kids,” her mom greets from her chair in the corner. To be honest, Janis had actually forgotten her mom was there. So her mom has watched her run across the room and tackle-hug Cady. Nice. “How was school?”
“It’s fine,” Cady replies. “You know… senior year….”
“Oh I’m sure it is,” she says fondly. “I’ll give you kids some alone time.” She gives Janis’ shoulder a squeeze before heading out, and then Janis can hold Cady’s hand as tightly as she wants and pulls the two of them to the bed, utterly giddy at having them at her side again.
Even if it won’t last a voice in her head whispers.
“So come on, what have I missed?” she asks. “Other than you two, I mean. Tell me everything. Spill all the tea. I crave gossip!”
“It’s been a week, Jan,” Cady tells her, grinning and swinging her legs as her feet don’t touch the floor. “But, you do know that you’re talking to the newest captain of the North Shore Mathletes.”
“Come on then.” Janis digs her elbow in her girlfriend’s ribs. “Tell me everything.”
That’s all the incentive Cady needs.
She babbles on about her plans for the new year as Captain, how she’s already getting new recruits and she’s even allowed to invite freshmen and create Junior Mathletes, how she’s sure that membership is going to be double what it was last year (at which point Damian reminds her that there were only three people on the team last year), and about how they’re already starting to put together teams for a few contests, more than last year, and of course, how she’s ready to defend their state champion title. With each word, Janis’ heart grows warmer, the sense of security she’s craved all week settling and wrapping around her like her favourite blanket, and their hands lie intertwined on the bed a though they’d never been apart.
“So that’s my life…” she says, tucking her hair behind her ear. She shakes her head and covers Janis’ hand with hers. “But what about you, what’s it like in here?”
“Oh, I’m fine,” she scoffs. “I’m always fine.” Cady’s smile dips, not enough, but Janis notice and let out a sigh. “I mean it’s not the ideal situation. But I’m… coping?”
“I do not like that inflection,” Damian adds, leaning back on the bed and raising an eyebrow.
“You wouldn’t,” she says. “Like, it’s not too bad. You know… the food is actually pretty good, we have some cool stuff in the longue, they know how to keep us occupied. The doctors are all great. Including one hot med student I’m considering setting Damian up with.”
“Consider my attention grabbed,” he says. “How hot are we talking here?”
“Like… Okay I’m not into dudes, so I’m not that great at guessing, but he’s a solid 7.5,” she explains. “Would be a 9 but he stabbed me several times while trying to find a vein.”
“He did what?” Cady squeals, making the two of them jump. Her eyebrows shot up her forehead. “He stabbed you?”
“Woah, yeah.” She grasps Cady’s shoulder and silently bites her tongue. She rubs it in circles, bringing her back down. “And it hurt for a few seconds and I was slightly annoyed by it. And then we laughed about it.” She strokes Cady’s cheek carefully. “Nothing bad, Caddy.”
“Okay.” Cady lets out a breath and shakes out her hands. “Okay, okay. I’m sorry.”
“It’s okay, love.” She plays a kiss on her cheekbone, the tension fleeing Cady’s body as she does so. She tangles her fingers in her hair. She even missed her hair. “It’s cute that you worry so much.”
“I always worry about you.” At that moment, Damian turns his attention to the window, and Cady rests her head on Janis’ shoulder and Janis wraps her arms around her. This, the fearful looks and causing anxiety to her, this is what Janis wanted to avoid in the first place.
Damn Cady Heron and her unflinching loyalty.
“You’re feeling okay though?” she asks quietly. “Right?”
“Okay’s a bit of a relative term these days,” she says. “I’m feeling a bit bleh. But it’s fine.” Cady murmurs something she guesses is an agreement and nestles closer to her. Janis rubs her hand up and down her arm. “I’m fine.”
“Good.” She presses her cheek into her head and closes her eyes, only for a moment.
