do you all see my vision here
Hi! You gave me the link to Ludwig 2 on Bilibili- thank you so much!!!!! The video title says that it should have English subtitles, but I can't figure out how to turn them on... do you know? Thank you again, I'm really looking forward to watching it!!
I haven't figured it out yet either, but I'll let you know if I find a way :)
@maliania and I fallen into the pit again and that means more Rexim for our cult.
Today we have something special on the menu:
Rebecca and Bea have a fight, that can only be settled with a car race. And because he doesn't have another ride, Maxim needs to tag along.
Had that with Buxtehude
We make fun of Americans and their geography knowledge a lot but I have a confession to make: as a child I didn't believe Panama existed. I read this children's book about a tiger and a bear trying to travel to Panama and I was like well the tiger and bear are fictional so obviously Panama is a fictional made up country.
More Rexim, what a joyous day
Dear Rexim cult members,
We have added a new chapter to our holy scriptures.
This time Rebecca might get a little affectionate and Maxim can not cope.
Have fun
@maliania
Wer kann schon ohne Liebe sein?/Who can be without love?
Even in a relationship as doomed as the de Winters’, there are the moments in between the shouting matches, away from the betrayal, there are those tiny grains of affection and hope, where Mr. and Mrs. de Winter can get it together, in the face of situations more disastrous than their marriage.
Not every moment in the two decades of marriage was hostile, and we’re here, cherry picking the good bits, to imagine them in a collection of fluffy one-shots.
It couldn’t have all been bad, right? Right?!?
#rexim for the weakminded
@maliania
what made me able to forgive maxim by the end of the book is the fact that rebecca was doomed anyway. i know this sounds bad, but it's the truth. she wanted to die -> she did everything in her power to die quickly in a manner of her own choosing. maxim became an unwilling and unknowing participant in her assisted suicide. she 100% intended it that way, whether or not it was meant to completely ruin him as well we don't know for sure but come on. the lady had one last ace in her sleeve, of course she would use it to drag him down with her. it didn't even have to be personal, just what he stands for is enough. with all of this i'm not saying that he's justified or that there weren't better courses of action he should've taken. but the stakes were stacked heavily against him. i mean Rebecca lived with him for 20 years, in which time she notably didn't die and we get no mention or even a hint of potential domestic violence either. if nothing else, that man had self control, and his wife of several decades was the best suited person to set him off. a dog you condition to bite will lash out. the first decision he makes completely on his own was to hide her body. he scrubbed her blood off the floor for what must've been hours he definitely had time to think about it and then he decided to not die. it almost destroys him anyway, by the time the narrator meets him he's borderline suicidal. his head had to be pulled above the water by other people because he was more than ready to be hang for his crime, which he recognizes as horrific. but he also admits that he would've shot rebecca again even if he knew what would happen, and he says this while he still thinks he killed a pregnant woman. he felt that much trapped.
Found this picrew and thought its cute
Here is me atm
Npts: @t3mpest98 @varpusvaras @tinyduckies @insertmeaningfulusername @ihaventpiickedausername @cookiemonsterv3 & anyone who wants to do this (u also dun have to if u don’t want to kdkdkdk)
AAAAAAA I LOVE THEM SO MUCH
/blasting Sie war gewohnt, geliebt zu werden/ heyyyy it's Becky in Vivienne Westwood
“To the utterly miserable - the unloving and the unloved - there is no religion possible, no worship but a worship of devils. And beyond all these, and continually recurring, was the vision of my death - the pangs, the suffocation, the last struggle, when life would be grasped at in vain.”
-The lifted veil
by George Eliot