#psycological transformation
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foncethefool · 3 months ago
Text
Until the lock breaks
Oh stars, this story took an absolute wild fuckin turn from where I meant to take it originally, it becomes an emotionally wild ride, so have fun~
The summer sun hung heavy over the playground, baking the pavement until the air shimmered with heat. Jackson’s knees were scraped raw, dirt clinging to his pale skin and smudging across his flushed cheeks. The older boys circled him like vultures, all sharp elbows and cruel laughter, shoving and knocking him down again and again — a sniffling, soft little thing too scrawny to fight back.
The biggest of them, a smug twelve-year-old, grabbed a fistful of his shirt and reeled back to finish the game with a punch — but the hit never came.
Instead, a blur of wild limbs and fiery hair came crashing into the boy’s stomach, knocking the wind out of him in one brutal, unthinking punch. The boy doubled over, and the others froze, staring as the girl stood her ground, fists clenched, her freckled face set with pure defiance.
The afternoon sun caught in her hair, making the light, stringy ginger strands glow like a flickering halo — bright, untamed, and brilliant. To Jackson, still sitting in the dirt, she looked less like a girl and more like some fierce, redheaded guardian angel sent to save him.
“Leave him alone, or I’ll make all of you cry,” she snapped, her voice sharp and unshaken.
That was all it took. The pack scattered, dragging their coughing leader away, too stunned to challenge her.
When the dust finally settled, she turned back to Jackson, crouching low and brushing the dirt from his scraped palms with surprising gentleness. Her smile was wide and fearless, like she’d just won a prize.
“You’re a soft boy,” she said, matter-of-fact and without a hint of teasing. “But that’s okay. I’ll protect you.”
She offered her hand, small and warm, and as he slipped his scraped fingers into hers, she gave it a firm shake, already sealing the deal.
“I’m Sophia,” she announced, like it was the most obvious thing in the world. “Now you.”
He swallowed the last of his sniffles, voice small and soft.
“...Jackson.”
Sophia grinned, sharp and bright. “Jackson. Got it.” She stood up, tugging him along with her like he weighed nothing. “Well, you’ve got a friend now, Jackson. I’ll keep you safe.”
And just like that, the world wasn’t so scary anymore — at least, not as long as Sophia was there.
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They were caught somewhere between childhood and something else — not quite old enough to leave behind the world of scraped knees and sleepovers, but old enough for thoughts they didn’t yet know how to name.
Sophia had grown into herself like a wild thing finally learning to stand still. The frizzy, sun-bleached orange that had once crowned her head had deepened over the years, settling into a richer, darker shade of red that swayed and bounced when she moved — though the fire in her spirit hadn’t dulled a bit. She was lean and toned, the kind of strong that came from endless afternoons spent climbing fences and sprinting through fields, always chasing some thrill.
Jackson had grown, too — but into the opposite of her. Where Sophia was sharp edges and steady strides, he was all soft lines and quiet habits. His frame was thin, almost fragile, like he’d been stretched just a little too tall for his own good. His hair, long and pale, fell in bright, silken strands whenever he let it down from the loose bun he usually wore, the soft locks brushing against his narrow shoulders. He didn’t bother cutting it, not once.
When people asked why, his answer was always simple, almost sheepish.
"It just feels more natural."
Most days, the two of them spent their afternoons together in Sophia’s room, the silence between them a comfortable thing. She’d be sprawled on her bed, thumbs busy on her game controller or lazily scrolling through her phone, while Jackson sat cross-legged on the floor, thumbing through whatever manga or novel had captured his attention that week.
Without fail, Sophia’s hands would eventually drift toward his hair, weaving through the soft strands like it was second nature. Sometimes she’d just stroke it absentmindedly, her fingers combing through the pale gold, or twisting a lock until it curled and bounced back. The first time he’d asked her why, her answer had been simple, and as matter-of-fact as ever.
"Your hair’s pretty. And it’s soft. I like it, is all."
The words had painted his cheeks a delicate shade of pink back then, his heart skipping somewhere between embarrassment and something else he didn’t yet understand. But as the days blurred into months, the shyness faded, replaced by a quiet contentment. Now, he didn’t flinch when her fingers combed through his hair — he’d just hum softly, the sound more feline than human, his body relaxing into her touch like it was the most natural thing in the world.
Sophia’s favorite pastime, though, was braiding his hair. Almost every afternoon played out the same way: Jackson sat at the foot of her bed, legs folded, a book resting lightly in his lap, while Sophia perched behind him, her hands moving with gentle precision as she worked the soft strands into a neat, perfect braid.
Neither of them ever said much during those moments. They didn’t need to.
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They were on the cusp of adulthood, teetering on the edge between childhood and whatever came next — a mix of nerves and excitement pulling tight around both of them.
Jackson, ever the quiet one, had flown through school with ease, top of his class without ever really trying. Sophia, on the other hand… Well, she’d scraped by, more than once leaning hard on Jackson’s patience and his sharp mind to drag her through. What she lacked in academics, she more than made up for on the track, her body honed and athletic. Colleges had already come sniffing, waving scholarships for her speed, while Jackson had been offered a full ride purely on his grades.
Still, no matter how different their paths looked on paper, the two were inseparable. Always side by side, always orbiting each other. More times than either could count, there were little moments — a brush of hands, a glance held just a second too long, shoulders bumping on lazy walks home — sparks of something neither fully understood, but both felt all the same.
Jackson had struggled with himself as he grew, though he rarely spoke about it. He hated the rough shadow of facial hair creeping onto his face, always shaving the second it appeared. He lived in oversized hoodies, sleeves long enough to swallow his hands, and when asked about it, he’d only mumble, “It makes me feel safe… or whatever.” More than once, Sophia had caught him staring too long at the front windows of lingerie stores, and once, when she’d teased him — asking if he was shopping for a girlfriend — the look on his face had twisted her stomach with guilt. She never joked about it again.
His hair had grown long over the years, soft blond strands that hung almost to his back when let loose. His bathroom was lined with a small army of products — for his hair, his skin, his face. Sophia had marveled at it more than once, realizing he took better care of his appearance than even she did.
But somehow, graduation crept up on them, and with it came one last night of being kids. A final evening before the world would start pulling them apart.
That Thursday evening, Sophia had slipped out of her house under cover of dark, bare feet silent on the pavement as she climbed through Jackson’s bedroom window — a habit as old as their friendship. They’d talked for hours, voices low and soft, both buzzing with the same cocktail of anxiety and anticipation. And now, in the late-night quiet, they simply laid side by side, the silence warm and heavy. Words had run dry. Being close was enough.
But then Sophia reached out, fingers brushing against his, her hand curling around his own in a quiet search for comfort. Jackson had expected the usual flutter of embarrassment, but the gentle squeeze of her hand told him all he needed to know — for once, the unshakable Sophia wasn’t so fearless. She was scared. And right then, he wanted to be strong for her.
He shifted, wrapping his arm around her and drawing her in close, guiding her head to rest against his chest. She nestled there without resistance, hands clutching lightly at the hem of his pajama shirt as her breathing slowed.
“You smell nice,” she mumbled, voice soft as a feather. “Like lavender and honey.”
A quiet chuckle rumbled through him, his fingers weaving through her hair, gentle and slow.
“Are you complaining?”
She shook her head, the motion barely a whisper against his chest.
Silence stretched between them, long and comfortable, until Jackson thought she might’ve drifted off. But then her voice broke the quiet once more — soft, heavy, almost lost to sleep.
“I don’t know what I’d do without you in my life. You’re so important to me.”
Her words settled deep in his chest, blooming a warmth so bittersweet it nearly ached. He let the silence hang a moment longer, unsure if she was even still awake, before whispering back,
“You saved my life, Phia.” The nickname rolled off his tongue like an old song, worn smooth by years. “You saved me so many times, I lost count. I don’t feel like I can ever be myself with anyone else but you.”
Another pause, softer this time, as if the world had held its breath.
“I remember the day I met you,” he murmured, voice barely more than air. “That first day you saved me. I thought you were my guardian angel. I still think I was right.”
Sophia shifted against him, the weight of sleep pulling her down, her voice barely audible.
“I’ll always protect you. I never wanna be without you.”
Jackson’s eyelids grew heavier, his fingers still tangled in her hair, his gaze lingering on the soft red curls resting against his chest.
And, finally, sleep took them both.
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It wasn’t unusual for Sophia to invite him over. She still called, still checked in, even if life had pulled them apart. The distance between them wasn’t measured in miles — it was measured in growing silences, in glances that lingered too long on his sunken eyes, on his increasingly thin frame, on the way his hoodies hung looser and looser over time.
Her voice on the phone had been soft, almost too soft.
"Hey... come over, okay? Just for a little while."
When he arrived, the house was warm — too warm, like it was trying to make him comfortable before he even noticed something was off. The walls were painted with soft, calming colors, decorated sparsely but tastefully, the way her success allowed. The scent of lavender drifted lazily in the air, sweet and familiar.
They talked, the same way they always did. About work. About people. About everything and nothing. But there was something strained under Sophia’s words, something Jackson couldn’t quite name. She kept watching him, her gaze flicking between his eyes and the way his fingers tugged self-consciously at his sleeves, the way his hand brushed against his chin when the faint shadow of facial hair caught the light.
When he excused himself for the bathroom, Sophia moved to the kitchen. Her hands trembled slightly as she reached for the tea. She crushed the small white capsule between spoon and porcelain, watching the powder dissolve into the dark liquid. Slowly, methodically, she stirred the tea, the motion mechanical — her gaze fixed on the swirling dark, as if the answer or forgiveness might float to the surface if she waited long enough.