“Anyway, enough of that stuff,” she says, bouncing and turning to Damian, beckoning him back over. “There’s got to be more that I’ve missed. Come on, spill.”
“Well…” Damian begins, spinning around to face them with a grin stretched across his face. He’s been waiting to tell her this, she can tell. “They’ve announced that the musical this year will be… drum roll.”
She can Cady drum their hands on their legs, the sound bouncing off the walls and making the room tremble with anticipation as it gets higher and faster until-.
“Cabaret!”
“No way!” she gasps. Damian nods excitedly, bouncing on the balls of his feet and clapping his hands together. “Stars have aligned, mon amie. Stars have aligned.”
“Which means,” he goes on, throwing himself down on the bed with such gusto that it bounces. “I am going to be the greatest Emcee that North Shore High would ever wish to have.”
“Damn right!” The two high five, their glee double that of the slightly out of the loop Cady. “Emcee has been one of Damian’s dream roles ever since middle school.”
“Ever since I came out of the damn womb!” he exclaims. “I cannot tell you how much I screamed when the drama club announced it.”
“I can,” Cady adds. “It was loud and long and he got several death glares from everyone else.”
“That’s the only appropriate way to react,” Janis chuckles. “We watched the movie way back when and that’s when he decided he was going to play the Emcee or die trying.”
“It’s also when Janis became gay for Liza Minelli.”
“I’m gay for myself,” she corrects. “Liza was just the object of young Janis’ affections.” She rests her chin on Cady’s shoulder and smiles at him. “I’m helping you prep for this. I don’t care if I have to break out of here with an IV in my arm, I’m helping you.”
“I’d expect nothing less,” he replies. “Also the drama club is devastated you can’t do the set this year.”
“Who the heck says I can’t?” she says indignantly. “Those morons they have won’t last five minutes without my guidance. And I will not have your shining moment ruined by a subpar set.” She tosses her hair over her shoulder. “We all know who really runs that drama club.”
“Oh really, madame,” Damian scoffs, turning so his leg is folded beneath him. Janis keeps smiling, despite the feeling that its being tugged down and the weight settling in her stomach. Of all the times he had to do Cabaret, why did it have to be now?
“Everyone really missed you at school,” Cady tells her.
“Bet it’s not everyone,” she says, half joking. “Not one person in particular.”
“Hey!” Cady slaps her arm. “Be nice.”
“I promised to play nice to her face,” Janis reminds her. “Not behind her back.” Cady huffs out a laugh, her face slightly scrunched up. “But how’s the most important thing; LGBT+ society?”
“Well, we’re having our first welcome back meeting on Wednesday,” Damian says. “And Gretchen is taking over your stall at the fair. Sonja’s going to help her out though,” he adds. “And Sonja’s taking over your spot on the committee too.”
“Good choice,” she says. Lovely as Gretchen is most of the time, Janis isn’t sure she could handle the pressure of running her stall. And Sonja’s the perfect choice to take over her committee spot, smart as a whip, decisive and funny as hell.
So why does the idea make Janis so uneasy?
“Yeah, why don’t we turn this TV on?” she says, grabbing the remote. “It apparently has Netflix, although I’m not entirely sure how to operate it. There’s a load of DVDs in the longue as well.”
“A DVD. Now there’s a name I haven’t heard in a while,” Damian says.
“I don’t think they have Cabaret though,” she sighs. “Which would be perfect for us right now.” She’s telling half-truths, because there’s a substantial collection of old movies, including musicals, but she doesn’t really want to brave the longue now, or to take them in there. The longue is probably her favourite place in the hospital, but it’s bound to be full right now. And for now, she wants to keep her cancer world and the real world separate.
So with some fussing, they manage to find Netflix and learn how to work it. Cady is insistent that Janis pick the movie, since it’s her room and she doesn’t know half of them and has already watched the other half. At the start of the summer, Janis had made Cady a list of every movie she needed to watch, and by the end of August they’d almost made it to the halfway mark. The best part wasn’t the movies themselves; it was the movie nights. Huddled under a comforter and surrounded by pillows, Cady’s body pressed against hers and the lights down low, buttery popcorn and sugar-covered candies keeping them going until one (usually Cady) fell asleep.
