#jean was purposefully left undercut-less
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Commission for @rhetoricfemme, featuring Annie and Jean being two bros chilling at a shooting range.
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#shingeki no kyoujin#snk#jean kirschstein#annie leonhardt#jean was purposefully left undercut-less#i took forever to do this but in the end.... I MADE IT#i blame life... guns... and jean's pose#commission me today and you might just get your drawing within the next ten years#don't waste this opportunity!!#sketch#commission
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Toothless: Return to the Black Pony of Second Chances: Part 6
This is kind of a weird little limbo chapter leading to further shenanigans but whateverÂ
Ao3
I donât get involved in drama.Â
Really.Â
I donât.Â
I donât care whoâs dating who, or whatever. It doesnât matter. I donât mention it whenever I see someone sneak home late at night. Itâs just not something I care about, beyond the fact that the person in question will largely be lazy and useless the next day.Â
It doesnât matter that Hiccup was having a video call with a pretty girl, because no matter how many times Ruff comments on how tall he is, I donât care.Â
In fact, it matters even less because heâs largely been non-whiny the last few days, at least compared to the twins or Snotlout. Fishlegs is whiny in a different way, because the accommodations arenât luxurious or intellectual enough for him, but again, I donât argue because I donât do drama.Â
I donât do dramatic exits, abandoning things with a sweep of an imaginary cape as I stalk off for a fresh start.Â
Apparently, Hiccup does.Â
Or at least he abruptly leaves dinner with most of his plate uneaten, and Iâm left chewing on perfectly cooked steak thatâs suddenly gone dry in my mouth, his dad not staring at me so pointedly that he might as well be glaring.Â
Fishlegs scrapes his fork across his plate and itâs fingernails on a chalkboard.Â
Tuffnut picks his teeth.Â
And itâs Snotlout, fucking Snotlout, who breaks the tension.Â
âIs anyone going to eat that?â He points at Hiccupâs plate, avoiding my eyeline even though itâs clear he thinks he needs my permission, and my teeth grind together unconsciously.Â
I swallow and stab at a potato with my fork.Â
âBecause if no oneâs going to eat thatââ
âGo for it,â I bark, making the decision that no one else will.Â
I donât blame Mr. Haddock, and not just because I canât blame him, but because he just promoted me, effectively, and this is my problem to deal with. And I donât know how to act, because Iâve never been good with the interface between âbossâ and âfamilyâ and exactly how my loyalty should be weighted within that matrix, but it has largely always centered on the horses.Â
And Mr. Haddock takes care of the horses.Â
âI meanâŠif no one else wants it,â Snotlout feigns hemming and hawing even as he pulls Hiccupâs plate towards him and I scowl.Â
âSpeak now, or forever hold your peace.â Itâs directed at everyone else, but Snotlout has to comment, because of course he does.Â
âIf youâre proposing, is this where someone is supposed to object, or?â He laughs.Â
No one else does.Â
I take my last bite of food, teeth clicking against the fork before I stand up.Â
âIâm going to go check the fences.âÂ
âAstrid,â Mr. Haddock tries to let me off of the hook I mounted myself and I pick up my plate.Â
âItâs a nice night, Iâd like the ride.âÂ
Once my plate is washed and on the drying rack, I risk the hallway I never walk through to get to the back door, because right now, walking past dusty family photos is better than dealing with Snotlout. The one closest to the door gives me pause, a gangly second grader between two smiling parents with that stereotypical posing smile, the uncomfortable one that I could never really replicate for school pictures.Â
A polite, get along to get along smile that he seems to have lost the ability or intention to use.Â
He was a scrawny kid, not that much has changed, and I think back to the brittle line of his shoulders as he hunched over his computer screen, trying to block it from me.Â
Hopefully, heâll be cooled off by tomorrow, or at least keep his grudge to himself.Â
The wind whips at my hair on the short stint to the barn and I wish Iâd grabbed my hat, but again, not worth dealing with Snotlout, so I jog the rest of the way, trying to remember if thereâs a spare in the tack room. I think I left a hair tie with Stormflyâs saddle, and thatâll have to be good enough.Â