When Jackson returned, he accepted the mug with that small, polite smile, the kind that never quite reached his eyes anymore.
The conversation drifted as the tea slowly vanished. His voice grew softer, his head heavier. His hands fumbled with the cup until it slipped from his grasp, clattering harmlessly against the carpeted floor. Panic flickered behind his eyes, but before it could bloom, Sophia was already at his side, catching him as his body slumped forward.
Her hands found his, clutching his fingers tightly, her thumb brushing gently across his knuckles like it might be the last time she’d ever be allowed to hold him this way.
"It’s okay..." she whispered, her voice barely steady. "You don’t have to fight anymore, Jackie."
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When Jackson woke, the world was soft and dim, but wrong. His limbs felt heavy, weak. His head swam, the sharp edges of panic rising to the surface as his body shifted — and he heard the sound of metal.
A collar. Around his neck. A chain clinked against the cold wall when he moved too fast.
The basement wasn’t a dungeon. It wasn’t cold or cruel. The walls were painted a soft, pale color, the carpet plush beneath him. A proper bed sat against one wall, neatly made with soft sheets. A small bookshelf rested within reach, lined with his favorite books, arranged in careful order — the same titles he’d lost himself in as a child. There was even a toilet tucked neatly in the corner, and soft light spilled from a standing lamp rather than the harsh overhead bulbs.
Everything was too familiar. Too comfortable. And that only made it worse.
His voice cracked as panic finally overtook him.
"Phia! Phia, what’s going on?!"
She appeared in the stairwell, descending slowly, her face pale, her eyes swollen and rimmed red from crying. She looked at him like her heart was breaking all over again.
"You’ve been miserable, Jackie," she whispered, her voice small and strained, the old nickname clawing at her throat as she said it. "I... I’ve watched you suffer. I tried to talk to you, but you always smiled through it. You always hid it. And I can’t stand it anymore."
Her hands clenched at her sides, nails biting into her palms, her voice trembling as the words tumbled out.
"I want to protect you, but I can’t if you won’t let me. You won’t let anyone."
Tears welled in her eyes again, spilling over unchecked.
"I... I had to do something, Jack. I had to help you. This is the only way I could figure out how."
She stepped closer, kneeling by the edge of the bed. Her voice was barely a whisper.
"You’re going to get a shot. Every week. It’ll knock you out for a while... and it’ll start replacing the hormones that have been hurting you. Estrogen, Jackie. It’ll help. I know it will. I promise you’ll feel better, even if you don’t believe me yet."
When she finished, silence swallowed the room.
Jackson’s wide, tear-filled eyes stared back at her, unblinking, the betrayal cutting deeper than any words could. His breath hitched, and the tears spilled down his face in hot, silent streams.
When she reached out, hand trembling to brush his hair away from his face, he flinched — recoiling from her touch like it burned.
And in that moment, Sophia’s heart shattered. She stayed kneeling, her hand hovering uselessly in the space where his warmth had been, watching him shake with silent fear.
"Even if you hate me, Jackie," her voice cracked, barely holding itself together, "even if you never forgive me... I’ll be okay with that. As long as you’re safe. As long as you don’t have to hurt anymore."
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The first shot
He fights. Stars, he fights.
A thrown book, trembling hands, desperate strength that doesn’t match hers — Jackson tries, but Sophia is too strong, too practiced at protecting him, even from himself. She holds him down as gently as she can, pressing his face into the soft carpet, whispering “I’m sorry” over and over as the needle slips into the soft flesh of his hip.
When he wakes, his face is bare. His skin smooth. His hair still damp from washing. His body cleaned while he was unconscious.
Sophia sits a few feet away, eyes swollen from crying. She couldn’t let him wake up alone, even if he’d never forgive her.
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The days bled together in the dark, each one slower than the last. The first week, Jackson didn’t sleep — not really. When exhaustion finally pulled him under, it was shallow, restless, the kind of sleep that left his body aching more than rest ever could. When he woke, it was always the same: the collar cold against his throat, the chain heavy across the floor, the faint smell of concrete and old wood pressing into his senses like a second skin.
The first week, he begged. God, he begged. For answers, for mercy, for Sophia. The girl he knew. The girl who promised to always protect him.
But she never raised her voice. Never snapped at him, never argued back. When she came down the stairs, it was always with a tray — simple food, sometimes his favorites, sometimes just something soft and easy to swallow. She never set it too close, always sliding it along the floor like he was a frightened animal. He never ate while she watched. Not once. But when she climbed the stairs, he’d devour every bite, hunger winning out over his pride.
Some nights, he’d cry until his throat gave out. The kind of ugly, shuddering sobs that left him clutching the chain like it was the only thing keeping him tethered to the world.
“Please wake up,” he whispered into the dark. “Please let this be a dream.”
But it never was. The cold never changed. The silence never broke. The bruises on his arm where she held him down still bloomed purple and yellow, proof this was real.
When the second week came, and with it another shot, he fought again — weaker this time, his muscles drained from too many nights of crying and too little food. She still held him down, still whispered apologies, still slid the needle into his skin as gently as her shaking hands would allow.
The cycle repeated. Day after day. Shot after shot.
By the end of the month, the begging had stopped. The fight had dulled into a quiet, seething ache that lived behind his eyes, and Sophia — she never stopped talking. Even when he gave her no answer, she’d sit nearby and fill the space with stories, with memories, with dreams. Sometimes, just the sound of her voice would crack him open all over again.
But he never let her see. He waited until the light at the top of the stairs flicked off, waited for the sound of her footsteps to disappear, before he let himself cry.
Because even then, even through all the betrayal, he still couldn’t let her see him break.
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The days stopped feeling like days. They stretched long and gray, a smear of endless sameness. The sharp edges of his anger softened, worn down not by peace, but by exhaustion. He didn’t fight the shots anymore. The last time he’d tried, he hadn’t even made it halfway across the room before Sophia caught him, arms wrapped around him more like a mother holding her child than a captor restraining her prisoner. She never hurt him. She couldn’t. But her strength always outmatched his, and that made the defeat cut even deeper.
Now, when she came with the syringe, Jackson just looked away. His silence had become his armor, the only piece of himself he could still control. The needle always came, whether he fought or not. He learned it hurt less if he didn’t resist.
Sophia talked to him every day. She told him about the world beyond the basement walls — the news, the changing seasons, the places they used to visit together. Sometimes she brought down little things. A new book. His favorite candy. A scarf in his favorite shade of blue. Small gestures, meant to fill the space between them. Meant to remind him of who she was, even if he could barely recognize her anymore.
The loneliness hit hardest at night, when the quiet pressed in from all sides. That was when the changes whispered to him, soft and unfamiliar. His emotions didn't fit the same way they used to. Anger came and went in waves he couldn’t predict. Small things made his chest tighten, his throat ache. Sometimes for no reason at all, tears welled up behind his eyes, hot and sudden, and he’d bury his face into the pillow, refusing to let himself cry where anyone could hear.
And his body...
Little things. So little he could almost pretend they weren't there. His face stayed smoother longer. The coarse stubble that had always shadowed his jaw grew in patchy, thinner. His chest felt... odd. Not painful, not yet, but sensitive. Brushing his arm too close or lying on his stomach would send a sharp little spark through him that he couldn’t explain. The weight of his own skin felt different. Softer.
It scared him.
And Sophia... she never looked away from the changes. She saw them. She watched them. But she never pointed them out. Instead, her voice grew softer, her touch lighter — careful, like she was trying not to frighten a wounded animal.
Sometimes, when she brought his meals, he found himself murmuring a soft “Thank you.”
And one day, out of nowhere, when she answered his whispered “Hello” with that old, warm, gentle “Hey, Jackie,” it didn’t make him flinch the way it used to. The nickname slid into his ears like an old song he couldn’t quite hate, no matter how much he wanted to.
That night, when the light at the top of the stairs flicked off and he curled beneath the blanket, he found himself running his fingers over his chest, tracing the faintest curve he swore wasn’t there before.
And for the first time in months, the tears that came weren’t all fear.
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He couldn't tell how long it had been, but, the silence wasn’t so sharp anymore. It had dulled into something soft, almost companionable. Jackson still spent most of his time with a book in hand or staring at the ceiling, but when Sophia came down the stairs, he didn’t flinch the way he used to. Sometimes, he even looked at her.
The changes in his body couldn’t be ignored anymore. They crept up slowly, day by day, until one morning he caught the way his chest curved beneath his shirt, the faint swell pressing against the fabric when he shifted. His skin had lost its roughness, growing softer to the touch, and his hair — longer now than it had ever been — slid like silk down his back, brushing against the small of it when he stretched.
The mirror, of course, was a luxury he hadn’t been given. Sophia knew better. But his hands were mirrors enough. The slope of his waist felt different beneath his fingertips. His thighs had filled out, carrying a new softness, a new weight. He hated it. He hated how natural it felt, how some part of him didn’t want to hate it at all.
And his emotions — they were worse than before. The littlest things could send him spiraling. Some days, the sound of Sophia’s voice was enough to make his chest twist and his eyes sting. He didn’t know why. Neither did she. And yet she always stayed, sitting at the edge of the bed, talking about nothing in particular, giving him the space to either answer or ignore her.
And sometimes, he didn’t ignore her. He started asking questions. Small ones, cautious and dry. About the world. About her work. About the weather. About books. About things that didn’t matter.
And sometimes, when the loneliness felt too heavy, he’d slip — and call her “Phia.” The old nickname didn’t taste as bitter on his tongue as it used to.
