19 | she/her
49 posts
Hagrid, Harry, Ron and Hermione - colored :3
honestly? sometimes the one who's blocking our chances or opportunities are ourselves 😞
please don’t spend your life convincing yourself that love or joy is reserved for the idealized version of you that only exists in the future
I’d rather stay in and read fanfics on AO3 than do this thing called go outside and talk to people
self-sabotage goes hard
I’m literally at the age where I can do what I want and the only responsibility I have is to myself and the fact that I take that for granted is crazy
maybe this is just me idk
May The Fourth Be With You!
everything eats and is eaten, time is fed
INGYDAR – ADRIANNE LENKER
Brushing a cat’s head with a wet toothbrush may remind them of their mothers
this is me trying - taylor swift/unable to find orgin/unknown/cop car - mitski/grief lessons: four plays by euripides, translated by anne carson/@rueyam/happiness - taylor swift/venetta octavia/c.s. lewis/I know the end - phoebe bridgers/a prayer - tathève simonyan/buried - ashe vernon
waiting games
"your love finds its way back", sierra demulder / "moon song", phoebe bridgers / automat, edward hopper / "right where you left me", taylor swift / a lover's discourse: fragments, roland barthes / new york movie, edward hopper
alright google calm down we all know this to be true
"i don't comment on ao3 because i don't wanna be annoying or weird" skill issue + you greatly underestimate the power dynamic here, writing multi paragraph comments is like feeding a bunch of deeply insane and possibly starved ducks at the park and watch them go completely mad over having received a piece of bread
i think about this a hundred times a day
Yeashh I always thought about this 😭 kind of inappropriate seating style and someone should reprimand him from serving (someone to hold us back)✨
I need some time to wrap my head around this scary shit.
🎥 : Adolescence (2025)
Adolescence (2025) - Episode #1.4
how ironic that one of the main criticisms of the school system in adolescence is how teachers would just stick on a video for the kids to watch instead of actually teaching them, and now all the talk from the government is about how adolescence should be mandatory viewing in schools. like are you actually gonna teach them anything? are you gonna do anything to deradicalise boys? are you gonna invest in youth and mental health services? are you gonna pay teachers the money they deserve? are you gonna do anything about the hate speech that gets spread online? are you gonna make sure parents are better supported and actually have time to spend with their children? no? i mean why would you do any of that when you can just stick on a tv show. jesus christ
Episode 3 as a whole is a punch to the gut, but I believe one of the most important parts of it to me was the way they perfectly portrayed how violent men and boys will take advantage of “not perfect” victims to try and rid themselves of any responsibility for their violence.
Even at 13, Jamie is aware of that, subconsciously or not. He uses words like “bitch” and “slut” to refer to a 13 year old girl—a child he killed. He brings up her leaked photos again and again, talks about her comments and her treatment of him as if any of that should exempt him from his crime.
He already knows he has an advantage, for being a boy and having hurt a girl who’s not perfect and “pure”. The show drives this point home when that store’s employee tells Jamie’s dad he suports his son and talks badly about Katie. He says there’s more people who agree with him.
Because there are. The whole time, Jamie brings up “Katie was flat”, “she took nude pictures”, “she rejected me”, “she bullied me”. He still tries to paint her as the villain when he was the one who admitted he only pursued her because she was fragile and he wanted to take advantage of that.
He even claps himself in the back because he didn’t sexually assault her after he murdered her, as if that makes him a good person. (When he did in fact commit a sexual crime by looking at her naked pictures without her consent).
I think that’s the most vital part of the show. The way Jamie can’t comprehend what he did was wrong because he doesn’t view Katie as a person, not even in death. That’s his understanding.