I donât bother announcing my presence before opening the door and Iâm shocked to hear someone swear, a horse snorting and pawing at the ground.Â
Not just someone.Â
Hiccup.Â
Who is standing in Toothlessâs stall, hand on the black, stupidly-named horseâs shoulder, eyes already narrowing into a glare as I close the door behind me.Â
I glare back, like a habit, and he turns back to Toothlessâs neck, brushing a fine bristled brush across his muddy neck, like thatâll do anything.Â
âIf youâre trying to groom him, that wonât work,â I tell him, trying for casual as I walk past Toothlessâs stall to Stormflyâs. She buries her nose in her dinner for one last bite before raising her head and nodding at me. Excited.Â
âI know you canât help but give it,â his voice is curt, barely undercutting disrespectful, âbut I donât actually need to hear your opinion on everything.âÂ
âItâs not an opinion,â I fasted Stormflyâs halter behind her ears and walk her towards the tack room, dropping the lead rope so that sheâll stand ground tied as I tack her up.Â
âSince Iâm already beholden to you, can I please just tend to my horse without fending off your constant judgement too?â He snaps, and I should go.Â
I donât get involved with drama.Â
âItâs not judgement,â I say because itâs not. That would imply that I care, which I donât. He got his work done, the rest of it is none of my business.Â
âRight.â His eye roll is audible, the whisk of that useless brush across the mud in his horseâs fur like nails on a chalkboard. âTotally believable.âÂ
I grit my teeth, grabbing Stormflyâs curry comb and raking it through the dried sweat behind her front leg. She looks at Hiccup curiously over my shoulder, ears twitching, and when I glance back at him, heâs staring at the brush in my hand.Â
He instantly looks away, ashamed to be caught again, and I want to bark that maybe he wouldnât have to hide so much if he stopped doing things he doesnât want anyone to find out about. Like talking to not-girlfriends in rooms with unlocked doors, right before dinner.Â
But that would be engaging, and I have to check the fences.Â
He brushes Toothless again, uselessly, saying something in a calm, under the breath tone that makes Stormfly perk her ears again. She must see something of Mr. Haddock in Hiccup that I donât think anyone else does, because her jaw works quietly, expecting her usual treat.Â
I set my curry comb down and get my hoof pick, urging Stormfly to lift her front foot with a click and tug at her fetlock as I bend over. She lifts it easily, still watching Hiccup, and I start clearing the mud from this morningâs ride out of her hoof.Â
Hiccupâs eyes are bright like coals on the back of my neck and I wish Iâd faced Stormfly the other direction, because Iâm also too aware of my shirt riding up my back, the still, sticky barn air against my lower back. Not that it would be better to have to look at him when I stand up. Or maybe it would. I donât know.Â
Iâm not usually involved in the drama.Â
All the complicated teenage interactions that Ruff is always trying to clue me in on have always just annoyed me. The reasons Gustav is nice to me or the way that Snotlout and Fishlegs act around girls back from college for the summer are completely irrelevant to what Iâm trying to do here, but now thereâs the pressure of foreman on my shoulders and it makes me worry about group dynamics and the necessity of at least feigning getting along, that is if I want to stay on through the fall.Â
I set Stormflyâs foot down and stand up, yanking my shirt back down over the back of my jeans and glaring at Hiccup over my shoulder.Â
âWhat?âÂ
âNothing,â he answers automatically, eyes darting back to Toothlessâs filthy fur.Â
âYouâre staring at me.â I donât need to ask, because itâs obvious, and he shrugs, not sufficiently deterred. âWhy?âÂ
âIâmâŠâ He looks at the hoof pick in my hand and deflates slightly even as he sets his jaw, âIâm wondering what youâre doing.âÂ
âIâm picking Stormflyâs feet,â I move to her back foot, ignoring how my shirt rides up my back again. Hiccupâs eyes are still on me, curious like he hasnât been, like somehow this exact second isnât drudgery and Iâm once again plagued with the fact that I donât actually want him to hate it here.Â
Purposefully making this awful for him would beâŠdramatic. Without question.Â
I want him to get his work done without complaint, and even I have to say that heâs largely done that the past few days. A little slow, sure, more than a little mouthy about how disgusting he finds things, but heâs been mostly willing. Mostly productive.Â
And he can put in a good word to his dad, if he has reason.Â