Sophia never pointed it out. She only smiled, soft and sad, and kept talking like nothing had happened.
The nights were the strangest. When he knew she was asleep upstairs, he let himself explore the body he barely recognized. The quiet glide of his hands over the curve of his chest, the way his skin reacted beneath his touch — it left him breathless, confused, and ashamed. But he did it anyway.
Because for the first time, it felt real. He felt real.
And when the guilt clawed at his throat, the only comfort came from the soft creak of the floorboards upstairs — the reminder that Sophia was still there, even if he didn’t know whether to love her or hate her for it.
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“A whole year,” Sophia said, her voice bright, but her eyes betrayed her. They always did. The guilt lived there like an old tenant, too comfortable to leave.
Jackson sat on the bed, his hands folded in his lap. He looked thinner, smaller, though the softness in his body said otherwise. His hair was long now, hanging over his shoulders in dark waves, brushing the tops of his arms. He didn’t look at her when she set the box down on the bed, but he didn’t flinch away either.
“What’s this?” he asked, voice flat but not hostile.
Sophia shifted from foot to foot, rubbing her wrist nervously. “It’s... a gift. I remember when we were younger, you’d always stop at that little shop, you know the one.” Her words tangled together, long pauses breaking them apart, like she wasn’t sure which ones she had permission to say.
He opened the box slowly, like it might bite him. Inside lay the sundress — soft, light blue, with thin straps and delicate folds — and beneath it, black lace lingerie, neatly folded and paired with thigh-high stockings and a garter belt.
“You don’t have to wear them for me,” Sophia blurted out, hands rising defensively. “I just thought — if you ever wanted to — for you. Only you.”
He didn’t answer. Not at first. His fingers ghosted over the soft fabric, lingering too long before snapping the lid shut. “No,” he murmured, voice low. “I’m not wearing them.”
Sophia nodded, lips pressing into a thin line. “I understand.”
She gave him his shot, like clockwork, and left quietly, without another word.
But later that night, when the house was quiet and the dark pressed in close, Jackson sat on the edge of his bed, the unopened box back in his lap.
His hands trembled when he pulled the dress free. The fabric was softer than he’d imagined, and as he slipped it over his head, something shifted. The hem brushed against his thighs, light and easy, the neckline sitting awkwardly against his unfamiliar chest — but the fit, the feel of it, the weightlessness...
It felt right.
And that was the part that cut deepest.
He stared down at himself, hands fisting the skirt, and the guilt sat heavy in his chest, raw and searing. This wasn’t supposed to feel good. It wasn’t supposed to feel like home. And yet the longer he sat there, the more the weight of the dress comforted him, the more natural it felt against his skin.
Unseen, at the top of the stairs, Sophia sat curled against the banister, watching through the thin slats of wood. Her heart ached with the bittersweet sting of it — the quiet, guilty wonder in his eyes, the way he twirled a lock of hair around his finger like he used to as a kid, the fragile balance between self-loathing and self-acceptance written plain across his face.
She didn’t make a sound, only pulled her knees tighter to her chest, and wiped away the tears that wouldn’t stop falling.
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Time softened the sharpest corners, dulled the sting of memory, and reshaped the space between them into something more like habit than comfort. The basement wasn’t a cage the way it had been at first — but it wasn’t home either. It was... limbo.
The fights had long since faded. The panic, the begging, the tears that once soaked the pillow he tried so hard to hide from her — all distant echoes now, worn thin by the slow, grinding march of routine. The pills came with dinner, and Jackson took them without resistance, swallowing them down like one more spoonful of obligation.
The space between them, the silence, had softened too. Not healed. Just worn smooth like sea glass.
The trust between them had been shattered the night Sophia drugged him. A beautiful, irreplaceable vase, smashed into too many jagged pieces to ever be whole again. She had spent two years gluing it back together, conversation by conversation, meal by meal, tender moment by tender moment. The shape had returned, but the cracks were still there, spiderwebbed veins of old wounds, impossible to ignore.
And the edges still cut them, when they weren't careful.
Some nights, he asked her to braid his hair — the way she used to, when they were young and the world was simple and safe. His voice, small and uncertain, barely reached her ears when he asked. And always, always, Sophia said yes, no matter how much her hands trembled at the soft, familiar weight of his hair in her fingers.
But even those moments couldn’t smooth over the sharp places entirely.
Sometimes he would pull away halfway through, retreating to the bed’s far corner without a word. Other times he wouldn't meet her eyes, the gap between them wide enough to drown in, even when they sat side by side.
And Sophia never pushed. She couldn't.
Instead, she offered small gestures, like pebbles laid in the foundation of the shaky bridge between them.
One evening, she came downstairs with a binder — worn and heavy, packed with notes and pages printed from forums, guides, handwritten reminders, and encouragements. Voice training advice. Exercises. Diagrams. Tips for finding the soft, quiet voice that had always belonged to him, even when the world told him it shouldn’t.
She didn’t say much when she set it on the bed. Just... "In case you wanted to."
Jackson stared at it for a long time, hands folded neatly in his lap. His face unreadable, but his silence told her enough. The binder sat there for days, untouched — until one night, when she came down later than usual and heard the faintest, quietest sound from the darkened room. His voice. Practicing. Awkward, unsteady, but undeniably his.
Sophia sat on the stairs that night, head bowed, listening to the shy, broken notes floating up through the cracks in the door. Her throat ached with all the things she wanted to say, but couldn’t.
The trust between them would never be whole again — but it was something. Enough to cut her, enough to comfort him, enough to survive.
For now.
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The lingerie had always been there, folded neatly at the end of his bed like a question he couldn’t answer. Some nights, it felt like a punishment — a reminder of the new skin he was meant to grow into. Other nights, the fabric called to him, whispering soft, dangerous truths he wasn’t ready to accept.
But it wasn’t the lace or the shame that saved him. It was the wire.
That sharp, cold strip hidden inside the softness, as if the thing had been designed for him all along. He spent nights working the wire against the metal frame of the bed, scraping it down until it was thin, sharp, and pliable. His hands bled for the effort, but he never stopped.
When the lock finally clicked open one silent night, Jackie didn’t cry. He just stared at the collar resting loose in his hands, and then fit it back around his neck, making sure the latch only looked shut.
And then, he waited. He needed one last piece: her trust.
The night of the plan, he played his part perfectly — letting her braid his hair, even asking for it. His voice soft, almost affectionate, as he mumbled, "I... missed when you used to do this, Phia."
Sophia’s hands trembled, pausing mid-braid. That little nickname — it had been so long. She didn’t want to read into it, but her heart ached with hope.
When she finished, Jackie turned, eyes wide and soft, and asked quietly, “Could you.....” a hesitant pause, and a deliberate one "The lingerie, could you help me try it on?"
Her whole body stilled. The words she’d longed to hear — an olive branch she’d imagined, but never thought would come. She nodded, swallowing hard, trying not to let her hope show.
Trembling hands reached for the shelf she knew he kept the lacy items on, she had stared at them hundreds of times, wondering if Jackie ever tried them on. Her attention was split, her gaze was soft, hesitant.
And that’s when he struck.
As she reached over, fingertips ghosting the soft fabric, he gave the collar a hard yank, popping the clasp and with a desperate movement, he shoved the metal collar around her throat.
The sound of the lock clicking shut was louder than any scream.
Jackie scrambled back, shoving himself agaisnt the far wall, out of her reach
Sophia’s breath hitched, but she didn’t fight. She didn’t even move.
She sank to her knees, hands gently curling around the collar’s weight, her head bowed. The silence stretched between them until her voice finally broke through, soft and so unbearably sad.
"...Jackie."
She’d known, deep down, this would happen. She’d always known. But the moment still shattered something inside her.
He stood there, pressing himself against the wall, as far from her as he could get, his chest heaving, tears already burning the corners of his eyes.
And Sophia? She just looked up at him, offering the smallest, almost forgiving smile.
“I always wondered... when you’d stop letting me win.”
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Jackie ran — faster than he thought his legs could carry him, heart clawing at his throat, lungs burning, the cold air upstairs slicing at his skin like it was trying to wake him from a dream.
The front door stood there, just a few feet away. Freedom. A world he’d almost forgotten how to exist in. His hand shot out for the lock — but froze, suspended midair.
Out of the corner of his eye, in the glass of a painting hung by the hallway, something caught him. A flicker. A ghost, maybe. But when he turned, it wasn’t a ghost at all.
It was him.
No — not him.
For the first time in more than two years, the face looking back wasn’t the miserable, hollow-eyed boy he'd carried like a burden his whole life. The sunken cheeks were gone, the harsh angles softened. His eyes, still wide, still scared, held something new behind them. His hair tumbled long and unkempt around his face, framing it the way he never believed it could.
He didn’t look like the person who’d been dragged down those basement stairs.
He didn’t look like Jackson.
His feet moved on their own, away from the door, away from the promise of outside. He stumbled into the bathroom, flicking the light on with trembling fingers, and for the first time in what felt like forever, stared at himself — fully, clearly.
And he didn’t hate what he saw.
The reflection was imperfect, unfinished, awkward in the way all new things are — but it was his. The curve of his face, the softened lines of his jaw, the swell of his chest beneath a shirt that hung too loose in all the wrong places, the way his hair slipped down over his shoulders.
He reached up, fingertips grazing his cheek, his lips, his throat.
It wasn’t the boy who needed to escape anymore.
It was the girl who had never been allowed to exist.
And the thought hit him harder than any locked door or heavy collar ever could:
Who am I, if not Jackson?
For the first time, the question wasn’t terrifying. It felt like a beginning.
