Anonymous asked: *pictures you eating fully-grown musketeers, screaming and stabbing ineffectively in your mouth*

I feed on the blood of heroes and the hearts of virgins.  They flail and writhe to no avail, for I am a dark and eldritch thing from beyond the stars.  It is vital that I believe in myself, for my worshipers are…gone, now.  We shall say no more about their fate.


D̄ͪ̿̐̑̿ọ̱̘̅͐̒́̌n̟̠ͭ̅'͍̦͈̫͔̳͐ͨt̹̓͒ͬͣͦͪ ̬̯ͭͦ̋̒̈t͙̖̳͓̰͙ͧ͆̿̂̋ͅe͔̬̗̜͓ͤ̒̀ͮ̋ͨl͕̪͕̗̓ͥl̟̹̣ͩͩͦͩ̇ͨ̏ ̭̘̜̹̥̠ͭ͆͆a̞͙͎ͩ̾ͭ̓͒ͬn͋y̭͙̎̌͂̚o̱̫̻̦̳ͦṅ̩̭̱͇͍̬̖̈́ͮė̺̥̗͉̩̮́̋ͥ,̩̙͇̦̲̫̍̐ͨ̂ͨ͒ d̯̘̫̅̐̿̔ͅe͚̪̩͇̫͍̮̍a̻̫͇̟̯̤̰ͧ͆̔͛̔ͤr̾͑͗̄ ̫̻ͣͣ̎ͪ͗̆a̻̺͍̤̿̋ͥ̈́ṋ̞̹̜̪͚̥̐̋̔ͨ̇o͔̤̤̤̪̎̚n͈̙̹͔͓̥̏̂̂̓ͥͤ̾.̣̝̘̰͎̽̔ͮ̐͐ 

Anonymous asked: YOU GOT REBLOGGED BY SPACE-AUSTRALIANS

Holy fuck, you’re right.

I don’t even know how that post got so popular.  I just like to sit around and be a smart-ass about Legolas and Gimli, guys.  Also, since it’s not my post, I never know who reblogs it until someone tells me or it comes across my dash.

royalslayer asked: wait wait wait wait. when you say robin hood, do you mean the old disney animation with the fox robin hood? because if so, im calling closeted furry here

laUGHING

Oh buddy that would almost be better.  Like, don’t get me wrong, that was 100% my favorite movie as a Smol, but no, I was that kid who literally intended to time travel and marry Robin Hood and Maid Marian.  Like, I was going to figure out time travel so that I could be one of the Merry Men, that was The Plan.  I was Very Serious about my weird poly crush.

I’d like to point out that I’ve since grown up and decided that I would struggle in most poly relationships, BUT I would still marry Robin and Marian.  Especially from Robin McKinley’s Outlaws of Sherwood, which is MY FAVE VERSION because Marian is a badass and Robin is perpetually heart eyes over her all the time.  Scarlet is also good, which has Maid Marian as Will Scarlet (no, it’s not gay, she’s in disguise).  I didn’t like BBC’s Robin Hood much–the first season was fun trash, but I honestly bailed on the spot when they killed Marian and tuned back in just in time to find out that they BURN DOWN NOTTINGHAM AND KILL ROBIN at which point I was just like *flips table* NO.

Anonymous asked: consider this tho: gwendoline christie plays rey and daisy ridley plays phasma bc a) have u seen that vid of oscar isaac and john boyega and gwendoline christie jamming all together to a led zeppelin song and b) small! terrifying! absolutely do not fuck with! phasma and c) rey using her size and strength to make dragging shit from wrecks easier and despite being able to beat junk selling food guy up does not bc she has no other way of getting food? pls consider

*gasp*

Anon.

Dearheart.

This…this is so beautiful…

I love this immediately, wholeheartedly, and entirely without shame.

Tall!Rey looming over Poe and Finn!

Small!Phasma staring Han down totally unimpressed!

*LONG GASP*

TALL REY BENDING OVER TO HUG FINN AND LOOKING SO AWESTRUCK THAT HE CAME BACK FOR HER.

STAMP OF APPROVAL

MAKE IT SO

Anonymous asked: bdsm ask anon here: thanks for that lovely, in-depth and polite reply (sincerely). tone's sometimes hard to carry through when it's just text, so thanks for giving me the benefit of the doubt! that was quite an interesting read and i definitely have a better grasp on the concept now. cheers, vodka aunt!

No problem, anon!  I’m glad to help.  

Also, a short story for your good will.

My dad, upon coming across my answer to your previous ask: So…my question, as your father, is how you know so much about the BDSM scene.

Me, affronted: I do my goddamn research!

Dad:

Me: …And furthermore none of your business.

Anonymous asked: DID YOU WATCH SPIRIT: STALLION OF THE CIMARRON BECAUSE THAT MOVIE AND BALTO WERE MY CHILDHOOD

Okay…so.  

