asteropewpew
asteropewpew
divine hindsight
406 posts
| 20+, they/them | many long-form thoughts...
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asteropewpew · 1 month ago
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Me: *looking at a porcelain hand in the home decor aisle of a store* if I lost my hands in some kind of tragic accident, I’d decorate my entire home with hand-shaped things. Then I’d invite guests over for like, dinner parties and such and sit there expectantly just basking in their discomfort.
My boyfriend: Do you hear what you say when you talk? Do you know what you just said to me?
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asteropewpew · 2 months ago
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I love kids they’re all like.. “when i grow up i’m gonna be an astronaut and a chef and a doctor and an olympic swimmer” like that self confidence! That drive! That optimism! Where does it go
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asteropewpew · 2 months ago
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doesn’t everyone constantly feel like they’re acting. All the time
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asteropewpew · 2 months ago
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this too, is anaxa
emptying and reloading a gun with practiced efficiency so you think i'm an expert marksman but you later find out that's just how i stim
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asteropewpew · 2 months ago
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i think it is important to recognize the ways in which your favorite thing sucks. i think it keeps u normal
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asteropewpew · 2 months ago
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Please retire the "we are made of stardust" phrase I am so tired of it
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asteropewpew · 2 months ago
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this too, is the things i can say about mister anaxagoras
love when theres a character whose entire existence is spoiler tagged by default. go behind the curtain boy
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asteropewpew · 2 months ago
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i wish i could say “?????????” in real life it would be very useful
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asteropewpew · 2 months ago
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asteropewpew · 2 months ago
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the more i sit on this, the more i get struck by just how much it fits to have castorice's trial and anaxa's own trial to occur so closely to one another. no wonder anaxa gave the culmination of his life's work, the philosopher's stone, to castorice for her trial.
of course. they both know what it must feel like to be eternally separated from their loved ones between life and death.
consider anaxa who lost his sister to the black tide, despite praying to the titans for salvation. then castorice, who had grown up not knowing what she had lost but suffered keenly what she had lacked apart from everyone else. and perhaps polyxia too, to an extent—she who lost her sister for the simple, damning price of having authority over death.
"Why could I not sacrifice myself in order to resurrect my nearest and dearest?"
what must it remind of polyxia thanatos of who saw anaxa's desire to seek death, yet his deepest wish had only ever been to gaze at the family that he had forever lost?
"If such a mighty power existed... I would use it without hesitation."
and so, she they gave it to him. perhaps this was the beginning of anaxa's eventual self-destruction, serving as an impossibly sharp fragment that gouged into his heart and unearthed his long-buried grief. or maybe it was the greatest acknowledgment to the depth of anaxa's love, who loved so passionately and deeply enough that he would brave the netherworld just to be able to reach his sister for one more time.
"Equivalent exchange... all I received for that price was an opportunity to see her for one final time. Nothing more."
what does it feel to anaxa then, to see his sister whole and untouched by the horrors of the black tide, to wear the peace of death with such grace in front of him who sacrificed half his sight just to see her for one more time?
so i can't help but really think that anaxa's giving of the philosopher's stone to castorice has another meaning, something a little kinder perhaps. from one grieving soul to another, in order to help feel a sense of closure to the loss that they had both felt for so long. it was through that stone, after all, that thanatos was finally able to feel relieved that castorice had lived well—despite weathering such a selfish act (of resurrecting someone long gone) born from the purest of love.
maybe thanatos had intended to give anaxa some sense of closure by seeing his sister so peacefully like this, just as anaxa had intended for thanatos to have their own closure in the shape of his student's innocent joy
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asteropewpew · 2 months ago
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"this is unbecoming of me" is genuinely a useful thing to have in your mental toolbox
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asteropewpew · 3 months ago
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oh..............thats comfort. thats comfort of my gore character.
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asteropewpew · 3 months ago
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asteropewpew · 3 months ago
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dearest shooting star 🌠
loving anaxagoras felt similar to the momentary awe whenever you spot a shooting star. that quick, brilliant flash of light streaking across the midnight sky, so vivid and arrogantly defiant against the moon.
i shine brighter than you, it would say to the soft glow of the moonlight illuminating the late night. this shooting star was so bright that it seemingly cut a large swathe across like very definite sword strike, all the while burning up the rest of itself during the end of their cosmic journey. so look only at me.