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Jackie didn’t go back downstairs.
Not right away.
The bathroom felt like another world, sealed off from the weight of the house — from the weight of her past self. The cold tile pressed through the thin cotton of her pants, the chill soaking into her bones, but she couldn’t bring herself to move.
She sat there, back against the bathtub, knees pulled tight to her chest, eyes fixed on the foggy mirror as if the girl she’d seen there might disappear if she blinked too long.
Her mind was a storm. Guilt and relief clawed at each other inside her chest, raw and tangled. She should’ve run. She was supposed to run. That’s what this had all been about — the planning, the quiet obedience, the pills swallowed without protest, the collar unlocked, the trap laid.
Freedom was only a few feet away. And she couldn’t take it.
Not yet.
She wasn’t the same person who had been dragged down into that basement. That boy — Jackson — he’d been left behind somewhere along the way, his sharp edges worn away by months of silence, the slow drip of change, and the bittersweet comfort of Sophia’s presence.
And now... who was she?
She traced circles against her own wrist, fingers brushing over the soft skin — softer than she remembered, the kind of softness that wasn’t earned through survival, but through something else. Something intentional.
Every inch of her body felt foreign and familiar all at once. She’d grown used to the changes — the slight curve of her chest, the way her waist pinched in, the way her voice sometimes hit softer notes even when she wasn’t trying. But this was the first time she’d seen it. The first time the mirror hadn't lied.
She let her head fall back against the cold porcelain, closing her eyes.
Her chest ached. But not with fear, not anymore. Something else bloomed there now — hesitant, trembling, but undeniably alive.
The world beyond that front door would demand answers. Names. Identities.
And for the first time, Jackie didn’t know what to give them.
She didn’t cry. Not right away. The tears came later, soft and tired, when the weight of it all pressed too hard. When she let herself grieve the boy she was, the boy she was never meant to be.
And when the tears stopped, and the silence settled heavy and warm, she whispered the words to herself, testing their shape like a secret:
I’m still here.
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The house had been silent for hours.
Sophia hadn’t moved from where she knelt on the basement floor, her hands still resting loosely in her lap, her breathing shallow and even. The collar around her neck felt heavier with each passing minute, a weight she wasn’t sure she’d ever wanted to take off. She knew this moment would come — she'd known from the moment her hands first trembled over a syringe, from the moment she'd crossed that line. But knowing and feeling it were two different things entirely.
The sharp click of the basement door latch made her flinch.
Her heart stilled. For the briefest moment, she imagined the heavy tread of boots — police, neighbors, someone who would take her away, finally. But the sound that followed wasn’t the cold stomp of authority.
It was soft.
Gentle footfalls. Careful, hesitant. Light.
She lifted her head.
And there, standing at the foot of the stairs, was Jackie.
But not the boy she’d known. Not the angry, flinching creature who’d once scowled at her from behind a curtain of unkempt hair. The figure that stood before her now held something else in her eyes. Not defiance. Not hatred. Not even fear.
Something unspoken hung in the air between them. A question neither of them had the strength to ask.
Sophia swallowed, her voice barely a whisper, fragile and cracked at the edges.
"...Jackie?"
The name tasted wrong on her tongue. And from the way the girl’s lips pressed into a soft, uncertain line — as if she didn’t quite recognize it either — Sophia understood.
“Sophia.”
The name floated from her lips like it had always belonged there, tender and careful, spoken as though saying it too loud might shatter the fragile thread stretched between them.
Sophia’s breath hitched at the sound, her chest tightening with something heavier than guilt, heavier than relief. It wasn’t the voice of the boy she'd once known — not entirely. It wasn’t the sharp, defiant child who had fought her every step of the way. It was new, unsteady, a little broken around the edges, but undeniably hers.
And for the first time, Sophia didn’t see the person she'd forced, or the person she'd tried to protect — she saw the person who had grown, against all odds, between the cracks.
Jackie stepped forward, slow and uncertain, like every part of her body was learning to move for the first time. One step. Another. The gap between them dissolved with each quiet, cautious motion until she stood in front of Sophia, the woman who had been both captor and comfort, the only home Jackie had ever really known.
Without a word, Jackie lowered herself to her knees, mirroring Sophia’s position on the cold concrete floor.
For a long moment, neither of them moved. The silence wasn’t heavy with fear or anger anymore — only the weight of everything unsaid. Everything they couldn’t put into words.
Jackie’s voice, when it came again, was quiet. Fragile. Barely more than a whisper.
“I don’t know who I am.”
And Sophia, her throat tightening, her voice cracking under the force of all the things she wanted to say but couldn’t, only managed a simple reply.
“…I know.”
The silence between them stretched long and heavy, filled with everything they’d been too afraid to say, everything they hadn’t known how to say. The air was thick with questions neither of them had answers to yet, and neither of them seemed to know where to start. It wasn’t comfortable — but it was real. Raw. True.
Sophia swallowed hard, her heart shattering in a thousand ways, yet she couldn’t help the small laugh that bubbled up from her chest. It was nervous, uncertain, but it came with the kind of ease that only a shared history could provide.
“Well… at least the collar’s not choking you anymore.”
Jackie’s lips trembled, the fight she had carried for so long crumbling with that one off-hand joke. Her eyes welled with tears that threatened to spill, and for a moment, she just stared at Sophia, seeing the woman she had once been and the stranger she was now.
The sound of her quiet laugh — a laugh that wasn’t forced — broke something in both of them. Sophia’s own tears followed, spilling over without warning, a fragile release of the tension that had weighed them down for so long.
Jackie let out a small, choked laugh, almost a sob, and for the first time in forever, she felt it. The lightness. The tiny flicker of freedom. It wasn’t complete. It wasn’t perfect. But it was there.
Sophia’s voice trembled, trying to hold on to the last shred of humor between them. “I guess... I didn’t get the size right, huh?”
And despite everything, despite the years, despite the pain, they both laughed. A soft, quiet sound that was more healing than anything else had been in a long time. Their tears mixed, not in sorrow, but in something that felt like a fresh start — the first step to something neither of them could quite grasp yet.
But they were there, together.
And that, at least, was enough for now.
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The sun streamed in through the open window, warm golden light spilling across the cozy living room. It was quiet, serene. Jackie sat at the desk by the window, the soft click of keys filling the air as she typed, her focus entirely on the code flickering across the screen. It had been years since she’d felt this at peace, and the realization still hit her sometimes, like the calm after a storm.
From the kitchen, the familiar sound of Sophia humming softly, the clink of dishes as she prepared lunch, was a comforting reminder of just how far they had come. The past felt like an eternity, the pain, the struggles, now distant memories that were slowly fading, replaced with something more real, something that felt like home.
"Jackie!" Sophia’s voice drifted in, sweet and teasing, like it always had been. She entered the room, holding a cup of tea in one hand and a small plate of cookies in the other, a soft smile playing on her lips. Her presence still had the same calming effect on Jackie, even after all these years.
Jackie smiled, her fingers pausing on the keyboard as she turned to face her. "What's that?" she asked, the warmth in her voice unmistakable. The years had turned her into someone different, someone stronger, but it was Sophia's touch that always brought her back to who she had been — and who she was becoming.
Sophia sat beside her, placing the plate of cookies on the desk, then handing over the tea. "Just thought you might need a little break. You’ve been at that screen all morning." She stroked Jackie’s hair gently, her fingers lingering as if she could never quite get enough of the simple touch. There was so much tenderness in her actions now, a tenderness that Jackie had come to recognize as a part of her love.
Jackie took the tea, her hand brushing against Sophia’s as their fingers intertwined for a brief moment. There was no tension now, no fear, just the comfortable rhythm of two lives that had found their way back to each other.
"It's perfect," Jackie whispered, her voice thick with gratitude, her smile full of something deeper now. "Thank you, Sophia. You always know exactly what I need."
Sophia laughed softly, brushing a stray lock of hair from Jackie's face. "You deserve it. All of it. Every bit of it."
Jackie’s heart skipped at the softness in Sophia’s voice. There was a time when she would’ve fought against the comfort, against the love. But now? Now, it felt like the only thing that truly mattered.
As they sat there, together, the weight of their past no longer felt like a burden but a testament to their survival. The collar was gone, the pain had faded, and now they could focus on the future they were building together.
And that future, as they both knew now, wasn’t just about surviving anymore. It was about living. Truly living.
---
A few months earlier, things had been different. A sunny day on a hill, the warm breeze fluttering their hair as they sat on a blanket, surrounded by the vast expanse of sky and grass. They’d had a picnic, their laughter filling the air, untainted by the past. It was then that Sophia had reached into her bag, pulling out a small box, her eyes full of love, full of vulnerability.
"Sophia..." Jackie had whispered, her breath catching in her throat. "What... what are you doing?"
And then, with a soft smile, Sophia had taken her hand, the box in her palm. "Will you marry me, Jackie?"
It had taken Jackie a moment to process the question, to feel the weight of it. To realize that, yes, after everything, after all they’d been through — she wanted this. She wanted Sophia. She wanted a future with her.
The answer had come easy, tears welling in her eyes as she whispered, "Yes."
And that yes had changed everything.
---
Now, here they were, living together, building something new. Jackie, once locked in a basement, now working from home, her skills in software giving her the freedom she’d always dreamed of. The work was hard, challenging, but it was hers. It was something she could control, something that had been built through years of struggle and survival. And with Sophia by her side, it felt like everything was possible.
"I love you," Jackie whispered as she took Sophia’s hand again, her thumb brushing the back of her palm.