âPicking her feet?â He clarifies the term when I stand up again, patting her on the rump and walking around to her other side. âThe ones sheâs wearing now are âso last seasonâ, Iâm guessing.âÂ
Itâs a joke that I donât get, but he still thinks itâs funny, laughing to himself in a way that feels like itâs at my expense and I bristle.Â
âTraditionally, jokes only count if everyone laughs.âÂ
âTraditionally, the ability to laugh at jokes requires a sense of humor.â He snaps back, edge in his voice making his horse stomp and jostle him with a heavy swing of his head.Â
âJust because Iâm not going to laugh at something thatâs not funny to make you feel better doesnât mean that I donât have a sense of humor.âÂ
âCould have fooled me,â he scoffs.Â
And he watches, craning his neck to see me lift Stormflyâs other front foot, and if I didnât think heâd take it as a victory, Iâd go check the fences on foot to get away from the unwelcome, confusing attention.Â
âWhat is so fascinating?â I stand up straight, forearm on Stormflyâs shoulder as I glare at him. âHavenât you ever seen anyone groom a horse before?âÂ
âNo.â He sets his chin, the line of his jaw skinny-sharp, like he should have put his tantrum away long enough to finish his steak. âI havenât. Or at least, not since I was about eight.âÂ
I can tell that to everyone else, the ranch feels small. Restrictive. Usually, I canât put together why, given the wide sloping fields and big blue sky, the endless nooks and crannies among the creeks and hills.Â
But itâs easier to conceptualize how much bigger the rest of the world is when Hiccup reminds me that heâs spent essentially his entire life, or the part that matters, the part where he formed his opinions and experiences, so far away from everything that I know.Â
I should ask him if he wants to learn. Or even tell him that he needs to learn, but I wonder what heâd want to tell me in return and fall back on something familiar. Bossy, even though Iâd never admit it when itâs thrown back at me.Â
âHe needs it,â I gesture at Toothless with my chin and he sighs.Â
âYeah, Iâm as ineffective as a horse owner as I am as a ranch hand. Who would have guessed?â He mimes flexing a skinny arm, making fun of himself like he anticipates me trying to and he thinks itâll be better somehow if he gets there first.Â
Usually, it hurts the same no matter who drops the pitchfork on my foot, so I avoid doing it myself.Â
âThat mud caked in his fur can irritate his skin, and itâs not helping his leg heal.âÂ
âYeah, I get it, but the general storeâs car wash is nonexistent and the ownerâs mad at me anyway.âÂ
âYou did steal.â I remind him and he bristles again, his heckles going up.Â
âAnd I didnât even spin my pistol around my finger in the parking lot while limping in chaps. Not very regionally appropriate, I know.â He shoves his hands in his pockets, expression softening slightly when Toothless nudges at his wrist, âI was operating under the impression that most John Wayne movies were filmed in Arizona, or something.  I thought the rules could be adjusted aesthetically, at least. My ass would get pretty cold in chaps here, with the wind.âÂ
âAre you serious right now?â I donât get involved with drama, but Iâm used to Snotlout attempting to drag me back.Â
âNever.â He snorts, and something about it strikes me as truly miserable. Not pouting. Not trying to extract sympathy.Â
âHave you picked his feet?â I ask, and it comes out wrong, flat and irritated, because Iâm flat and irritated, but he doesnât puff up or argue.Â
âNo, these came stock.âÂ
âPicking a horseâs feet means cleaning out the mud and rocks from the bottom of the hoof.â I point at Stormflyâs last back foot, putting on my best reasonable foreman voice and trying to make my face match. âItâs important because a rock or other hoof obstruction can eventually make a horse come up lame.âÂ
âThey arenât assigned lame in middle school like the rest of us?â He jokes and I grit my teeth together, struggling to stretch my ranch size world view to accommodate his non-attempt at communication.Â
âWhen a horse is lame, they have a limp, of some kind. Some issue moving. Itâs a bigger deal for a thousand-pound animal.â
âAh, the other kind of lame I was assigned. I get it.âÂ
âCome here,â I order. Distinctly. Foreman voice wavering.Â
âWhy?âÂ
âBecause I canât get close to that horse and someone needs to pick his feet, so you can learn on Stormfly.âÂ
He weighs that for a second and Iâm surprised when he nods, carefully exiting the stall, fingers not quite clumsy on the latch but not comfortable either before he walks over to us, threatening to skirt way too close to Stormflyâs rear.Â