Now they make do with the thin hospital bed and the near-plastic sheets. At least they can adjust the height of it, and Janis positions Cady against her and Damian sits in the comfiest chair to watch The Parent Trap. It’s none of their favourites, but it’s familiar and good enough and while it wasn’t on the list, Cady hasn’t seen it yet. Besides, Damian can make any more fun.
And really, Janis can’t take any more of the back and forth debate.
The more the movie goes on, the more normal Janis feels. She runs her fingers up and down Cady’s bare arms, her girlfriend’s jacket discarded across a chair like she would in her house. The conversation is light and easy and full of giggles even at the stupidest, silliest thing, Damian quoting along with the movie and Cady hopelessly lost, especially at around halfway through when Janis decides to tell her that Annie and Hallie were played by the same person.
“No way!” she declares. “I’m not believing you until I see proof.”
“Google it,” she says. “Damian?”
“Way ahead of you.” He pulls up the page and shows her the cast list, with one little Lohan billed as the two twins. Cady’s mouth falls on the floor, her shoulders shaking in a silent, disbelieving laugh.
“Jesus Christ!” she says. “How did they do that all the way back then?”
“Movie magic,” Janis replies, wiggling her fingers for effect. “It’s okay, Caddy, we all felt betrayed when we first found out.”
“Didn’t she go off her rocker a bit?” she asks, pointing to the screen. “I know that much. Regina told me.”
“A little,” Janis agrees. “But I kind of feel bad for her, you know?”
“I guess.”
“Oh. Oh!” The camera pans up, revealing the striking and scary figure of Meredith Blake, and Janis squeezes Cady’s arms. “I hated this bitch.”
“I hated her more,” Damian adds, his tone not 100% light. “When I first watched this I had this soon-to-be stepmom, because my dad was back in the dating game, and she was…” He gags and points down his throat.
“Real mature, Damian,” Janis jokes. “I mean she absolutely was, but still. Mature.”
“Okay, missy,” he laughs. “Nah but I used to try to get inspiration from how to deal with her from this movie.”
“Shh!” she hisses sharply, covering Cady’s ears. “Spoilers!”
“I can still hear you,” Cady tells her. “And I could sort of guess. All the movies about step parents do that kind of thing, don’t they? Bratty kid gets wreaks havoc on the step parent?”
“Are you saying thirteen year old me was a brat?” Damian asks.
“Seventeen year old you is also a brat,” Janis teases. Damian gasps and grabs the cushion from the chair, aiming it at her head. Part of her is completely sure he wouldn’t, not in a hospital, part of her is completely sure he would because of course he would.
She doesn’t find out either way, because their gathering is interrupted by her medical team, and the weight in her stomach comes back with a vengeance.
“Not getting in the way are we?” Nurse Lucy asks.
“Not at all,” she says. Before she stops herself, she’s already pushing Cady off her. Heat rises in her cheeks. “That time again?”
“Unfortunately so,” she replies as Cady slides off the bed. “Is it okay if Jackson does it this time?”
“Yeah, sure.” As she rolls up her sleeve, her friends catch on to what’s happening, and Damian rushes to Cady’s side.
“I promise I’ll find the vein this time,” Jackson jokes.
“Oh this is the one you said-” Cady is cut off by Janis making a small ‘cut it out’ gesture with her hand. She then raises an eyebrow at Damian, whose small smirk tells her everything she needs to know.
She takes a look at her IV and her bare arm before turning back to them. She still hates this; shockingly, she hasn’t gotten used to it in under a week. Her stomach still drops a hundred feet when she looks at the needle and her chest tightens even if she’s only thinking about it.
“You guys don’t need to watch this,” she tells them. “It doesn’t hurt. But if you need to look away, it’s fine.”