Sophia’s eyes softened, and she leaned in to kiss the top of Jackie’s head, the gesture so simple, yet so intimate. "I love you, too," she replied, and for a moment, there was nothing more important than that.
Their lives, though far from perfect, were finally their own — and that was enough.
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azzg · 6 days ago
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🕳️ “The Town That Forgot to Breathe”
A Hidden Design in Transformers: EarthSpark
Witwicky, Pennsylvania. A town that feels like a backdrop. A place suspended in unreality — half-abandoned, half-controlled.
It’s where the Terrans were born, and where the world quietly vanishes.
🧍‍♂️👧 Why Are Mo and Robbie in the Same Class?
Robbie is older. Mo is younger. Yet they’re always together — in the same grade, same classroom, same assignments.
Why?
Is the school so small that it combines grades?
Did Mo accelerate?
Or was Robbie held back — not academically, but emotionally?
There’s a quiet implication that Robbie’s development might have stalled. Perhaps after trauma. Perhaps due to their family's chaotic lifestyle.
But there’s another detail even stranger.
👦 Robbie had friends.
He says it clearly in episode 1:
“I had friends… back in old town.”
But Mo never says this. Never mentions a friend. Never mourns a peer.
Which raises the question: Has she ever had any? Was she always emotionally bonded only to her family and Terrans?
If Mo’s entire social development has been within a bubble of siblings and artificial lifeforms created to adore her — can we even say she has real social skills? Or only command?
🤖 The Terrans' Harmony Is Suppression
We’re told the Terrans are “in harmony.” But that harmony is programmed — not chosen.
They didn’t choose their emotional bonds.
They didn’t choose their bodies.
They didn’t choose their isolation.
Their bond is encoded dependence. Their world is selective exposure. Their peace is silence, not resolution.
This is not balance. It’s a suppression of the organic — of chaos, of choice, of dissonance.
Even their feelings are tightly looped around the Maltos, unable to truly stretch outward.
🏚️ The Empty Town — and No One Questions It
Why do the Terrans — curious, intelligent beings — never ask:
“Why don’t we see other people?” “Why is this town so small?” “Where is the world?”
Because they were never taught to look. Never encouraged to explore beyond the illusion.
They live in a psychological vacuum, where everything they feel is mirrored back at them from the same small circle.
A few children. A hidden base. A dying town. And that is all they are allowed to see.
🕷️ Social Control by Disconnection
Terrans were born in captivity. Raised in emotional dependency. Cut off from both Earth and Cybertron.
They do not know themselves. They do not know the world.
And no one around them seems to notice — because in EarthSpark, silence is rebranded as harmony.
But silence is not peace. And harmony, when forced, is just emotional flattening.
Disclaimer: This post was written with the help of ChatGPT.
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alilali · 4 months ago
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I saw the new Devil May Cry animated series and, as a fan since the first game, I liked it a lot. Maybe some could say I shouldn't if I were a real fan, but I've read many AUs and fanworks, and one more OOC character can't hurt me now.
But there's a thing I can't stand, and I hated it so much, and that's Lady's background. I feel making a person with PTSD, depression, and who knows what more, become crazy and kill someone, is the cheapest excuse for a character background.
OG Arkham was a intelligent manipulative man who knew what he was doing since the begining: he looks for Vergil, he kills Lady's mother so she wants to get revenge and follows him, and he gets Dante on the tower after tellin him Vergil is there. And then pissed them off so they fight, get tired and a bloody mess so the only thing he has to do is collect blood and get what he wanted, because his only power is transform into a jester and walk on wall. And that's what makes Mary refuse the name her father gaves her.
I see people changing their names a a very powerful way of telling they don't like they parents or showing they are different people, and Lady doing it is what makes Lady Lady, as Dante saving people because is the right thing to do is what makes Dante Dante, that's their core. Dante has that in the animation, but Lady don't. I don't mind if he joined the army, damn, she is a teenager, they brainwashed her, I can believe that, but Lady not rejecting her name is a big NO.
So, to sum up, stop using people with psycological problems as enemies o killers, and do Lady some justice if there's a second season.
BTW, Vergil appearance made me feel weird, as I'm not sure if their are going to know how to use him, so much anger and trauma...
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annabelle-creart · 5 months ago
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Boulder the Dino-bot shenanigans. Part 8
---
Boulder and Heatwave were recharging on the floor as usual, Boulder transformed on its dino form while Heatwave was in bot mod, as if Boulder was a pillow, they had been sleeping like this since Boulder asked so, it was way more comfy, and it felt like home... but sometimes is not enough
-
Boulder: hmmm... Dent get out
Heatwave: AUCH! Ah-
Boulder kicked Heatwave, by pure accident, both were recharging, the weird thing was that Boulder was talking while recharging, Heatwave didn't paid attention and just reclined again on Boulder to recharge
Boulder: Dent... come here
Now that was weird, the same name two times, and Boulder's vents started to work faster
Was Boulder having a nightmare?
Heatwave: Boulder? *he shaked Boulder's nose horn a bit to wake Boulder up* are you okay-
Boulder: AHG!
Heatwave: hey! Is just me... is everything okay?
Boulder: sorry
Heatwave: don't be
Boulder: Did Boulder wake you up?
Heatwave: don't worry about that... can I ask something?
Boulder: what?
Heatwave: what were you meaning with Dent?
Boulder: ...
Boulder: Heatwave, promise nobody will know about this
Heatwave: why?
Boulder: is a secret, just... promise it
Heatwave: you have a lot of secrets, eh, big guy?
Boulder: Boulder already knows that
Boulder reclined entirely on the floor and hugged Heatwave with its tail
Boulder: Dent was a friend
Heatwave: Like Crimson?
Boulder: yes. But Dent was dumb. We told Dent not to get on that room but didn't cared, Dent believed it would made it look like if Dent was brave but there was something else on that room and none of the group could break the glass on time...
Heatwave: what happened?
Boulder stayed in silence for a moment, it felt like if it was yesterday
Boulder: something killed Dent on that room just because Dent was there. No one had the right to enter that room but that day we understood why
Heatwave: you were remembering that day
Boulder: once, Crimson heard that the processor made us remember moments when we recharge so we don't forget what we have learnt, but Boulder still haven't learned anything from it, and yet is what Boulder remembers the most
Heatwave: ...maybe this time it wasn't to remember something you learned, but to remember your friend
Boulder pressed itself against Heatwave and he surrounded Boulder with one arm like a half-hug, seeking comfort
Heatwave: I'm sorry
---
Heatwave: watcha' doing?
Boulder: Hi! Graham gave Boulder new paints
Heatwave: I thought you ended them up all
Boulder: in past, now Boulder has new ones
Heatwave: pfft
Boulder: What?
Heatwave: you really like to use your fingers more than brushes
Boulder: brushes are useful to make or imitate certain textures but fingers are easier to use for simple things
Heatwave: I see... why all those bots green? Not to judge
Boulder: ...Boulder knows no one on the batch will see this but yet... they would like to be remembered. Boulder knows they all would have liked Earth, except Mirror, Mirror didn't liked anything
Heatwave: pfft hehehe, if they're all like you, yes, I'm sure too. But, what a coincidence they're all green
Boulder: not sure, but some bots of other batches had different colors, maybe it was to difference from which batch was each bot, but most of them were jerks
Heatwave: It was that bad?
Boulder: the bots of the blue batch were boring, and the ones of the yellow batch were mean, but the worst ones were from the orange batch, there was no way to talk with that batch without wanting to punch them
Heatwave: they sound kind aggresive
Heatwave: ah... never heard of it, I think
Boulder: they were...
Boulder: wait a sec- how much Heatwave knows about color theory?
Boulder: Color psycology?
Heatwave: ah... no
Boulder: now that Boulder notices, blue is a calm color, kind of sad, while orange is near red, almost aggresive
Heatwave: and that means...
Boulder: the batches were separated through aggresiveness levels, not through colors
Heatwave: and... sorry, I got lost, is that important?
Boulder: ...
Heatwave: is something wrong? You seem sad
Boulder: it... it isn't important anymore
Boulder: it isn't finished yet
Heatwave: I see...
Heatwave: it looks good this far
Heatwave: I can't wait to see the result
Maybe Boulder didn't liked what Boulder just figured, but Heatwave's kind smile was a good little hope
---
Frankie: and then the x moves here... are you paying attention?
Cody: sorry, it's just, equations are kind of boring, and the bots are having so much fun outside
Frankie: yeah, but it's still homework, how will we finish it if we don't do it?
Boulder: Boulder can do it
Cody: really?
Frankie: no! Boulder, thanks for helping, but doing Cody's homework is not the solution
Cody: awmmm
Boulder: why don't you try making it backwards?
Cody: ...hey, you're right!
Frankie: finally! But talking about the bots, what are they playing?
Cody: they're playing cube
Frankie: what's that?
Cody: is like football with basketball, Chase said is something rescue bots used to play a lot
Frankie: I see, Boulder, how does it work?
Boulder: sorry? Ah, Boulder doesn't know how it does
Frankie: but, you're a rescue bot
Boulder: yes...
Frankie: ok...
---
Heatwave: Boulder?
Heatwave shaked Boulder's horn a bit to wake it up. It was late in the night
Boulder: wha- something's wrong?
Heatwave: I'm asking the same, are you okay? You're crying
Boulder: Boulder's not- just confused
Heatwave: ...wrong question
Boulder: hm?
Heatwave: usually, nobody replies honestly to "are you okay" so, I'm changing the question. What do you feel?
Boulder: Boulder's fine
Heatwave: that's not what I asked
Boulder remained silent, still in dino-bot mode
Heatwave: do you want a hug? Or something?
