Whatever you do don’t put ramblings of a lunatic, permanence and rust by @bears_in_trees in sequence into the same playlist because you end up crying on the way home from work and on the way to Tesco and pretty much just end up crying wherever
@mmediocreman@ChilledFoodTin Respectfully she did go blind as a result of using Flow, even if her blindness isn’t treated as seriously/consistently as it should be. I’d say that was a mistake/consequence of her actions?
i went to the forest inside your soul and all the critters there told me the love you carry in your heart warms them and makes them feel safe when it’s cold
BREAKING: Swiss commentator kept on reminding viewers of the war crimes the pilot has openly supported, while the Israeli bobsleigh team was racing on the Olympics.
If we had met Luke Skywalker in The Last Jedi as exactly the same person he was in Return of the Jedi—just with gray hair—it wouldn't have been heroic; it would have been stagnant. Thirty-five years changes everyone. To expect Luke to remain the optimistic youth forever is to treat him like an action figure rather than a human being.
What makes this version of Luke so compelling is how he embodies the film's central thesis: "The greatest teacher, failure is."
If you look closely, The Last Jedi is a symphony of failure. Poe fails to see the big picture and costs the fleet dearly. Finn and Rose fail their mission on Canto Bight. Rey fails to turn Kylo Ren back to the light. Even Snoke fails to foresee his own demise.
But Luke? By the end, he is the only one who truly succeeds.
He confronts his trauma, reconnects with the Force, and achieves exactly what he sets out to do on Crait: saving the Resistance and sparking the fire that will burn the First Order down. While everyone else struggles to learn from their mistakes, Luke masters his. He doesn't just return to the fight; he transcends it, proving that while failure is a teacher, a true Master knows how to graduate.
@hash1992 I know I'm already in your distant commission queue but that's for my girl in her DT era. In the meantime, I'm going to throw my Roe girl in her ShB era.
@AdairaAlmighty You did more than usual & it worked amazingly for the story telling,each POV was distinct & felt right (v attached to frame handler already)!These posts are frequently the bright spots of my day & I hope you continue to enjoy making them. At the same time please don’t burn out!
@Hilly_Poppy@MrZendosona If possible, swimming is quite helpful as an exercise as it takes stress off of those joints and muscles and the feet which can get affected by long term diabetes
@TheRileyOMalley You’re welcome! I know just how important headphones are to quality of life and don’t want you to be without for longer than necessary <3