that-weirdo-nextdoor:

colonelshootingstar:

What if Aliens think Humans look like pets?

Human: *is minding his own business, filing reports and reading documents at his desk*

Alien: Look at him, doin’ a work. What a good boy. Precious hooman. We don’t deserve them.

Human: You do realize your damn translator is on, right? I can hear and understand exactly what you’re saying. We may be “cute” to your species, but don’t patronize me. I let it slide for god knows how long-

Alien: *runs their “fingers” through his hair, messing up the carefully combed over “floof”* soft hooman, a n g e r y boy

Human: I dropped out of college and went through Martian boot camp for this.

This is just too funny not to reblog.

jeunefrenetique:

The problem with girls like her, girls who’ve been broken and pieced back together to grow mistrustful and cold, for whom playing music on shuffle in public is already revealing too much of oneself, is that once they let their guards down, once those walls they worked so hard to maintain tumble, they build them back up twice as strong and twice as long.

why it’s so hard to let people in

vinegretteofconfusionandconflict:

There are a lot of reasons I was drawn to A Series of Unfortunate Events as a kid, and if I wanted to try and analyze them all I would have to write an entire anthology of books about the series and me and psychology and by the end of the day I would be very tired and you all would be very bored, so I’m not going to do that, but when I think about the series and probably the main reason why I’ve stuck with the series so long as a kid and now as a quasi-adult, what stands out to me is the beautiful way that Daniel Handler writes, portrays and deals with abuse.

There are a lot of messages that the series conveys across its thirteen volumes and even more in the companion pieces Handler has authored, but almost all of them come back to deal with abuse in some way, particularly child abuse. Even beyond just roundabout lessons that can be applied to child abuse, it actually depicts and deals with child abuse, a topic that is virtually nonexistent in middle grade literature even now as we start to become more aware of the topic. Children with harrowing backgrounds are common in the genre, but the difference between the Baudelaires and Harry Potter is that Snicket makes it very clear that what is happening to the Baudelaires is abuse and is wrong, whereas the Harry Potter series dismisses Harry being forced to live under the stairs as simply mean guardians and an abusive school teacher as a romantic pining for his lost love (don’t get me started on Snape discourse). A Series of Unfortunate Events tells children up front that abuse does happen and that that is what it is – abuse.

It showcases dozens of different varieties of abuse, physical, emotional, neglect, and it even hints at sexual with Olaf’s predatory behavior towards Violet. It shows different kinds of abusers, Mr. Poe, who does it out of genuine ignorance and an unwillingness to learn, and Count Olaf, who does it out of cruelty.

More than showing child abuse, it shows how people react to child abuse, either through internalizing it and believing that they are deserving of their fate, withdrawing from other people, or becoming distrusting of any and all adults to the point that they might miss out on people who could have possibly saved them if they had just trusted them. A Series of Unfortunate Events presents trauma in an accurate, non-sugar coated way to the audience that most needs to hear it.

As a seven year-old kid living with abusive parents, at the time I didn’t know why I loved A Series of Unfortunate Events so much, but I knew I loved it in a way I had never loved or related to a book before, and more than a decade later it still has a dramatic impact on my life. I was a cynic from a young age, and there’s something just draining about reading story after story of quick fixes and happy endings and stories where things go right when your life never seems to go right. I loved A Series of Unfortunate Events because the things that were happening to the Baudelaires, even though they took place in a fictional universe, were real. Handler never tried to pretend that life was great because it isn’t and if you’re a kid who has been taught by literature over and over that life is supposed to be great all the time and it’s great for everyone except you, that messes you up. A Series of Unfortunate Events told me it was okay to be messed up, and it told me that other people are messed up too, and the world is just as imperfect for everyone else as it was for me.

secretkalexsanta:

secretkalexsanta:

secretkalexsanta:

secretkalexsanta:

secretkalexsanta:

Sign-ups for Secret Kalex Santa are now open!! 

SIGN UP HERE! 

This is a holiday fic exchange EXCLUSIVELY focused on romantic Kalex fic, with the option of Alex x Kara x (others) poly ships for those so inclined. 

Minimum fic length is 1,000 words. Sign-ups are open until Sunday, October 21, 11:59pm ET, and you will receive a “letter to Santa” including writing prompts within the following week! The deadline to complete and submit your prompt is December 20.

Please follow this blog for more updates, and reblog if you’re comfortable doing so to help us reach everyone! If you have any more questions, the FAQ will be up soon, and you can message me here

Sign-ups for Secret Kalex Santa are still open, and if you haven’t signed up yet, you should!! (We have 11 participants so far, so you will definitely get some fic out of this deal!)

If you have any questions, check our FAQ, or message me at this account 🙂

FIVE DAYS LEFT TO SIGN UP! And we’re up to 20 people! Thanks so much guys; I’m so excited to see all of this fic!

As with before, if you have any questions let me know, and if you’re comfortable doing so, please reblog to help spread the word! 

TWO DAYS LEFT! 

LAST DAY!

Thank you so much to everyone who has signed up so far; I’m over the moon this has gone so well! 

cwsupergirlgifs:

Supergirl‘s fourth season, which continues Sunday (The CW, 8/7c), reinforces the idea that “you can find empowerment in many different avenues of life,” star Melissa Benoist tells TVLine, confirming that there’s “not much” romance coming up for the Girl of Steel.

“It’s not that I don’t think there should be any,” she explains, “but I like seeing a woman fending for herself and not thinking about [romance]. If it falls into her lap, great.”

One relationship you can look forward to developing, however, is between Kara and Nia, the new cub reporter she’s mentoring at CatCo Worldwide Media. Though there’s still “some ice to break” between them, Benoist says that pairing will “pay off in really amazing ways.”

That said, it may take a while for Kara to suspect that there’s more to her new mentee than meets the eye. (Specifically, that she’ll eventually suit up as superhero Dreamer.) “What she sees initially is a really smart, capable, intelligent woman with great ideas,” Benoist says. “She just wants to harbor that and help it grow the way Cat Grant did for her.”

And then there’s the “other” Kara, first introduced at the end of the show’s third season finale. Referring to her as “Red Daughter,” Benoist says, “I haven’t really gotten to know her yet fully,” but confirms, “I have spoken some Russian” in the role.

kalex-week-2018:

As Kalex Week 2018 winds down to a close…

You can still post fills if you have stuff that didn’t get done in time!

Post it either with the tag #belated kalex week 2018 (on tumblr) or with the “belated kalex week 2018” tag on AO3, and add it to the collection!

Much love and appreciation to all the people who participated! I am… pretty freaking floored and spoiled by all the new fic in the tag. ❤️❤️❤️

… how belated are we taking here because I have one I’m writing now that might be done in a few months maybe xD

But also YES KALEX WEEK HAS BEEN AMAZING, THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR ORGANIZING! ❤️❤️❤️