It was obvious, Boulder was sad, and yes it wanted one. Boulder put its head on Heatwave's lap as he surrounded him like hugging a puppy... a big one
Boulder: promise you will not tell anyone, please?
Heatwave: I promise...
Boulder: this time was about Crimson
Heatwave: the owl?
Boulder: my friend back at the batch. Crimson was taken for investigation... but when Crimson came back it wasn't the same, and then died time later
Boulder's optics flooded as its voice box started to crash, Heatwave couldn't do much except hugging Boulder more, even if its antlers didn't let him do much
Boulder: none of we did anything to save Crimson, we should!
Heatwave: I know I wasn't there but Boulder, I don't think there was actually something you could have done... I'm sorry
Boulder: But we could... Crimson wasn't alright and we knew that!
Heatwave: oh, Boulder...
It was indeed true, Boulder couldn't do much, but it still drove Boulder mad each time to think about it, Boulder couldn't hate that feeling more
Boulder wanted to save Crimson but didn't, and yet Boulder was supposed to be a rescue bot, but who could Boulder fool? Boulder was a soldier, an experiment, not a savior...
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minijenn · 10 months ago
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Story Summary: After spending five years stuck in the World of the Ocean King, Link returns to the Great Sea, only to find it changed beyond recognition. His friends and family view him as a traitor, accusing him of causing chaos across the ocean. With his allies all turned against him and a curse threatening to take his life, he sets out to reconnect with the one person who may be able to clear his name: Tetra.
Meanwhile, something sinister is rising over the Great Sea--a shadow seeking to spill the hero's blood and revive its fallen master. And this time, Link may not be strong enough to stop it on his own.
Ships: Link/Tetra
Rating: T
Warnings: Angst, Trauma, Violence, Blood and Injury, Torture, Harm to Children, Psycological Trauma
Chapter Summary: A curse is levied against a hero for crimes he knows he didn't commit. When Link had been stolen away by the ghost ship five years ago, little else had been stolen along with him. His gear had been stored below the deck of Tetra’s ship, his sword long since buried at the bottom of the sea. The only things he arrived in World of the Ocean King with were the clothes on his back, the borrowed scarf tied around his neck, and something that rarely ever left his side. Something truly special for so many reasons, from the kingdom it had come from to the power it possessed. But for Link, what mattered most was who had given it to him.  What mattered most was that the Wind Waker was the only gift he still had from the King.  So he’d hung onto it, even after their journey together had ended. Tetra and her crew had come to rely on its ability to shift the winds in their favor and Link was more than happy to use it to do exactly that. The relic had fallen out of use when he began sailing with Linebeck, whose steam-powered ship all but defied the winds most other boats were subordinate to. Link hadn’t been sure the Wind Waker would even work in the World of the Ocean King; he’d never bothered to give it a try.  But now, he’s back upon the surface of the Great Sea, still a short distance away from Outset. He doesn’t dare look back over his shoulder at the still-looming shadow of his island home, a home that hadn’t welcomed him in any of the ways he once hoped it would. Aryll’s bitter words and frigid glares still sear his mind and sting his heart as he struggles to make sense of them. He tries his best not to think about it as he pulls the Wind Waker out of his pocket. 
Click the link to read more; all comments are appreciated!
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marswasnothere · 20 days ago
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https://www.tumblr.com/marswasnothere/787771865949159424/had-a-crazy-long-dream-where-i-kind-of-fucked-a?source=share
As someone who gets tons of crazy ass dreams, I'd love to hear what happened in yours! Scientific curiosity ofc 🤭 — 🦋
Ask link
Been playing a lot of Raft so the whole dream centered around an island. I know I should have answered this sooner bc I'm forgetting the beginning of it, though it involved a lot of being chased by something and running around the island, transforming into weird shapes as all dream locations do.
THEN comes the whale fucking. I get assigned a task from somewhere in my brain, perhaps on a radio, to just lie on a hill on my front and wait for the whale creature, gaining legs as it goes on land, to walk up and mount me. I don't think it gets to the mounting because I end up riding it, not in that way, but riding it as a horse back into the ocean.
Then we swim underwater through the ocean and come across a sunken skyscraper with a door for me to swim into, which I do along with the whale that has somehow shrunk. In the room I hear banging noises from above as I'm about to climb up a a ladder and SOMEHOW I instinctively know it's a gorilla.
And then I woke up.
If you can discern anything from that please do, maybe there's a psycology in the perspective you view dreams from, like is it through your own eyes, is it a fixed birdeyes view watching yourself from above, is it like a TV show with angles and all watching yourself.
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eijaksa · 2 years ago
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honestly the thing I'm the most afraid of on s2 is that those physical and... was it psycological? transformations Izzy goes through includes making him not a dick anymore 🙄 everything else is believable character growth but if he stops being an angry wet weasel of a man that's where I draw the line tbh 🙄
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curious-menace · 4 years ago
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I'm new to this Anon question? thing but can we see what movie night looks like for each of the Riddlers?
Welcome nonnie! glad to have you! lets see if i can actually do this one in one take lol
Arkham riddler
usually doesn't have time for movie nights. he likes to stick movies on in the background while he works, for company. if its particularly interesting he sometimes gets more engrossed in that than his work, gets frustrated and turns it off so he can work in peace. he likes animated movies, like how to train your dragon and wreck-it ralph. one of his goons found him openly weeping at the ending of charlotte's web. 
blacklight riddler
he  and shep have regular movie nights. they usually have some silly contest to decide who picks , like rock paper scissors or thumb wars...and then they just pick whatever comes on tv first. they’ve got a preference for sci-fi stuff like fifth element and alita: battle angel but ed will watch pretty much anything that isn't crime or thriller. he always guesses the twists and its too much like his day job to be fun.
btas riddler
he likes to go to the theater for a proper viewing. he goes regularly when he wants to switch off for a while. he can usually be found in those tiny indie cinemas with 3 rows of seats showing arthouse films. always buys popcorn and snacks and always talks during the movie to the person beside him. he probably sneaks into sundance every year.
original riddler
always gets super excited for movie night, not matter who its with. he sets his living room up like a cinema, all the lights off with snacks and a borrowed sound system. he likes action movies like die hard, transformers and john wick. if its got explosions that can be felt with a subwoofer he’d love it.
telltale riddler
he actually likes monster movies. they dont have to be horror either; godzilla , pacific rim and the babadook spring to mind as some of his favorites. of course, he took a film class once and likes to analyse other kinds of movies. but for actually enjoying what he’s watching he just wants to see some spooky or scaly big boys.
zero year riddler
this one actually has a proper home cinema system. surround sound, wide screen with curtains over it, cinema seats in his basement etc. he’s a bit of a film snob with an entire wall of movies, with dvds and super 8s and any other kind of film you can imagine. he probably has the original reels of some of the classics down there too. he prefers black and white movies, everything pre 1950s but for modern things he prefers horror movies. lake mungo the poughkeepsie tapes and the house that jack build are his favorites so far.  he likes to dissect the psycology of them, much to the ire of whoever is watching with him. 
cheers for the ask nonnie! i actually don't watch movies much myself but i really wish i had the attention span for it. i always have to be doing more than one thing or i lose interest and its hard for me to concentrate on just a movie for 90 minutes or more. i do like watching the same thing over and over again if im feeling anxious. its quite soothing , highly recommend. 
got something you wanna talk about? send me an ask or a dm! im always game to talk about our favorite curious menace💚💜
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abandoned-as-mustard · 5 years ago
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there's this really perturbing thing about how edward perceive himself as old, not a 17 years teen for the years he have 'lived'. But from the moment he die and was transformed, he's and always will be 17, physically and psycologically. Inmortal kids weren't able to evolve because they were frozen at the moment they were transformed, the same to Edward. So having adults thinking of him in a sexual way is so so wrong and it's so fucked he has to block those fantasies
yeah!! totally agree!! imagine 80 years of that.... enough to drive anyone insane 
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evening-rose-309 · 5 years ago
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Nachtkrapp
(Final Chapter Update)
Rating: Mature
Pairing(s): Gellert Grindelwald/Newt Scamander, Past Albus Dumbeldore/Gellert Grindelwald
Archive Warning: Graphic Depictions of Violence
Warning(s): Blood and Gore, Blood and Torture, Mentions Of Torture, Mentions of Psycological Torture, Mental Anguish, Mentions of Characters Pulling Out The Hearts Of Other Characters, Dead Dove: Do Not Eat, Mentions Of Characters Smashing Other Characters Heads Against Iron Bars, Mentally Unstable Character, Child Neglect, Implied/Referenced Child Abuse
Summary:
Bleeding on the floor of a cell, Newt says something he shouldn't have.
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chidoroki · 6 years ago
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TPN ch162
After all this time, Isabella is... alive?
This may be just me, but I always assumed that she had been killed.. especially due to some of the moments we’ve seen up until this moment in the manga.
From the moment the kids escaped and we see her facing grandma, I believed she met her end right then and there, similar to sister Krone. Krone was getting in the way and no longer needed. Isabella made a huge mistake, so I thought they got rid of her just as quickly.
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Later on we learn from Phil that he hasn’t seen Isabella since the night of the escape either. He and the rest of the children were moved to another house where they were now being taken care of by a new mother. (which is understandable since the old house burned down)
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The next moment comes from Emma’s.. hallucinations? dream? thoughts? (whatever you what to call those, when she was stabbed by Lewis). she saw Lucas and Yuugo’s friends along with Krone, who are all dead. Norman was also seen, who she presumed was dead at the time. She also saw Isabella as well, but I couldnt chalk it up as a true fact that she too was killed because we also see Emma thinking about her family that she escaped with and Phil, all of whom are very much alive. This scene put me on the fence a bit, but in the back of my mind I still had that assumption.