"Your students looked quite... apoplectic." You look observed, tone filled with knowing amusement as you watched his students amble their way out of his classroom with varying expressions of frustration. Or in some cases, with a look of absolute vengeance. "A lively morning earlier then, yes?"
Anaxagoras doesn't quite chuckle, but the small, involuntary huff as his lips curved slightly in smug glee gives away his current sentiment regarding his students. His form tilted slightly forward as he turned to face you, a pair of vivid seafoam eyes gleaming brightly with all the knowledge and intellect that captivated your attention like a treacherous lure.
It's both fortunate and unfortunate (for your heart), that your own class ends at just around the time that his class ends—with the bell tolling overhead to signal the students to do a self-study session (or exchange shared moments of misery) at numerous amphitheaters or at the central library of the Grove.
"As always, our class ended with another debate."
"About the gods, Professor?"
"Naturally." Given his rather vocal stance as a blasphemer, it was no surprise that his students had seen fit to challenge him to yet another debate. More likely in hopes to humble him rather than commit to any intellectual exchange, you mused. "And as always, they are infuriated whenever I poke out the holes in their arguments."
"Their collective spite would end up with you getting killed one day, you know?" A lie. For as notorious as Anaxagoras had been in criticizing the actions of the Flame-Chase Journey right alongside, his students had somehow decided that he was deserving of their gifts and...other knick knacks that you were most definitely sure were priceless antiques.
Poor Hyacine who's been given more work by the rising mess around his office, no doubt. Although Anaxagoras' new student named Phainon had been mentioned as some sort of precious antique collector and appraiser, which made organizing things much easier, if any.
"If they commit as much dedication to verbally eviscerate me on court trials and debates, they should focus it on their thesis proposals." The sneer in his face made your lips quirk into a smile.
"You should really stop goading your cute little students, Professor Anaxagoras."
He opened his mouth, likely retorting his favorite correction before realization caught his would-be misstep. The small "tch" made your smile widen even as he shot you a warning glare, not missing your clear attempt at throwing him off despite following his numerous insistence regarding the matter with his name. "Telling me how to handle my students now, Professor?"
It should feel criminal how your name comes out of his mouth in a slow, lilting drawl. Almost indulging, if you were to entertain your own fanciful whispers.
"Just a word of advice as a fellow lecturer." But his unimpressed look told you as much about just how convincing your excuse is.
loving anaxagoras felt like loving a shooting star. there is joy in catching that moment of fleeting beauty across the sky, knowing that it would forever be different from any other shooting stars in the world. but like all things, even shooting stars are unforgiving towards their admirers.
they were utterly beautiful in their destruction, the broken fragments carrying with it such a devastating power that perhaps a part of you would break in return; echoing the shatter of a brilliant celestial body with your own hapless heart.
"What did you do?" You rushed to ask, voice trembling ever so slightly as you looked at the ragged exhaustion across Anaxagoras' face.
"Merely created something that puts us in equal standing with the gods." He sounded victorious, as if the price of his triumph wasn't riddled with blood and pain. Anaxagoras looked inappropriately disheveled, clothes rumpled and singed at some of the hems—pale blue hair clinging to his face that was full of grime and sweat and a few cuts here and there. "And I have succeeded in finally making it useable."
There are tremors in his hands, visible ones and you couldn't take your eyes away from the inflamed skin where the bright red of the Philosopher's stone adorned his right hand. Instantly, you feel the impossibly heavy weight of his trust in allowing you inside his personal alchemical laboratory.
There's a myriad of things that you could say to him, and yet all of it would make you nothing more than a hypocrite who allowed the one that you cherished most to completely ruin himself in pursuit of knowledge. All those years that had you faithfully shadowing him in his unquenchable thirst for answers, barely managing to reel him back just in time before he truly hurtled towards the deep end.
All those years of endless exasperation and countless debates as you hurried to catch up to him, all of it cultivated into biting back down a few choices of words directed at his dangerous recklessness. "Really? Treating yourself so poorly while you're in an experimental binge doesn't quite count as a logical course of action."
You hurriedly knelt down beside him as you brought out a roll of fresh bandages from your satchel, and he was mindful enough to not give you much grief as he obediently placed his trembling hands in your hands.
"Am I ever in danger with my own experiments?" His retort made you purse your lips as you carefully started tending to his wounds, a deep frown crossing your face for all that your hands remained gentle in treating his injuries.
