There are hardly any female werewolves because they break all the classic rules of femininity. They force you to confront female violence, strength, size, grotesqueness and uncontrollability. Historically female shapeshifters always shift into something dangerous (snake) or sleek (cat) or dainty (bird) but female werewolves ignore the masculine gaze completely. They're distorted beasts that have no ulterior motive except to destroy. Nothing about them is nurturing or modest. They're the opposite of what a woman "should be." Their omission from pop culture is not an accident.
Forgot I made this in a dazed state last night and got jump scared by it in my drafts
the way theo looks at liam and the way liam looks at theo are so distinctly different because theo knows he's in love with liam and has given up on ever pursuing it but liam doesn't even know that he's in love with theo but keeps chasing whatever feeling it is inside of him that keeps telling him to stick around theo and see what happens
THEYβRE IN 4TH AND 5TH CHASING EACH OTHER FOR THE REST OF THEIR LIVES #WARISOVER
The past few chapters are giving me "too good to be true" vibes BUT THEN THEY'RE ACTUALLY REAL. THEY'RE CANON. THIS IS GENUINELY HAPPENING YOU GUYS
Earlier today I was walking to my room and then I remembered chapter 121.5 and how Atsushi died for Akutagawa and then repeated Akutagawa's dying words back to him and I actually almost walked into a wall
am I okay you ask
no I am not
The sskk development of 121.5β123 is making me scream (in a good way, as a sskk shipper I am currently having the time of my life and popping champagne bottles), like, Atsushi died for Akutagawa? Akutagawa's canonly possessive of Atsushi? Atsushi is Akutagawa's reason to live? Atsushi is Akutagawa's heart? Atsushi saw Akutagawa's past and understands him on a deeper level now? Atsushi dying gave Akutagawa his memories back and the first thing he remembered was himself dying for Atsushi? Akutagawa thought about Atsushi's and his sacrifice when he was contemplating what real strength was which means the strongest he's ever felt was when he died to protect and save Atsushi? Atsushi is Akutagawa's ordeal? Atsushi is Akutagawa's drive to act? Akutagawa sees Atsushi's face in his mind instead of Dazai's now? Akutagawa knows he's on the brink of death so he thinks about Atsushi because he wants the weretiger to be his last thought? Akutagawa demanded a literal god to bring Atsushi back? They both know they can't live without the other now? When Atsushi's with Akutagawa he truly doesn't feel alone anymore? Atsushi said in the beginning of the series that no one would ever care if he died and now Akutagawa is doing everything he can to get him back because Akutagawa cares?
My heart is melting
i love writing theo and liam's perspectives on the same thing because theo thinks like philosophical poetry and liam thinks in run-on sentences and keysmashes
βI'm the one who gripped you tight and raised you from perdition.β
I started it about a week ago π€― but I had a vision and I was following it and enjoyed the whole process β₯
so, accurately, house bailed out this wilson;
and wilson first saw this house;
There's this really frustrating goyish idea that Jews are always finding "loopholes" or "tricks" to violate the "spirit of the law" when it comes to observing Jewish law. No, they're following Jewish law. All ways in which one can follow the law are equally "in the spirit of the law" because the law's purpose is to be followed. The idea that finding easier ways to observe religious rules means "tricking" god or doing something otherwise shameful is reflective of Christian philosophy. Suffering is not virtuous in Judaism. Penance is not the purpose of Jewish law. Judaism is meant to enrich the current lives of its community, not ritualize hardship for some unknowable divine purpose.
20||She/Her||Biπ©·ππ||Jewish β‘οΈ||Multifandom||https://13-28-83.carrd.co/
251 posts