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The big nail in the coffin for me was Ray’s experience when he and Emma were sent back to Grace Field House, curtesy of the demon god and the 7 Walls. While there, he meets Isabella, but not just her. He also encounters Conny, Hao and Cedi, all children we know for a fact are dead. Many other kids appear too, so it’s likely to assume they met the same fate and were also shipped out and killed. Since Isabella appears in this setting, it was a big red flag for me saying, yeah, she has to be dead. (of course this could’ve been just to mess with Ray psycologically by showing him all the kids he couldn’t save alone with his own mother)
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The idea only faltered a little bit when the full score trio encounters the demon queen. Said queen has eaten so many lives. We see Krone again along with Michelle and Olivia (who were from Grace Field back when the trio was much younger), even some demons too. She’s eaten all of them to make herself stronger.
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For a brief moment, I thought the queen was going to transform into Isabella. It would make sense right? She was a very smart woman who become a mother and controlled one of the very best farms. Such a human would be perfect for the queen. Queen even started to look like how all the mothers dressed.
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Well, long story short, queen didn’t transform into Isabella. Of course that could’ve meant she was still alive and well, but my mind told me nah, maybe they wont do such a thing. This series is full of surprises. I’m sure theyll do something else.
And boy.. what a surprise it was because I am completely wrong! There she is! Wow.. (what was that saying when it comes to anime? if we don’t see a death happen on screen/panel then it’s not true?)
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I was honestly fine with the idea of Isabella being killed all those chapters ago because it just made sense to me. She grew up in that harsh life, just as our heroes did, and she managed to survive her own way. She was outplayed by the very kids she raised, including her own son, and realized that there can still be some sort of hope in this world. She then admitted defeat and helped the kids with their escape for god’s sake! If she hadn’t pulled back the ropes leading off of the wall, then I’m sure the demons would’ve found the escapees so much sooner than they did in the forest.
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And despite her lending a last minute helping hand to the kids she wishes she could’ve loved normally, you’re gonna tell me she’s suddenly all against them again? AH! WHY? Did they brainwash her? Did grandma still deem Isabella worthy of living so that they could use her? Speaking about grandma, what happen to her now that Isabella is sudden a grandma? like.. HELLO??
Oh my heart hurts. After learning about Isabella’s past with Leslie and Ray, I really came to like her. I don’t want my opinion of her to change based on whatever she has planned for the kids now, especially since she has the “grandma” title now and possibly that much more power but.. aahh I honestly hope she goes against the demons in the end and helps the kids again.
also Ray.. oh god what’s he gonna think? How will he react to seeing her? The real her?? OH NO
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0sawsage0 · 6 years ago
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Character research project
Characters:
  Tetsuo Shima - Akira, TMS Entertainment
I recently watched Akira for the first time and what caught my attention was the fact that it was set in 2019. The animation adaptation of the comics came out in 1988 and it is regarded in the industry as one of the best animated movies of all time, specially of it’s time. Tetsuo lives in Neo-Tokyo and accidentally aquires psychic abilities which are taking control over his body and cause him imense pain. 
What caught my attention to this movie was mainly the post-apocalyptic cyberpunk genre and the beautiful animation in general. I interested to know more about what inspired the team who made the movie and why the story differs so much from the comics. The psycological environment through out the movies gripped me to the screen and I aspire to create such a complex movie myself including the characters, they are not superficial and have their own motifs to do the lings in their own way, all of these aspects really inspired me to write about the deuteragonist (secondary main character) who is a victim of his own power.
San - Princess mononoke, Studio Ghibli
San is a “princess of the forest”, she was brought up by the wolf godess Moro and lives in her pack as her daughter. Mononoke is the japanese work for spirit or monster wich reflects her personality and lifestyle since she was brought up by the forest spirits and learned to live in harmony with them. Several events led some greedy humans to invade the forest and want to destroy it to build iron factories and mines. San grew to hate humans despite being human herself, and tries to stop them with all she has.
What I love about San is her fierse personality, she acts on instinct and her senses are extraordinarily refined which are key aspects to her character and how she uses them to her advantage. Her hate for humans and love for the forest are what stand out the most but along the way she learns that not all humans are the same and some are willing to help her in her quest to save the forest. She slowly opens up to Ashitaka, the prince of a village that had to leave to find a cure to the curse bestowed upon him when he unknowinglly killed one of the forest Gods. He is the one that teaches San about the human world and that not everyone is evil.
I love the transformation San goes through from a fierse wolf girl to a fierse woman and how she keeps her values on top of everything else despite going through that change and choosing to live as a wolf in the end of it all. I am trully amazed by the animation as well, the way Studio Ghibli decided to use the colours and the music to convey what the characters were feeling and how the exagerated expressions of rage and anger translate to a beautiful and passionate animation.
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minijenn · 1 year ago
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Story Summary: After spending five years stuck in the World of the Ocean King, Link returns to the Great Sea, only to find it changed beyond recognition. His friends and family view him as a traitor, accusing him of causing chaos across the ocean. With his allies all turned against him and a curse threatening to take his life, he sets out to reconnect with the one person who may be able to clear his name: Tetra.
Meanwhile, something sinister is rising over the Great Sea--a shadow seeking to spill the hero's blood and revive its fallen master. And this time, Link may not be strong enough to stop it on his own.
Ships: Link/Tetra
Rating: T
Warnings: Angst, Trauma, Violence, Blood and Injury, Torture, Harm to Children, Psycological Trauma
Chapter Summary: A lost hero finally finds his way home... but at what cost? Two Years Later “This is a pointless waste of time,” Linebeck scowls. He spits a mouthful of tobacco juice over the side of the S.S. Linebeck , into the ocean. Across the deck, Ciela cringes; how the captain recently developed such an affinity for such a foul habit, she has no idea. But she doesn’t intend to scold him about it, not unless he manages to inspire Link to pick it up too. “Always is, every time we do this.” “If it’s important to Link, then it isn’t a waste,” Ciela flies a bit closer. Even from a distance, she can smell the tobacco on the captain’s breath. Still, she holds her tongue. At least about that. “Who knows? Maybe Astrid will actually have some new information for him this time!” “Yeah, and maybe I’ll search my pockets and find a million rupees!” Linebeck snarks. He puts on a show of doing exactly that, pulling out his blatantly empty pockets to further prove his point. He rolls his eyes when he hears Ciela let out an aggravated growl. “Look, I’m just saying,” he leans against the side of the boat, crosses his arms. “I don’t know why the kid insists on putting himself through this every few months. He gets his hopes sky high just for that clueless fortune teller to feed him the same bunch of nothing over and over again.  “You don’t know that!” Ciela argues. “It could be different this time! You never know.”
Click the link to read more; all comments are appreciated!
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voiceofkingdomchildren · 4 years ago
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Male 48 Sweden 🇸🇪 - Sex, Drugs, Criminal background, but God came!.. Full Story: Chaos was written in my DNA. I was born in a broken home. My mother was a hippie who lived a borderless life with sex, drugs & rock ’n’ roll. My father was a violent man. My childhood was a loud yell after love and affirmation.
I discovered violence, drugs and criminality. My life is a painful and touching story that goes deep into the darkness and hopelessness. Painfully deep.
After a fiew years in the heavy criminal world the strong feelings of getting high I once felt had started to fade out. Besides this I came to realize that I was addicted. I was stuck in the drugs and criminality. My mind was kidnapped. My heart caught in chains. My conscience was numb. I felt that I was like a king. Now I realized I was nothing but a slave.
The chaos escalated. The violence got worse. The drugs heavier. The anxiety got darker. Psycologically sicker. All of the bridges were burnt. I had drugged myself down to the bottom of society. I was homeless and hopeless.
One day I prayed a simple prayer at my temporary room at a prison. ”God... come!” Like the speed of lightning on a dark night sky there came a strong light. I was encountered by God in a tangible way and this changed everything.
I was taken on a journey away from the drugs, the misery and hopelessness to a completely new life. A new daily life that includes nothing but the love, peace and acceptance I always searched for. On the inside I was burning with a desire to give what I had experienced to others. A longing that has taken me out to the streets. What happens is just miraculous. Miracles happen and people’s lives are transformed from city to city and in nation to nation.
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freaksneedfriendstoo · 7 years ago
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My name is Julie and I have a very real and moving Testimony I would like to share with you. Please share this with anyone struggling with mental health, abuse or addiction so that they can know Gods power.
I was born in Toronto in 1983 and taken by CAS at 3 months old. The details surrounding this are sketchy for me but basically my mother got arrested and she got my aunt to watch me who then gave me to a lady she met on the street. I had a very bad cough and the lady took me to the hospital who called CAS because apparently I had bruises. I spent 10 months in foster care and was then adopted. I had psycological problems from the start and would destroy and rip everything apart. I think its because I never had normal bonding or was traumatised. I spent my youth very bullied and I would usually just walk around by myself all recess watching the other kids play. I liked to be alone and at 11 I was taken to a psychiatrist because I became so reclusive and stopped wanting to even eat. I would just listen to my micheal jackson tapes over and over on my walkman with my face buried in the couch.
I started cutting myself at 14 and smoking weed and cigarettes. I got sent to a psychiatric ward the summer after grade 9 and would never live with my adoptive parents again. I got passed through such facilities as Youthdale, Whitby psyc, Thistletown in Etobicoke and Crossroads run by Kinark. In the hospitals I was frequently left alone in restraints tying me to a bed and given so many drugs my personality was gone. My adoptive parents didnt even know me anymore when they visited.