âWhoa there,â I hold my hand out to stop him and it works, except for his sudden, condescending smirk.Â
âAre you talking to me, or the horse?âÂ
âYou.âÂ
âYou just said âcome hereâ, I know Iâm not a master of deciphering mixed signals butââ
âDonât walk right behind a horse you donât know.â I must say it with some kind of authority, because he pauses, for once, before turning on his heel and walking around Stormflyâs front. He doesnât touch her though, even as her eyes follow him and she huffs hot breath against his sleeve.Â
âSheâs not tied up,â he comments on the lead rope against the ground and I shrug.Â
âSheâs ground tied.âÂ
âSo, horses are susceptible to gravity. Noted.âÂ
âSheâs trained to not move when her rope is touching the ground.â I clarify, handing him the hoof pick and stepping to the side so that he can get at Stormflyâs back foot. âYou need to bend over and pick up her back foot.âÂ
âThousand-pound animal,â he points at his chest, a little panicky, âI canât actually deadlift two-hundred-fifty pounds like you can.âÂ
âI wasnât,â I pull back from the argument before it starts, âsheâll help.âÂ
âIf this breaks my backââ
âIt wonât.âÂ
He doesnât seem to believe me, too cautiously setting his palm flat on Stormflyâs side as he adjusts his grip on the hoof pick. When he leans forward, his shirt rides up his back, revealing a pale, skinny spine and boxers peeking out of his stupid, pre-ripped jeans. I focus on Stormflyâs foot, patting her haunch when she easily lifts it for him, shifting only slightly when he fumbles with how to hold her hoof.Â
âPut your handââ  I try to explain and he cups the bottom of her hoof, impossibly awkward. âHere. Let me.â I bend down next to him, grabbing his hand and placing it properly around her hoof wall, tugging her foot up a few inches so that he can properly see the bottom of it.Â
âOh.â He shifts his feet, turning the hoof pick in his hand and trying to get an angle on it. âThat doesnât hurt her orâŠâ
âNo.â I try to be patient. Really. âNow scrape around the frogââ Â
âVery funny,â he sets her foot down all at once and stands back up, wiping mud on pre-ripped jeans and taking a step back.Â
âWhat?âÂ
âThe âfrogâ?â He snorts, âreally? While Iâm bent over are you going to drop a house on me and call me the Wicked Warlock of the Big Evil City?âÂ
âNo,â I hold my hand out for the pick and he stares, guarded like heâs sure thereâs a catch. âIâll show you.âÂ
âIâve always wanted a tour of the secret horse frog,â he hands it over, and I swallow against the urge to tell him how wrong he is, ignoring how my shirt rides up again when I bend over and lift Stormflyâs foot.Â
âThis,â I trace the triangle in the middle of her hoof with the pick, âis the frog. Thereâs a V shaped groove around it, and thatâs largely what needs to be cleaned out.â I demonstrate, a few compressed flakes of mud falling onto the barn floor before I stand up and wipe my dirty hand on my jeans.Â
âDoes everything having to do with horses have to have some weird word associated with it?â Itâs rhetorical, but he expects an answer, and I think that summarizes most of our interactions. âIs Toothless even black or is there some other name for it? Is he Ebony? Charcoal pattern A-1?âÂ
âHeâs black.âÂ
âNot Onyx 3A-4B?âÂ
Iâm used to being the butt of jokes. Or more accurately, the imaginary stick supposedly up my butt being the butt of jokes. Usually, I ignore it, because thereâs no point in engaging. It gets me nowhere, it doesnât matter.Â
But right now, looking at Hiccupâs smug face, spouting meaningless numbers and trying to act like heâs not mad that I walked in on a call I donât care about, I remember something.Â
My first math packet is due digitally next week.Â
âHeâs letting you close to him,â I say and Hiccup shrugs.Â
âHasnât showed me his frog yet, but I figure, at this rate, itâs just a matter of time.â His awkwardness doesnât shut him down and I donât understand how heâs so ok with projecting it.Â
Like itâs easier to be uncomfortable if everyone else is too.Â
Itâs infuriating.Â
âThen you should really learn to groom him.â I pick up my curry comb and hold it out at him, âlike if youâre trying to get the mud caked on his neck off of him, you need to use one of these.âÂ
âThis isâŠa torture device,â he pokes the tines on the comb and I sigh, pressing it into Stormflyâs neck and dragging it across her shoulder. She arches into it, lip curling when it scratches her favorite itch.Â
âItâs a scratch, for her.âÂ