“I’m fine,” Cady tells her. When Janis looks down though, she sees how tightly she’s holding Damian’s hand.
“Okay,” she says.
This time around it only takes Jackson three tries to find her vein before securing it with the bandage. Good for him. He’s learning.
“You know the drill by now?” Lucy asks.
“Two hours, stay hydrated.” She gives her a two-fingered salute.
“Two hours?” Cady echoes, and Janis has to chuckle at it. “This takes two hours?”
“That’s what she said the first time she found out,” Lucy says, gesturing to Janis. “I can see why you two like each other so much.”
“No but… two hours,” she says again as they leave. “What do you do for two hours?”
“I just… sit here I guess,” she answers, looking up at the medicine. “You know, there’s TV. I have books. I draw. Sometimes it knocks me out and I get a little surprise nap, so that’s fun.”
“Is that… should we go?” Cady asks. “If you’re going to-”
“Oh no.” She shakes her head firmly. “No, it’s fine. I’ll be fine.”
“You’re sure?”
“Completely.” She’s such a liar it’s a wonder her tongue hasn’t turned black and crumbled. “Come on. Let’s finish the movie at least.”
Cady lays beside her rather than on her, and Damian stays on the other side of the bed, away from her IV. She catches him once or twice, watching the drip instead of the movie. His gaze is unreadable, and since she’s always been able to know his thoughts without him speaking, it unsettles her.
It’s not long before that familiar tiredness descends on her, clouding her mind and pulling her downwards. And she fights it; she keeps her eyes open despite how they itch and shifts her body when she finds herself too comfortable lest she start drifting off. It’s a challenge, not just because of the medicine’s effect on her, but because of Cady’s warmth next to her, promising security and comfort and being there when she wakes up.
And she must have given into it at one point, because she opens her eyes after a blink and the movie is over; Nick and Elizabeth are together again, Annie and Hallie stay with each other forever, happy endings all around.
“What time is it?” Janis asks.
“Nearly five,” Damian explains. Visiting hours don’t end for another two hours. “Are you okay?”
“Me?” she asks. “I’m fantastic.”
“You sure?” Cady’s hand is on hers, slowly linking their fingers together. Janis squeezes her hand, clarity coming into her mind by her own will.
“Of course I’m sure.”
They don’t have to be home for another hour. Home for dinner, that’s the rule. That doesn’t really change. Damian tells her that his mom is thinking about her every day and was beside herself when she heard the news.
“She’s started following more baking blogs,” he tells her. “So prep yourself for a lot of baked goods on your doorstep.”
“I can’t object to that,” she says. “Especially since Val always bakes with love.”
At some point during the hour, Janis pulls Cady into her lap again, or Cady crawls into it, or both. Her head is under her chin and her back against her chest, slotting into place perfectly. Like if she holds her this close, she won’t have to leave.
Wishful thinking, she knows, because when it gets close to six, Cady picks up her jacket and her backpack and there’s nothing but empty air against Janis’ body.
She wishes she could lead them to the door, but her IV catches on everything, so they say their goodbyes where they are.
“Don’t miss me too much,” she warns them teasingly.
“I hardly ever think about you,” Damian replies, his voice thick.
“And you,” she tells him. “Better run lines with me. When’s auditions?”
“Next Thursday,” he tells her. “So I’ll call you tomorrow?”
“Perfect,” she says. “I have treatments at 11, at 2… You know what? I’ll text you them.”
“Okay. And you were right by the way. That med student is a snack.” They laugh, and then there’s a moment of silence before he folds her in his arms, her face burying itself in the crook of his neck and his hand cupping the back of her head. “Take of yourself, okay?” His voice is so soft, so desperate, that it sounds like a plea.
“I will,” she says. “I always do.” Knowledgeable as always, he gives her and Cady space to say goodbye themselves. She rubs her hand on her shorts, nervousness gripping her body in a way she hasn’t felt in a while and she thoroughly dislikes.
