biophilie asked: "u dont know tragedy until you ship a dead girl and a bird" i feel it

antaresia:

son. it was sad as fuck when i first read it when i read it nearly 15 years ago and it is even sadder now because i was cold as fuck as a kid and now as an adult i have the fragile emotional state of an infant that’s been shown the first 10 minutes of the movie “up”. animorphs has destroyed me and showed me how to feel, and most of that is bad and i regret it.

send an ask: get to know your author

polyamoryavengers:

1) is there a story you’re holding off on writing for some reason?

2) what work of yours, if any, are you the most embarrassed about existing?

3) what order do you write in? front of book to back? chronological? favorite scenes first? something else?

4) favorite character you’ve written

5) character you were most surprised to end up writing

6) something you would go back and change in your writing that it’s too late/complicated to change now

7) when asked, are you embarrassed or enthusiastic to tell people that you write?

8) favorite genre to write

9) what, if anything, do you do for inspiration?

10) write in silence or with background noise? with people or alone?

11) what aspect of your writing do you think has most improved since you started writing?

12) your weaknesses as an author

13) your strengths as an author

14) do you make playlists for your current wips?

15) why did you start writing?

16) are there any characters who haunt you?

17) if you could give your fledgling author self any advice, what would it be?

18) were there any works you read that affected you so much that it influenced your writing style? what were they?

19) when it comes to more complicated narratives, how do you keep track of outlines, characters, development, timeline, ect.?

20) do you write in long sit-down sessions or in little spurts?

21) what do you think when you read over your older work?

22) are there any subjects that make you uncomfortable to write?

23) any obscure life experiences that you feel have helped your writing?

24) have you ever become an expert on something you previously knew nothing about, in order to better a scene or a story?

25) copy/paste a few sentences or a short paragraph that you’re particularly proud of

(via notahotlibrarian)

thexdarkenedxlight:

vangoghstss:

calumthonas:

:/

This is actually v important and needs to be reblogged

Gonna just share this:

My European Studies professor decided a few weeks ago to take a Friday and instead of following the syllabus, he spent the entire hour and a half comparing Hitler’s actions from a European perspective to that of what Trump is doing in America. He never repeated a single point, and even used video and photos like this to show the comparison.

To make things better, he had us do an in class assignment for participation points. He first played a clip on youtube of one of Hilter’s speeches, subtitled and 3 minutes long. He then played a clip of one of Trump’s rallies. Our assignment? Copy down every single sentence that matched in translation down on a sheet of paper or a word document that wasn’t repeated. The person with the closest amount to what my professor found got a candy bar.

My professor found, in just three minutes of a speech, that Trump matched 65 different phrases/sentences to that of Hitler’s translation. 

65 nearly identical phrases used in his speeches. Take a moment to think about that.

Okay, I am as terrified of Trump as the next person, but in the hopes of giving everybody SLIGHTLY less of a heart attack, the armbands thing is not a thing.

(Source: squishycalum, via windbladess)

slyrider asked: FAM I was at target the other day and saw the DVD for miraculous ladybug and I flipped and bought it cuz I thought it would have all the eps but it only has the first 7 and yeah

That’s so fucking upsetting, and since I am sorry for your disappointment HERE, this the possibly-dubiously-legal website I’ve been watching them on because I don’t have money and I do have wifi.  You’ve probably gotten around to finding that, but still.  A present.  It streams pretty well when you’re not working with shitty college-campus-grade wifi.

octoberspirit:

concept art - the prince of egypt, 1998, dreamworks animation

(via wildehacked)

captioned-vines:

mexicanoprince:

LESSON OF THE FUCKING DAY

“Why is self-confidence arrogant? Why is self depreciation considered modesty? I worked my ass off to be able to have a high opinion of myself. It took a long time and many, many years, and I’m never gonna let anyone tell me that I should think less of myself.”

(via adelindschade)

"

Do not go gentle into that good night,
Old age should burn and rage at close of day;
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.
Though wise men at their end know dark is right,
Because their words had forked no lightning they
Do not go gentle into that good night.

Good men, the last wave by, crying how bright
Their frail deeds might have danced in a green bay,
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.

Wild men who caught and sang the sun in flight,
And learn, too late, they grieved it on its way,
Do not go gentle into that good night.

Grave men, near death, who see with blinding sight
Blind eyes could blaze like meteors and be gay,
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.

And you, my father, there on the sad height,
Curse, bless me now with your fierce tears, I pray.
Do not go gentle into that good night.
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.

"

— Dylan Thomas, Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night (via marsza)

(via yea-lets-do-this-shit)

Tags: THIS IS MY FAVORITE POEM okay i have a lot of favorite poems BUT THIS ONE GUYS SIT TIGHT FOR LIKE TWO MINUTES BECAUSE I LOVE THIS POEM i don't remember the first time i read it i'm welsh and thomas was welsh and my parents were english majors and i could quote hamlet by my fourth birthday poetry was kind of a thing but i remember the first time i really *read it* i was in seventh grade i think i hated school i hated the people around me i hated that i didn't understand why they did things and that i wasn't normal like they were i was kind of a fucked up kid/am kind of a fucked up woman okay i read this poem and i read the last stanza and it hit me in the chest with all the subtle grace of a wrecking ball and i got it like for the first time in my life i understood why people read poetry besides shakespeare (if you don't like shakespeare you don't live in my house) (that's basically the deal) (my parents threatened to disown me when i tried to take their collected works of shakespeare down to college) (but they bought me my own when i turned eighteen this year so it's all good) i read this poem and the whole world fell into place and there was silence in my head for the first time in years all i could hear were the words ringing through my head there was no clamor no noise no voices of a thousand thoughts it was like waking up and seeing the sun for the first time ever i felt like for a few minutes i was bound into my skin and it was a bliss so perfect i almost cried i look for books and poems that make me feel like that now

vivianvivisection:

biruskis:

If the Winter Soldier was responsible for the Kennedy assassination and Magneto tried to STOP the Kennedy assassination then that must mean somehow Magneto lost a fight to a guy wITH AN ENTirE ARm MADE OF METAL

Marvel writers sweat intensely

Canonically in the comic, Magneto has lost to the X-Men.  When they had neither Jean Grey nor Professor X (psychics) with them, and both Wolverine (metal skeleton and claws) and Colossus (metal everything) with them.  You don’t get more impaired than that against Magneto.  I’m sure HYDRA could have found a way.

(Source: ewcaptainamerica, via adelindschade)

ttdow:
“ yung-witch:
“ this child is so patient with this name thing
”
reblogging so you all can correct people’s mispronunciations, so she doesn’t have to anymore
”

ttdow:

yung-witch:

this child is so patient with this name thing

reblogging so you all can correct people’s mispronunciations, so she doesn’t have to anymore

(via cthulhu-with-a-fez)

selenay936:

But anyway, I recently sat down to figure out exactly where Steve’s local gay bars would be, or where the closest ones would be, for purposes of plotting things out, and uh … turns out that Steve Rogers lived in the MIDDLE of the biggest cruising/gay bar/gay hangouts area of Brooklyn. Like, a couple blocks from the St. George Hotel, which was almost entirely gay by the early 40s. 

This is actually a really great, fascinating essay (by thingswithwings) on the area and time Steve grew up in. The whole idea that Steve (and Bucky even more) would be completely, totally clueless seems even more ridiculous when you really look at this stuff.