âSheâs bigger than Toothless,â he comments, a little muted, and I shrug.Â
âNot by much.â I exhale through my nose, trying to remember how to cushion things. âAbout earlierââ
âWhen you told everyone that I had a girlfriend?â He doesnât so much snap as he snaps back to some previously established protocol and I huff.Â
âIâmâYou were being secretive in your room talking to a girl, what was I supposed to think?âÂ
He weighs my rhetorical question like itâs real and shrugs one shoulder, hand idly petting Stormflyâs shoulder, ânothing.âÂ
Heâs right.Â
âI donât involve myself with ranchhand dramaââ
âCould have fooled me.âÂ
Itâs like he knows that I canât fall back on my usual backup where people are scared of me. Itâs not even intentional, usually, people justâŠdonât expect intensity and when they find it, theyâd rather back off than question it. And his dad made me foreman.Â
And my math homework is due next week.Â
âI wanted to ask you about the internet.âÂ
âWanted?â He sees right through me, eyebrow raised, stepping away from Stormfly like she burned him.Â
âNo.â I tuck my hair behind my ear, âIâyour dad never turns it on.âÂ
âWhat? Do you need to check Facebook to connect with the three people in the county who donât live within a hundred yards of where weâre standing right now?â There it is again, the cruelty he tries on like a mask. A mask he wishes were permanent, and something about his determined brooding makes me think it will be soon enough, if he gets his way.Â
When he gets his way. Probably.Â
âI need to turn something in,â I stick to the truth, voice curt as I cross my arms, Stormflyâs ears flicking back towards me.Â
âTo the single county cop who cares about a pack of gum?âÂ
âTo school.â I grit my teeth, and he is tall. Taller than me. And I hate it. Because how do I maintain anything of âforemanâ when I need his help?Â
âTo school?â He repeats, frowning, and I sigh.Â
âYes.â I tap my boot on the floor before turning on my heel and heading back to the tack room to grab Stormflyâs saddle. I donât ask Hiccup to move before swinging it onto her back and he barely gets out of the way in time, stumbling backwards and elbowing the nearest stall, startling Hookfang, who snorts and stomps his foot.Â
âIt is summerââ
âTo summer school.â Admitting it doesnât feel great. In fact, I wish I could take it back. I wish I could take the whole conversation back, that I could have just ignored him. Iâd be half done with my round by now, wind in my hair, peace of mind incoming.Â
Heâs silent for too long, watching me tighten my saddle, eyes cataloging my motions like he might be planning to steal from me next and my teeth grind together. Stormflyâs patient as I get her bridle, slipping the bit into her mouth and unclipping the lead rope like Iâm not waiting for Hiccup to say something.Â
Because Iâm not.Â
Because heâs not going to say anything helpful. Heâs definitely not going to say anything charitable. Heâs going to relish in having something to hold over me even though he doesnât understand my world or its consequences, at all.Â
Heâs a spoiled thief in pre-ripped jeans who has never had to work eight hours after school, trying to keep a horse farm running through disaster after disaster. Heâs never fallen asleep in class because heâd already been up working horses for hours.Â
âSo, the rumors are true.â He says, cryptic as I start to lead Stormfly to the barn door by her reins.Â
I stop short, thinking about Snotlout and the twins and even Fishlegs. About the swirling small-town rumor mill that he doesnât understand. That he couldnât understand.Â
âWhat rumors?âÂ
âYou did fail math.âÂ
âWho told you?â I shake my head, ânever mind, I donât care.âÂ
âFishlegs.âÂ
âFishlegs,â I grit my teeth, shoving the door open and inhaling as Stormfly follows me through.  Iâll put him on chicken coop duty for a month.Â
Two months.Â
âIf I help you get internet, whatâs in it for me?â He asks, and he could put in a good or bad word for me and I donât know which his dad would believe more. I donât know how Iâm here, or why, or how nothing is clear anymore.Â
âI donât know, Hiccup,â I swing onto Stormfly and settle into the saddle, glad for the height and the mode of transportation, the warm, steady sides between my knees. âWhat do you want?âÂ
âTake me into town sometime.â He catches me off guard, âIâm going crazy. I think I forgot what buildings look like.âÂ
âUsually at least four walls. A ceiling, typically.â I should be above his bad influence, but Iâm not. Apparently.Â