“I’ll text you the second I get home,” Cady says. “And can I call you tomorrow?”
“Of course you can,” she says. “As long as you get some homework done tonight, kid.”
“I will,” she says. “I didn’t get the top grade in Norbury’s class for nothing.” Cady takes in a deep breath, her hand fidgeting around her backpack strap and her hair half-hiding her face. Janis reaches out and pushes it back and if she notices her shaking hand, she doesn’t say anything.
“Caddy-”
Janis actually wasn’t sure what she was going to say there, but it doesn’t matter, because Cady steps up and kisses her. It’s not perfect; it feels clumsy and awkward and they bump against each other, but it’s everything Janis needs. So much so that when they pull away, she doesn’t even attempt to hide the blush on her cheeks.
“Okay,” she whispers, grinning. “I’ll see you soon.” She steals another peck.
“See you later, Janis,” she whispers. They don’t stop holding hands for as long as they can and Janis is still looking at her until she’s out of view, walking back down the hall with Damian, maybe getting lost again. Down the hall, to the right, into the elevator and out the double doors. Bus stop down the street, next stop home. They ride together until Damian gets off and Cady stays on. All the while she stays here, IV in arm and her phone buzzing, talking to them until she falls asleep.
#mean girls broadway#mean girls the musical#cadnis#cady x janis#janis sarkisian#cady heron#damian hubbard#fic: heart of stone
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static’s lead vocal & center yohan
verve creative; music 12 vocal / 01 rap / 07 dance
i. if they ask about your childhood,
you tell them that it was fun, that you grew up with mrs lee next door always pinching your cheeks and cooing about how handsome you were, how she’d always give you a lollipop when mom wasn’t looking and said you’d look even more gorgeous. you tell them about how half of the boys wanted to hang out with you because half of the girls also wanted to hang out with you. you don’t tell them about the other half that didn’t like you because they were jealous (boys) or because they were too shy to interact with you (girls).
you also don’t tell them about your parents fighting, about your habit of taking long baths because then you could muffle the noises of their arguments under the water. you don’t tell them about the nights that your mom cries herself to sleep when she thinks you aren’t listening or your dad spending the night on the couch when he thinks that he won’t get caught by his son.
you tell them about this one funny time when you were six that a man in a suit approaches you and your mom when you’re shopping and offers a smile along with a business card and a spot in a cf for milk or something like that. you tell them about your mom being suspicious and politely refusing the offer.
ii. if they ask about your parents,
you tell them they’re fine. they got a divorce when you were about ten and they’re friendly enough now. you tell them about how dad found a new girlfriend and your mom a new husband, they’re happier now and you’re happy for them. you tell them about the little sister you got from your dad and the little brother you got from your mom.
you also tell them about your summer vacations with dad and he had this strange phase of fishing and you two ended up visiting lots of fishing sites but to this day you can’t fish to save your life. or how your mom enrolled you in this binding course with her along with her husband (your younger brother being too young to join too but he does end up learning later on) because she got recommended by a friend and she thought it’d be great family bonding time. you tell them there’s a tradition now to give each other handmade notebooks in birthdays or at least one special occasion.
you can add that you gave one for each member of static because you think they’re family too.
iii. if they ask you about the journals that has been spotted with you more than once,
you tell them that your parents were worried because you were taking their divorce a little too well, that they were afraid you were bottling things in for their own sake so they ask for some advice for you mom’s friend who is a psychologist specialized in children and she recommends that you write down feelings that for some reason or another you don’t express it out loud.
it started as an experiment, a little thing to do when he was bored to a habit that you can’t shrug off. you don’t need to tell them that you keep every journal you ever written to this day, even the first one with his childish handwriting and as silly thoughts and doodles here and there. you tell them they’re extremely personal and you don’t think you’d ever show them to anyone and if you do, it’s because they’re very special. he doesn’t think he’d be comfortable even with his members reading what is in there.
