Do you think cwilbur started to forget everyone he knew while he was in limbo? Do you think when he got flashes of ghostburs memories he was unable to tell who he saw? Do you think that at some point the only visual image he was able to remember was cold and gray train station? Do you think he didn't recognize ctommy? How painful it would be not to remember what the people that you love look like and how their voices sound. Do you think that he just forgot. He knew that it would happen at some point–it was his eternety, after all– but still wasn't ready for the memories to slowly fade away.
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Reference guide of all the external changes made to the Space Shuttle Orbiter Challenger (OV-099) during her lifetime.
Date: 1983-1985
Documents by Alfonso X Moreno: link
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A day late, but here we are! A bunch of adult kids in our own post-canon stuff. Did I do their adult designs before finalizing their canon ones? Uh, yes. Will I do it again? Probably.
I've been out of the fandom for a while (just returned this past year), but my hope has always been that these guys get to live and heal and be happy after it all. Growing up is hard, and as someone growing up around the same age as these guys, I get it.
It takes time, but you'll get there. Just keep going, and hold the people who care about you close.
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watching spop with the knowledge that catra and adora get together in the end is really a horror movie experience. you go in expecting a complicated and angsty but ultimately healthy romance with good pacing, but soon realize that you're watching the story of a doomed tragic hero.
every time you see catra commit another atrocity, your heart just sinks further and you feel so bad for adora. you're dreading the moment they get together and when you reach that point, it's just as horrifying as you expected. and the worst thing is, most of the fandom accepts it as a perfect ship and you feel like adora felt in the false reality, wondering if you're just going insane.
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how old are you, are you like 36, you seem so unaware and stifled by modern internet slang, you’re like jerma
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No but I think it's so kind that in episode seven that officer died to save the kids and it was brutal and awful, but then it turns out he was already betrayed, he was already doomed. And that's terrible itself as well but it just feels so kind of the narrative to take that guilt off their shoulders, to say no, these children carry so much already, they don't also have to carry the guilt for that, the weight of how he would have lived if they had left. He wouldn't have lived. He died saving people. It's a cruelty but it's a kindness for them. Sometimes the narrative (a narrative about death and loss and incompetence and malice and cruelty born of cowardice) can be gentle in its own twisted way.
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