The silence that followed, was a little stifled. Even with you, as immersed in your irritation and worries, didn't fail to notice the tension lining over his shoulders.
"This won't be the last." In the end, it was Anaxagoras who broke the silence, sounding a little gruff as he ducked his head to avoid your gaze. "I still need to find the answers to my new questions... far too many thing—"
"Be that as it may," you interrupted his halfhearted reasons with a pointed glare, "you are still expected to teach your own students instead of passing all them off to me every time you get possessed in doing your experiments!"
He tilted his head in consideration, as if only belatedly recalling that he had spent longer in his laboratory than he had expected.
"The brats should know better than compare you with me." The stupid, foolish, heretic scholar with one of the sharpest minds of today, missed your very non-subtle show of concern. Amazing. Truly a mind of the ages indeed. "And besides, you're the only one that wouldn't revise my lesson plan without consulting me first. Or make those impressionable students learn something that they shouldn't waste their time."
"No, I just want to get them off me because I'm tired of grading forty students every week on two different subjects."
"..." The foolish professor didn't even try to object, knowing better than to test your limits.
You also refrained from pointing out that his students have this weird tendency to debate with any professors that even dared to make them stray off his meticulous curriculum, for all that they are keen to put him through the wringer for at least once before they could graduate. "No personal laboratory time for at least a while."
"You can't possibly demand that of me."
The smile on your face dared him to argue any further than this. "I believe Hyacine would appreciate being notified of your... occupational injuries."
There's another beat of silence, but it was a little easier this time. Familiar.
Although your worries still made your chest grow tight, his disgruntled look soothed something within you as he obediently tilted his head up for you to dab at the small cuts and abrasions across his face.
Even more, the victory was sweeter when Anaxagoras eventually grumbled in defeat.
loving anaxagoras felt a little like condemning yourself to watching the fleeting destruction of a shooting star. you, a criminal who was sentenced to chase and watch the one that you loved the most, meet his own end with the most joyous laugh that you've heard from him.
anaxagoras who would completely burn up himself upon reaching the zenith of his journey, content in defying the tranquility of the evening night in a blaze of brilliant light. the false sky, as he had claimed, with eyes sparkling like the simulated constellations in the astronomy laboratory where alchemy fabricates a sky without the threat of aquila's temperamental gaze.
how you wanted, to valiantly preserve that shine without losing the brilliance that belonged to anaxagoras and his endless curiosity. except he was the kind of person who was never meant to be caged, confined and conforming to conventional ideas.
because he was always and foremost, meant to be free.
(and you could only hope that he can come back to you from time to time, if his time permits it; which was a factor that was slowly getting dwindling with each passing day.)
...Perhaps you'd have known it then, that he wouldn't simply just stop at embedding a Philosopher's stone in his right hand. That nothing could truly ever satiate his thirst in finding out the intricacies wrapped around Amphoreus and the ever-enduring Flame-Chase journey.
That he would embody your most favorite celestial body in all its vivid, and gut-wrenching beauty like this.
"Anaxa—are you crazy?!"
You saw him, slumped over the pillars of the central table while the contents in his personal laboratory which looked as if a veritable storm had swept upon it. Potions and vials lay shattered all over the ground, his alchemical gun lying innocuously beside him while numerous papers full of almost unrecognizable scrawls were scattered on the floor.
For a brief, frightening moment, you feared the worst.
"My name...is Anaxa...goras," he rasped after a moment, lone eye a little dull and unfocused as he struggled to recollect his thoughts when you rushed over to him. "Do not...call me Anaxa."
"And very soon, those words will be your last words if you don't get to the Courtyard as fast you can!" Panic was laced in your voice as you tried to check whether he had any debilitating injuries that require a mad dash to the Courtyard.
(Thin. He's thinner again.)
"This is a...culmination of my life's research and a milestone...regarding my capabilities," he argued, wheezing as he bared his teeth in an attempt to hide his pain when he tried to shift his position as you carefully prodded at his form.
"Which would be utterly useless if you don't make a patent of it while you're still alive," you snapped, finally letting out a breath when your preliminary search yielded nothing but a couple of bruises and symptoms of dehydration alongside exhaustion. "Have you truly decided to throw your life away like the foolish blasphemer that you are?"
Ever since he came back from that one conversation with Empedocles after he'd lost his eye, you know that he was a little different.
Sharper perhaps, much more intense as he had been before. Yet he looked perpetually weary, for all that his back stood tall and unwavering while handing out criticisms and advice for his students and fellow scholars.