you don’t tell them about the lyrics in there, written by sudden inspiration or even born from moments of boredom, most of them being done when you started putting your feelings in form of lyrics instead of simple text, when you gave your personal thoughts the form of poetry that only lacks a melody to become a song. you don’t tell them because you know they’re going to ask to see it and that’s a part of you that you aren’t ready to share (yet).
iv. if they ask you about singing and your scouting,
you tell them you’ve always sung in a way. you tell them the apparently funny story about how you used to sing even when you were as young as six to your parents and they’d sing the poporo theme with you. you don’t tell them it was one of your many tactics to make them stop fighting. you tell them that you’ve always enjoyed singing but it took you joining the music club during middle school, the teacher responsible for the club recommended that you took actual singing classes because you had a lot of potential to take it as more than just a hobby you enjoy.
you tell them about the school festival from when you were fifteen, about the performance with an one last minute formed band and how a man in a suit came to you with a business card and the offer of an audition if you ever were interested. you’ve always liked singing, but until that moment you always thought that it was a dream too far away and since you were offered a chance you wouldn’t let it go.
v. if they ask you about your training,
you tell them it’s hard, harder than you thought even if you had this classmate who started her own training a couple of months before you and she shared some stories, you could see how training was doing its damage on her. there were a lot of tears, blood and sweat involved. you tell them about how you thought about giving up more than once but the you remembered about why you were, about the adrenaline of being on a stage, the proud look on your family face when you told them about your hardwork, about the promise of being a great singer someday, the amazed look on your younger siblings because they’d have a big brother who was a star and every shed tear, every sneaker he ruined, every sore muscle, every tutoring that he left with a sore throat was worth it.
you don’t tell them that sometimes you missed home so much it hurt even if you didn’t live that far away from the company to begin with.
you don’t tell them about how much you love your job but hates the industry. about how you think it’s unfair that they’re both taught about how they should bond with other trainees because the members of a group being united and well bonded with each other makes a whole lot of difference but at the same time they’re stimulated to be competitive, to step on others to get to the top because there are only so much spots to debut and too many trainees to fill them.
you don’t tell them that you’d never wish this career for anyone you love like your youngest siblings. no, you smile and tell them about how much you worked hard and how much it’s paying off now.
vii. if they ask you about your debut,
you tell them it felt like a dream, that it actually took a while to believe that it was actually happening. you tell them it’s funny because even when you were put into a dorm with four other boys that were introduced as your teammates, that you spend hours and more hours practicing the choreography and recording their mini album, it still felt like you were still training without a debut to look forward to in the near future.
you tell them about how your mom cried on the phone telling you about how she saw you on the stage, that your father didn’t but he sounded happy saying that everyone was proud of him. you tell them about your excited siblings and how you promised them to be famous enough to ask for their favorite’s autograph without it being awkward — or more like they don’t have to wait for long because you’ve always been a little shameless.
you tell them it’s stressful but don’t talk about the sleepless nights going over the choreography again and again, how it took you a three or four times to get your first line right during the record of the mini album because you were that nervous, about the weight of the company name’s in your back, of the expectation of being the first boy group after a long while, of people looking at them and not knowing whether they’d be able to achieve those expectations.
you don’t tell them that you felt like static would flop before they even got a chance to shine and a good part of the fault would be on your shoulders because your mind goes to dark places sometimes.
viii. if they ask if you’re happy,
you tell them yes. the idol career might not be as you once idolized (nothing in life really is, isn’t it?), but you’re still allowed to do what you love that is singing with the company of amazing people that are your members. you tell them that you feel honored to share the stage with sunbaenims that you hope to be as good as someday.
you don’t tell them that you still miss home, that there are some things that happen behind the scenes that you don’t agree with, that there are days that you feel the exhaustion in your bones and wonders if this is really worth it.
no, you smile and tell them that this is what you’ve always dreamed to do and hope that can continue working hard until the day you can’t step on a stage anymore.
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