At Whitby I was diagnosed with borderline personality disorder by a team of psychiatrists. I frequently would run away from the group home crossroads and once in a fit of rage I climbed the fire escape and threw myself off the roof. An ambulance arrived and put me on a board. I had hairline fractured my lower back.
Shortly after this I ran away from there for good and met up with a 25 year old man named Andrew. I was 16 at the time He was homeless and I stuck to him like glue as he showed me how to live on the street. He had a terrible temper and would beat me especially when he was drunk. I spent 11 months with him living on the street in abandonded houses, under a bridge and for a short time in an apartment in Bradford they we got through a worker. The police would get called to the apartment because people would hear me screaming from him hitting me. I was abusing cocaine and would use anything I could to get high.
After we left there we stayed on the street again and one night around 2am Andrew was drunk and he was literally beating me to death. He was sitting on me and just going at it. He put his hand in my mouth and tried to break my jaw. When I looked in his eyes it was like he didnt even know me anymore. The thought came into my mind to yell at him and desperate I started yelling at him to get away from me. To my astonishment he actually walked away from me yelling at me. I got up and ran pausing for moment to gaze a my reflection in a store window. My face was all swollen and bruised. I ran behind a mall and found a man making deliveries who called mall security who called the police.
I got placed in a group home in Newmarket called Heritage Lodge. I met a 26 year old drug dealer named Doug and started dating him. He got me into using needles shooting cocaine and oxycitin. I would abuse any pills to get high such as Gravol. He would also hit me and I got kicked in the head by him 2 times in a row with shoes on so hard I blacked out for a moment. He got arrested for this and then I went back to him about 6 months later. I had no feelings of self worth or real love.
When I was 18, I took an overdose of pills and went to the hospital and told them I was suicidal. They put me in a small room to wait and see someone. The room had a framed picture on the wall and sadly I broke the glass in the frame and I slit my wrists so badly up and down my forearm that my arm is disfigured by scars for the rest of my life. 4 thick, ropey scars.
At 19 I got pregnant by Doug and went with the baby to a womans shelter when the baby was around 3 months old. We went to Rosalie Hall in Scarborough and Sandgate womans shelter. I recieved emergency housing and was given a one bedroom apartment in a co-op. So now it was just me and my baby. My adoptive parents lent me a small black and white tv and a sleeping bag and I would camp out on the floor snuggling my baby until I got furniture.
After about a year I felt this urgency to find out the truth in life. I went to a used book store called Random Books to see what I could find. I found a book called There’s A New World Coming. The title sparked my interest so I bought it. I took it home and read it right through. It was all about Bible prophecy. At the end of the book was a prayer to recieve Jesus as your Saviour. I recognized that I was a terrible sinner and jumped at the chance to have a Saviour. I prayed for Jesus to be my Saviour and to forgive my sins. I confessed my faith in Him.
Then I tell you the truth I felt God’s indescribable, powerful love washing over me like gentle ocean waves. I spent like a week crying and praying. Confessing my sins. You see having borderline disorder the only thing I had ever felt was desperation. Desperation to be loved but I had no idea what love was nor could I express it. I had felt rage, I had felt pain like there was a giant hole in my chest.
In that moment God filled that hole with His love and peace. He gave me His Holy Spirit and great faith. He forgave me for all my wretched sins because of His great mercy. I have never been the same.
I began distributing Bible tracts and going to church. I got baptised on June 12 2005 and my baptism certificate sits by my bed. Instead of self destruction and self hatred I can by the power of the Holy Spirit feel love and compassion for others. I will help anyone and am moved to express love for others in whatever way I can.
God has filled me with His great compassion for the homeless as I know what it is like to sit panhandling. This new creation He has made in me prepares packages with Bible tracts and gift cards and treats and now I go seek out the broken and the lost on the streets of Toronto every two months.
This Christmas the Holy Spirit moved me to prepare gifts for the homeless and I set out Christmas morning with a hockey bag filled with wrapped packages of pot of gold chocolates, gift cards, handmade cards filled with Scriptures about hope and belonging. ‘No Greater Love Then Jesus’ is what the covers read. God uses me to bring His love to them. God’s love and compassion are the most beautiful things I have ever felt and He fills my heart in an indescribable way. This is just one example of what God has done in my life.
So when people dont believe in God I can tell them without a doubt that God is real. He has done a miracle in me. Everything in the Bible is true. God is good. He is pure in everyway. He is light and He sent His Son Jesus to destroy the works of the devil. The devil devours kids like I was but the Lord rescues them. He saves them.
My name is Julie and I am a living testimony that God is mighty to save and with His Spirit, He can transform even the most broken, hopeless person. Its all about having faith in Jesus and surrendering to His Spirit. Chris Tomlin music has helped me greatly with this as it is so soothing to my soul.
The fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, gentless, faithfulness and self control. I really rely on God’s Holy Spirit as apart from Him I cant feel love, peace, compassion or joy. It’s not things I can or have produced on my own. The works of the flesh (me without Jesus) were all destructive and led to death. Here is my poem called broken that I wrote 12 years ago during the first week I was saved. It poured from me like water.
BROKEN I look at my wrists, I see the scars I search my soul, I know my shame I’ve been led by the blind and beaten down by sin I should have died, but You wouldn’t let them win I see Your hands, the holes in Your palms I know your glory has overcome all pain I turn to You Lord, in my broken suffering A love unimaginable, how can this be In all my wretchedness, You reached out to save me A soul so pure, my hero, Your truth The word of God that whispered to my heart and set me free As I tripped over trials, in this deathly darkness I looked for the way Your light opened my soul and my eyes lit up with hope You showed me a path that I can now take Thanks to Your selfless sacrifice This girl will never fade away I toddle like a baby, into Your strong hands I am Yours, You have made me new again Paralized with tears, my repentance shakes my being Then You kiss my tears away and I am no longer unclean Thank you Father, my cross I’ll bear 'Till the day I go home, when You shout from the sky All Your children will run to You with a happy cry And there I’ll be, tucked safely under Your wing As we fly away, this life will have seemed like a dream I will never forget how You gave Yourself for me I love you Lord Jesus
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kiwikamenrider · 5 years ago
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Thoughts on Kamen Rider: Kabuto Episode 4
The episode starts with Tendou in his base form (dont remember if that is the Masked Rider form or not) fighting a Worm. This one has the capability to fly, so it escaped fairly easily.
We then see somebody running, with brief shots of a baseball in a fire? That will possibly be important later.
Kagami gets a delivery of fish, and Tendou's little sister comes to pick it up. I like her already! She hits the nail on the head, Tendou is rather arrogant, ah, she reminds me of myself. On second thought that may not be a good thing. Ohohoho, little sister fishing for information on her older brother? Kagami is not very good at deflecting, is he? Kagami has a younger brother, or had, as that may be his motivation to hunt down the worms. Kagami, dude, slow tf down, the food isnt going anywhere. Awwww, She's so wholesome, and Tendou is being a tsundere. And there is a memory of Kagami with his little brother, and then it turns sad. Poor Kagami. So, Ryou is there, but I am kinda suspicious, because this is a show where the main enemies disguise themselves as people to move undetected.
Hyori and Tendou are talking in the restaurant. Tendou seems intent on figuring out how to make his match up to hers. And now he is doing the dishes. So, we now know that he dissapeared two years ago, which means it wasnt a recent thing, and yet, Ryou looks the same as he did in the memory. Which, to be fair, this is a live action show, so the scenes were filmed at around the same time, but still. So, Ryou has no idea what the worms are, which, to be fair, are not known about by the general populous, I think. He also has the charred baseball, and Kagami is staring at it in what might be surprise.
So, back in the restaurant, Tendou and Hiyori are still doing the dishes when Kagami comes in. Tendou is suspicious, and rightly so. I dont blame kagami for being happy is brother is back, but exercise some caution buddy.
So, the boss, boss lady, and Kagami are discussing Ryou. "Its highly likely he is a worm mimic" more like certain at this point, but I'll give the benefit of the doubt. Wow, Kagami is not happy. And we finally get Kagami's motivation explained. Also, apparently Kagami can throw a decent punch, at least decent enough to be acknowledged by tendou, which is nice.
So now Kagami and Ryou are at the baseball field. We get some cute dialogue about promises and such, and Kagami explaining that an important part of him had gone missing along with his brother. Also apparently their father is still alive? Thats news, most Kamen Rider characters dont have a decent father, though, Sora in Kamen Rider: Saber is very lucky in that aspect. And we see that Ryou really is a worm. Poor Kagami, he was so relieved to have his brother finally back. Kagami is indecisive. If he kills the worm imitating Ryou, all traces of his brother will be gone, but if he leaves him alive, he will be betraying his organization. And now, Tendou is here, espousing his grandmothers words. And we get our transformation! Apparently all it takes to destroy lesser worms is a few strikes, which is fair. And now we see Tendou taking blows to make Kagami choose. Do we finally get to see Kagami transform??? And now the worm is conducting psycological warfare on Kagami, which slightly backfired, as he asked Tendou to destroy the worm.
And so we get our epic fight scene. No transformation from Kagami yet, but I hold out hope. And to be fair, it is only episode 4, so early days. The scene in the rain where Kagami says he will surpass Tendou is heartwarming, and heartbreaking in equal measure. Kagami's only link to his brother now is a charred baseball, but I like to think that whatever was left of Ryou in there dropped it on purpose, so Kagami had something to remember him by. And for our final scene, we see Misaka stalking tendou.
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