My relationship with a lot of movies I watched as a little kid is messy.  Spirit being one of them.  On the one hand, I think I recall liking it quite a lot.  On the other hand, I watched it with my cousins, which is pretty much a knee-jerk hate response because my cousins took their mother and grandmother’s perspective on me.  There’s a lot of movies that fall into this category, or, alternatively, the category of “I was too fucked up to deal with this movie as a kid” like for example Spirited Away.  It’s a pretty benign movie that I inexplicably had screaming nightmares about.  All of these movies fall into the much larger category of ‘very vaguely recalled because they were casualties of memory repression.’

So…I guess the end result is: yeah, I watched it, but like…it’s complicated and I’ll probably rewatch it now that I’m an adult on the other side of some therapy and get a lot more out of it.  Sorry this got kind of weirdly personal rather than being a response to the movie.

Anonymous asked: hey, if you're up for discussion: i noticed a lot of the arguments re: bdsm were the kind of arguments that in other situations might be used against queer relationships. what would the difference be between a bdsm couple having a leash in a grocery store aisle as opposed to two gay men kissing? is it that theres a stigma against choking (man, that sounds weird put like that)? arent they doing their thing wituout asking other ppl to be involved? id love to know ur thoughts if u dont mind.

Oh…kay.  

*pours self a drink*

There’s a lot to cover here, so everyone buckle up while your queer dom vodka auntie discusses some stuff.

This is regarding this post for anyone who wants to follow along.  Here’s the major points we’re going to hit:

  • BDSM etiquette
  • Consent
  • Sexual vs sensual behavior, AKA sex vs romance

First off, we’re going to talk about BDSM—as it should be done, not the exploitative imitation in 50 Shades.  The core of BDSM is trust: the sub trusts the dom to stop if they safeword out, and the dom trusts the sub to know their limits and use that safeword.  The three major tenets of BDSM are Safe, Sane, and Consensual, meaning that everyone in the scene feels safe because they trust the person they’re with, everyone in the scene knows what they’re getting into and what they’re doing, and, most critically, they have agreed to those things clearly and explicitly.  Safe and Sane are pretty predicated on the people involved knowing what they’re doing, but Consensual is non-negotiable.  

Which brings us rapidly to point two, consent.  This is the major problem with couples practicing any sort of overt BDSM in public. The public, merely by their presence, is part of the scene—you don’t do stuff in public unless the response of the public, the feeling of being watched is somehow part of it, so the public is involved in the scene—but they have not consented to participation. Consent in BDSM is (or should be) an intricate thing, based on negotiations of what people are or are not willing to do, discussion and acknowledgement of their personal history, and establishing a safeword, a word used to indicate “everything needs to stop now” that can be used by anyone involved without protest from other parties.  So, for example, if it was me, I might be like “I have a history of abuse, so I’m not comfortable humiliating a sub or acting like I’m punishing them,” and the person I was talking with might be like “I’m not comfortable with being choked, but I’ve always wanted to be tied up.”  And then we would go from there with those ground rules in place, and establish a safeword. Before we ever discussed a scene, all of that would be hashed out, and then when we did discuss a scene, it would be something we’d already agreed that everyone involved was interested in doing and had the option to opt out of.

So, this is where public BDSM sort of falls apart, yeah? Because the bystanders have not discussed their boundaries or their histories, they have not negotiated what they’re interested in, and they do not have a safeword that will let them opt out of the scene.  Suppose one of the bystanders goes up to the couple and asks, “Hey, could you not choke your girlfriend in public?  You’re really freaking my son out.”  The couple hasn’t had that discussion with that bystander, they are not obligated by the BDSM contract to honor that bystander’s request.  Now, it’s the decent thing to do, to respect someone’s request for what’s really an easy thing, but people…uh, suck.  People suck.  Honoring the request to not choke your girlfriend in public actually takes less effort than doing it anyway, but people suck, so they’re almost inevitably going to go “fuck you” and do it anyway.  Which is NOT how BDSM is supposed to work, because see above re: Safe, Sane, and Consensual.  So, like, there’s that.  BDSM is about consent and trust.  The bystanders don’t have that foundation of trust, and they haven’t consented to being part of the scene, so everything else aside it fundamentally violates the contract implicit in BDSM.  If a couple does want to do that sort of public BDSM stuff, that’s what fetish parties are for, they can pay the necessary money to do it with people who have agreed and consented to being their audience. Otherwise, it’s more like catcalling—you might be getting off on it, but the other people involved just feel creeped out and vaguely violated.

But here’s the core of your question: the difference between sexual and sensual behavior.  

