stop believing that you ran out of time to shape yourself into who you want to be! stop believing that its ruined! stop believing you don’t have potential! you are not a fixed being! you have endless opportunities to grow.
the problem with autism is sometimes you want to do something (brave) but you need someone to gently walk you through each step so you know what will happen. and people don’t like doing that
I want to write 1000 words on how the reason generation loss is so impactful is because it rejects the catharsis most classical tragedy structures rely on. which means long-term, as a viewer, you're searching the narrative for any possibility of this catharsis of an escape but you keep on running full speed into walls where the only ending is horrific. you can find other scenarios, other perspectives, other ways that it could of turned out but it's only death. it's only hopelessness. it's only the illusion of choice being ripped away. the story leaves no room to breath outside of the claustrophobic feeling of despair. no daydreams about a happier world outside. it's just this. it was always this. it will always be just this.
We don’t talk enough about Wilbur and Techno’s bit where Wilbur would join public mc servers acting like some little kid with a traditionally “cringe” skin and username like Flowergirl or whatever and tell everyone that he was best friends with Techno, for everyone to obviously respond like “shut up you don’t know techno lol” after which Techno would immediately join and start saying something like “Hi Flowergirl how’s it going” because that’s literally hilarious
okay but like. has anyone else thought about. with the overarching themes in generation loss of being forced to do what a viewing audience wants to see you do rather than what you actually want to do. has anyone else thought about the fact the first thing ranboo has to do is a cooking challenge