As if he was always desperately running towards something that remained just out of reach.
"Why...do you care anyway? You're always so...meddlesome." The question made your heart grow still. It felt like being in the middle of Aidonia's harshest snowstorm, the wind howling at your foolishness for daring to even hope. "Don't you understand...why I must...do this?"
He is so thoughtlessly cruel at times, your dearest shooting star.
"I can't accept that what you're doing is so important that you would throw away your entire life for it." You didn't beg, but all of your emotions saturated each and every word. "Please, just take a break, Anaxagoras. There is time. You have time."
"Nothing is more important than seeing the Truth...of the false sky." His voice was hoarse, yet unwavering with the weight of his own conviction and obsessive desire. "And proving that...the Flame-Chase journey is not so linear in its approach. Everything else...was just an afterthought."
"Perhaps I had thought too highly of our time spent together." It hurt, when you could sense nothing but the genuine truth laced in his words. He's definitely suffered some sort of altered mental status right now, but it did little to lessen the sting. "And that my effort towards a dear colleague and companion, was nothing more than a show of charity in your eyes."
Anaxagoras didn't speak, nor did he even need to, as he had finally passed out in abject exhaustion and pain-filled sleep.
(Perhaps it was the best, that he couldn't hear the bitter disappointment in your voice.)
You allowed yourself a look, a last glance, feeling like you've swallowed knives with each indication of self-neglect over his form. His clothes were bigger than it should be on him, not to the point of fright but enough just to indicate how much he's foregone sustenance at least multiple times. Likewise, there's a clear expression of exhaustion in his face. His clothes were disheveled, likely from his latest stunt more than an unconscious habit—but he looked utterly... small in that moment.
It would be easy to hate him. To rage and hate his foolishness, the ease in how he discarded his own present in favor of crafting a future that he had decided that was not his to see. The sheer hypocrisy by how passionate he was in insisting the sanctity of life and autonomy over "misguided notions" of honor and obligation, when each of his choices had contributed to his eventual ruin.
But you couldn't.
Despite all your frustrations and concerns, you never would be able to hate him for as much as you cherish him.
You know you were not so important as to be able to anchor his feet, but you can't help but wish you were.
loving anaxa meant suffering from daring to attempt that you could handle the intensity of a shooting star. it's like being a moth drawn to his vibrant flame, helplessly oblivious to the eventual agony of being burned alive.
you loved still loved your shooting star who had captivated your attention so tightly, before he spirited your heart away from your hands without any intention of returning it. nor even trying to take care of it.
anaxagoras was a great many things, but he was also utterly oblivious at the best of times. you should have created a boundary with him early on, to rein in your feelings as soon as your traitorous heart thundered at the sight of his bright, satisfied smile.
(but you didn't. and equally hurt and filled you with humility for every time you could see a part of anaxa that perhaps few or rather, none had ever been privy to see it.)
your blasphemer was always meant for great things, regardless if he would be scorned or admired for his actions.
and you could only watch and try to help him when he has burned himself too early in his journey towards searching for the truth of this world.
the astronomy laboratory was one of your favorite ventures, and you keep to your silence even as the door opened to welcome the familiar clack of footsteps coming towards the center of the laboratory.
"...I didn't know that there's someone using the astronomy laboratory."
"It's occupied." your voice was clipped, sparing only the barest words as you didn't bother to turn around and acknowledge the illustrious anaxagoras. there was a brief pause, before you heard a rustling sound as he carefully sat down beside you.
ever since that day, when you had rushed anaxagoras into the courtyard after he had collapsed, you decided to keep your distance. a futile attempt at drawing a boundary when you've already reached a point in no return, but you held strong even when hyacine had cautiously asked if you would like to visit him even just once.
it was more for your sake than his, and you were confident that he wouldn't even notice—for all that he's dedicated his focus and attention to his dogged pursuit of the truth.
"You weren't present to the general meeting with all the Professors." it took everything in you not to flinch when you felt the weight of his gaze on the side of your face.
"I was busy." you were very much grateful that the darkness hid much of your expression as you drew your knees close to yourself.
"Busy with what?" he probed, because he never did have a sense of self-restraint when it comes to satiating his curiosity. "Hyacine told me that you asked to be relieved of another class to handle. And that you also applied for a...sabbatical leave."
the latter sentence echoed his mystified confusion, the notion of a vacation apparently being a foreign one to the foolish scholar.