Okay, so, sexual behavior is exactly what it says on the tin, it’s about sex.  Sensual behavior is about physical touch and showing affection with no expectation that those touches lead to sex, it’s about romance.  This is where the analogy between BDSM and queer couples falls apart, because it’s this simple.

  • Queer couples want to express romantic affection through hand-holding, hugging, kissing, etc.
  • BDSM couples want to engage in something that’s intrinsically for sexual pleasure.

And I don’t want to hear debate about this, kiddos.  I know that BDSM can be nonsexual, I know that some people find it a deep relief to let someone else take control or to take control themselves, but that’s not the kind of BDSM relationship that gets flashily displayed in public.  Let me posit a scenario, in which I have a friend with whom I have a platonic dom/sub arrangement.  When they’re under stress, they let me take charge, and let’s suppose that during one of these agreed-upon scenes we’re going grocery shopping.  I might have an arm through theirs, or I might hold their hand, while I do most of the talking and instruct them on what to put in the cart. Any passerby wouldn’t notice anything unusual there—my friend might be tired, I might be a chatterbox, we might be doing a grocery run so I can make dinner, hell, maybe I’m just a bossy person. That’s not something that engages the public in any way, shape, or form.  On the other hand, let’s take the example of a couple who goes grocery shopping in the same way, but one of them has the other on a collar and chain.  That’s about the exhibition, it’s about the two of them getting off on being seen to have that power dynamic and all the trappings. And that’s about sex.  It’s about being titillated by bringing something that’s normally private into the open.

A pair of gay men kissing in public?  That’s not about sex.  That’s about being romantically attached.  And it’s something that straight couples get away with all the time, is the thing here.  Whereas it doesn’t matter if that hypothetical couple with the collar and chain is two women, a man and a woman, or three tentacle aliens and a grizzly bear, that’s still about sex and therefore still inappropriate to be pushed onto the public without consent.  It’s not about our culture having a stigma on choking, which…real fast, let me establish that there’s a very serious difference between having a stigma on, say, tattoos, as opposed to something like choking.  The reason we have a cultural stigma about choking is because it’s frequently used to hurt or kill people.  America, at the very least, could stand to have some stricter stigmas about other things used to hurt or kill people.  Like guns.  The reason overt BDSM like what’s described above is inappropriate in public is because it is sexual and it does disregard the right of the bystanders to consent to their own sexual experiences.

As long as we’re on the subject, I want to hit one more thing.  I think your ask is talking specifically about the remark that used to be made about “Well, how am I going to explain two men kissing to my kids?”  And kids are important here.  Because, okay, let’s suppose a four-year-old is presented with these two situations.  The two men kissing is easy.  That kid has definitely seen someone kissing their partner before, just tell them that the two men love each other and kissing someone is a way to show that you love them.  Easy-peasy.  However, explaining BDSM to anyone involves a pretty in-depth discussion of human sexuality, and…like, listen.  There is a reason that showing children porn is considered abuse.  By exposing the public to intense BDSM play, you are also exposing kids to a sexual act, without their consent or full understanding of what’s going on.  And we have pretty much agreed that pulling that stunt is Wrong.

TL;DR: BDSM of the variety being discussed here is inherently sexual, whereas queer couples engaging in affectionate contact is not. Sex acts require consent, and the general public has not consented to being part of your BDSM scene.  Don’t be an asshole, and if you really want to carry your power dynamics out of the bedroom, do it in a way that doesn’t force everyone else to be part of something they have not agreed to and cannot opt out of.  I can do a separate post on that if you’re interested.

Aaaaaaaaall righty then.  I think that covers everything.  I hope you’ve all enjoyed this journey into good BDSM etiquette and the fine art of consent.  

Vodka Auntie, out.

flvffs asked: why is this blog so quality. fucking hell.

Poor impulse control mixed with a certain cynical joie de vivre would be my best answer to that.

Anonymous asked: Hi oh my gosh okay so first of all I love all of your fics also your blog is super hecking gr9

*mild shrieking*  BLESS, thank you so much, I’m so glad you enjoy my fics!  

image

Originally posted by gameraboy

Anonymous asked: bud bud bud what do you think of river song

Okaaaaaaaaaaaaay

So.

Here is my complicated stance on River Song.  

On the one hand: her whole plot of going rogue against what she was designed to be and living her life backward relative to the proper timeline and fighting for what she believes in and being badass and snarky with the hair and the heels and the guns and the rest?  INTO IT.  INTO IT UP TO MY EYEBALLS ANON.  HERE.  FOR.  IT.  HONESTLY KIND OF BITTER I DIDN’T COME UP WITH THE WHOLE ‘LIVING TIME BACKWARD’ THING MYSELF.

On the other hand: A, I don’t like the way the narrative handles her, B, I don’t like the change toward companions needing to be Special, and C, I’ve never been able to get into her and the Doctor as a thing.  This got long.

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