âGood counting,â his grin is a little too performative to really be cruel and I want to ask about his phone call again, because I think I forgot how to care about petty drama until he showed up and made it too petty to ignore. âNo promises, but Iâll tell my dad about the wonders of anti-virus again.âÂ
âIâve got to go check on the cows,â I cluck at Stormfly, pressing my leg against her side to indicate where weâre going. Finally. After all these interruptions. âI donât know when Iâll have to go into town again butâŠif your chores are done, Iâll let you know.âÂ
âAnd youâre the one who gets to decide when my chores are done,â he grins, clapping his hands on his thighs hard enough that Stormfly tenses. âGreat.âÂ
I could tell him that he hasnât been doing the worst job, but Iâm not willing to part with another bargaining chip right now. Not when I know I havenât been avoiding the drama at all. Iâve just been blind to my own involvement.Â
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      hi everyone itâs ya girl kris , and iâve finally arrived to get the plotting going ! iâm 23 , prefer the pronouns she / they , and iâm from the est timezone ! iâve truly fallen in love with exo within the last few months thanks to having nothing else to do , and i really wanted to play chanyeol , so here i am , fulfilling my dreams ! christianâs a bit of a play on a previous character i had , but iâve tweaked a lot about him since then . this intro is already long as #heck so i wonât bore you with my own intro , but please feel free to add me on d.iscord @  đŹđđđ§ đ đšđđ đź đđšđ°đđ«đđŹ.#4090 or message me in the imâs , whichever youâre more comfortable with !
      Ëâ«*ïŸPARK  CHANYEOL  ,  CIS  MALE  ,  HE / THEY  : did  you  hear  christian  kwon  is  joining  the  cast  of  exposed  after  he  left  his  fiancĂ©  at  the  alter  the  day  of  their  wedding  ?  the  twenty  seven  year  old  drummer  /  songwriter  with  29m  followers  is  trying  to  clear  their  name  .  theyâve  become  known  as  the  resident  casanova  here  in  the  mansion  ,  and  itâs  clear  thatâs  spot  on  because  theyâre  quite  -  pompous  &  -  venereal  ,  but  also  +  spellbinding  &  +  unostentatious  .  you  know  theyâre  heading  to  the  confession  booth  if  you  hear  goodbyes  by  post  malone  ft.  young  thug  blasting  ,  most  likely  talking  about  how  theyâre  more  than  constantly  twirling  drumsticks  between  skilled  fingers  ,  the  lingering  scent  of  his  cologne  long  after  heâs  gone  ,  sweat  dripping  from  dyed  locks  as  he  loses  himself  in  the  music  ,  and  throbbing  headaches  after  finally  crashing  at  six  in  the  morning .
đđđđ : christian kwon .
đđđđđđđđ(đ) : chris and ian .
đđđ  +  đđđ : twenty - seven + february 28th , 1993 .
đđđđđđđđđđđđ  đđđđ : pisces .
đđđđđ  đđđđđđđđđ : chaotic neutral .
đđđđđđ  +  đđđđđđđđ : cis male , non binary + he / they .
đđđđđ Â đđ
 đđđđđ : laguna beach , california .
đđđđđđ  đđđđđđđđđđđ : bisexual .
đđđđđđđđ  đđđđđđđđđđđ : biromantic .
đđđđđđđđđđ : drummer + songwriter for rock band after laughter .
đđđđđđđđđđđ : korean - american .
đđđđđđđđđ : korean .
đđđđđđđđđ  đđđđđđ : korean , english , mandarin , and japanese .
background .
christian kwon grew up in laguna beach , california to a pediatrician and an optometrist , so his life was pretty comfortable from the start . he grew up near the beach and in a home that was bigger than what was needed for the three of them , but that was his parents making life comfortable for him . Â
growing up , christian was the kid who had everything , but never treated people as less than . granted , he went to school with the kids who had larger than life homes of dreamed of getting a mercedes for their sixteenth , but he had friends who didnât have that kind of lifestyle , and never treated anyone other than the way he wanted to be .Â
his parents were constantly putting christian into various after school clubs to keep him busy , and this was where he discovered his love for music . he started out with learning how to play the guitar , but then he eventually found himself being pulled towards the drums . christian wasnât a prodigy by any means , but he took the instrument quite easily . Â
it was no surprise that during high school , christian decided to start a band . it took a lot of trial and error , and for about six months the band didnât even have a name . during those six months , the band worked together to find their sound and constantly wrote music together until they eventually found themselves with a small gig where they debuted as after laughter .