"I'm accompanying Hyacine and Phainon on their usual visit back to Okhema." there, that should be enough to get him off your back and leave.
except it doesn't.
"You've never shown any interest in leaving the Grove for that holy city." it was evident how poorly he had regarded the capital with the eternal light, and you've heard his sentiments regarding a certain chrysos heir residing in the city often enough to understand his position.
but you didn't care much for that.
what pricked at your still smarting heart was—
"I don't need to report to you nor justify any of my actions to you for anything, Professor Anaxagoras." you replied, voice chillingly cold and void of your hurt as much as you can. "As you have made yourself quite clear on my interference to your pursuit of knowledge."
There was another pause, the fabric of his coat rustling as he abruptly moved closer to you.
"That day when you rushed me into the courtyard," his voice was faintly urgent, promptly you to finally give a glance at his pinched expression with a carefully distant look. except the faint unease within his piercing eyes made your traitorous heart flutter once again. "Did I say anything?"
this close, you could see that hyacine's work had lessened the exhaustion and overall gauntness of the scholar's face. despite you still childishly holding on to your anger, you felt a tension within you finally relax.
"Nothing but the truth, Professor." it was maddening, how your anger was quietly doused by seeing just how much he had recovered (even if you could still sense an air of weariness around him).
"That's not—" anaxagoras tsked, ever astute in deducing a hint from your response. "I said something."
you kept silent, because you refuse to be considered a puzzle where he would look for clues to satisfy his own questions. no, it would hurt you far too much if he treated what had happened as nothing more than a logical problem to be straightened out.
(it would be like holding out your still mending heart for him to destroy.)
"Whatever it was, it was enough for you to refuse a visit to me at the ward." the intensity in his gaze proved too much, and you ducked your head to look away from him. you saw his hand make an aborted move towards you, before it stopped and curled into a tight fist. "It happened when you caught me in my personal laboratory, and I was cognizant enough to respond but not enough to retain the memories of our brief interaction before you brought me to the Courtyard. You're angry. And I hurt you."
your foolish scholar had known nothing but the thorny path that would lead to his goals, and it was your own foolish decision to chase after him like a persistent shadow. in the end, everything can be traced back to your own decision to accompany him for so long—like that hapless moth who was drawn to the raging inferno that was anaxagoras the blasphemer.
you knew that he would change the world, at any and at all costs. even if the damning price was to ruin himself in the process.
"What did I say?" he asked again and... abruptly, you felt very tired.
forget it.
"It's alright," you murmured, finally looking up to give him a lopsided smile. don't worry, went unheard. "It was...my fault more than yours."
there was another pause again, before he spoke again.
"I am in need of a...companion for Hyacine to finally relinquish her watch on me." he said, stumbling over a particular word while you gave an inquiring hum.
you like to think that you know the undertone of his statement. don't go.
but you never truly left him, even in the height of your anger and hurt. hyacine would never fail to give you updates regarding his wellbeing and any additional expenses quietly paid for by you (under the guise of an anonymous benefactor), and combined with her stubbornness and the threat of making ika sit on his chest was enough for him to veer off from going back to his laboratory far too soon.
"...I can do that." it would be another story if you saw his main table and be reminded of how you initially saw him, but that was a thing for the future.
his shoulders slumping over slightly made a smile finally crack across your face, and he swiftly closed the remaining distance to rest his weight against yours.
"Good." and he sounded like he meant it.
you know that anaxagoras doesn't apologize for his actions, not because of pride but because he would not regret any of the actions that he had made. that each of his actions were driven with a purpose that would ultimately bring him closer to his goals.
when his hand carefully rested above yours after a while, the warmth spoke more than his clumsy attempts at making it for his apparent misstep. you gazed back upon the twinkling constellations, with the weight of anaxagoras' presence sitting close to your side.
your shooting star, if only for a moment, paused in his relentless pursuit to accompany you for the night.
it wasn't quite an apology, but it was more than enough.
(p.s. first time trying to do this so please tell me your thoughts? would you also want an anaxa pov to compliment this hehe)
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asteropewpew · 3 months ago
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asteropewpew · 3 months ago
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if i say anything... but like, anaxa reminds me of kim dokja sometimes... a little more unhinged tho
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asteropewpew · 3 months ago
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they should invent a grief that doesn’t define you in new and strange ways for the rest of your life
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