the band continued to work towards their dreams , eventually recording their first album ( all we know is falling ) and being a part of the lineup for the warped tour following their graduation from high school in 2011 . following the tour , the band began working on their second album in 2013 ( riot! ) and this was the album that catapulted them into mainstream success due to the singles crushcrushcrush , misery business , and thatâs what you get . the album went platinum , and they were nominated for their first grammy .
the group went on their second tour , and took a short break before diving into their third album . they were soon releasing brand new eyes in 2016 , and they were off on their first world tour . during the tour , the band released their ep singles club , and finished their tour a few months later . deserving a bit of rest , the band took a yearâs hiatus before returning to the music scene in 2018 with their album paramore . the album spawned four singles , and one of them , ainât it fun , went on to win the band their first grammy .
later in that same year , the band released their self - titled album after laughter , and went on a nine month tour to perform both albums . Â
exposed .
during his time in the band , christian found himself a committed relationship . the couple were together for about two and a half years before christian finally proposed , and they were both excited to be getting married . their engagement had been a blissful one , and within two years they were ready to get married . the day came , and christian found himself with cold feet , thus deciding to leave his fiancé without so much of a goodbye before heading out of the country .
christianâs name had been slandered due to his decision , and his management team wasnât sure of how to fix the error of his ways . therefore , when the opportunity rose , his team had him cast on the show in a way to help clear up speculations about him and as a way to fix the tarnished image he obtained following the end of his engagement .
temperament .
heâs a bit of an asshole . not a bit , he is . christian is very much a smooth talker and knows how to get what he wants due to his charisma . definitely the  â mr steal your girl ( or boy ! ) â type of smooth talker because thatâs what he does best . heâs wildly charismatic and has a very strong habit of saying things he doesnât mean in order to get what he wants .
his emotional and romantic stunting mostly stems from him purposefully putting up walls that he makes nearly impossible for people to break down . after the ugly ending to his engagement ( and joining the cast of exposed ) , christian has shut himself off from others not only for his image , but because he simply canât deal with it anymore .
can be quite the meme sometimes . never truly knows whatâs going on , but somehow manages to put two and two together . has a really loud laugh when he truly finds something funny , and probably radiates himbo energy like thereâs nothing to it . not really a point of his personality , but heâs always finding a way to make something musical ? whether it be drumming his fingers , constantly humming a tune he canât get out his head , or randomly singing a song when he hears a word from the lyrics .
headcanons .
christian identifies as cis male and as non binary . this is mostly due to the fact that he that he doesnât identify to any gender , but he acknowledges that he has been socialized as a man . he is fine with someone using he / him / his and  they / them / theirs pronouns when speaking to or referring to him .
very much so romantically and emotionally stunted , therefore he bides his time with casual sex and noncommittal acts of romance . typically can be found slipping out of beds in the middle of the night , never returning texts / calls ( or blocking the number entirely ) , and at times ( and considered to be his worst trait yet ) will pretend as though he doesnât know who the other is .
donât ask him about technology because he doesnât know ! despite being twenty - seven he can be quite ... behind the times . the only reason he has the latest gadgets and such is because his management team ensures that he has it . Â
his stage fashion and off - stage fashion styles tend to differ greatly . when on state , christian can often be seen sporting the typical drummer attire : half - opened button downs , form fitting jeans , vans , and looser tees . in short , he likes for his shirts to be loose as he really gets into playing . as for off - stage , it ends to be a little more refined . he can be seen wearing a touch more designer and he likes layers even when itâs hotter outside . still an avid fan of half - opened button downs , but instead of jeans , heâll replace them with shorts depending on the weather .
his signature within the band is often dying his fair various colors , with the most common being pink and blonde . he tends to get a perm because he likes his hair to be curly / fluffy , but a slick back with an undercut hairstyle ? chefâs kiss .
he only uses a variety of customized drumsticks and he cannot see ! do not ask him to look at anything when he first wakes up because chances are he will have to get super close in order to see it . typically alternates between his glasses or contacts .
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