#clearning out my drafts
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They don't know that I know this trick!!
Stumbles and falls of a building and fucking dies
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This is an interesting argument to me because of one of the mashups I did in the 90s-00s between my own fanfiction crossovers and world myths and legends. Everyone reading this blog or my retired tumblog will remember that the first step in the genesis of Arthur, King of Time and Space was me globally replacing all the proper nouns in my Usenet Star Trek/Doctor Who crossovers with proper nouns from the Matter of Britain - Arthur for Kirk, Merlin for the Doctor, etc. But there were also other Doctor Who crossovers, resulting in e.g. Hercules for Superman and Robin Hood for Sisko.
With the Hercules bit I established that the Age of Heroes on the planet Helles was analog to the 20th century as British space was to Kirk's Federation. So, what to do with M*A*S*H? Obviously, adapt a war story. Obviously, adapt the war story. Of course, M*A*S*H is about surgeons, not soliders, so the warrior characters in The Iliad had to become doctors. Front-line surgeons, at the 1st Hellene Occupational Relief Surgical Effort at Troy, the Trojan H.O.R.S.E., which was - and here's where the Le Guin quote about Homer not taking sides makes me think of it - the first wartime military hospital staffed by surgeons from both sides.
Helen is the chief nurse, Odysseus is the mastermind and commandant of the base, and Patroclus is the company clerk. Hector is shipped home and replaced by Aeneas. Patroclus is killed in battle while off on R&R after Achilles goaded him into sowing some wild oats, and is replaced by Tiresias.
"I think Homer outwits most writers who have written on the War [fantasy archetype], by not taking sides.
The Trojan war is not and you cannot make it be the War of Good vs. Evil. Itâs just a war, a wasteful, useless, needless, stupid, protracted, cruel mess full of individual acts of courage, cowardice, nobility, betrayal, limb-hacking-off, and disembowelment. Homer was a Greek and might have been partial to the Greek side, but he had a sense of justice or balance that seems characteristically Greek â maybe his people learned a good deal of it from him? His impartiality is far from dispassionate; the story is a torrent of passionate actions, generous, despicable, magnificent, trivial. But it is unprejudiced. It isnât Satan vs. Angels. It isnât Holy Warriors vs. Infidels. It isnât hobbits vs. orcs. Itâs just people vs. people.
Of course you can take sides, and almost everybody does. I try not to, but itâs no use; I just like the Trojans better than the Greeks. But Homer truly doesnât take sides, and so he permits the story to be tragic. By tragedy, mind and soul are grieved, enlarged, and exalted.
Whether war itself can rise to tragedy, can enlarge and exalt the soul, I leave to those who have been more immediately part of a war than I have. I think some believe that it can, and might say that the opportunity for heroism and tragedy justifies war. I donât know; all I know is what a poem about a war can do. In any case, war is something human beings do and show no signs of stopping doing, and so it may be less important to condemn it or to justify it than to be able to perceive it as tragic.
But once you take sides, you have lost that ability.
Is it our dominant religion that makes us want war to be between the good guys and the bad guys?
In the War of Good vs. Evil there can be divine or supernal justice but not human tragedy. It is by definition, technically, comic (as in The Divine Comedy): the good guys win. It has a happy ending. If the bad guys beat the good guys, unhappy ending, thatâs mere reversal, flip side of the same coin. The author is not impartial. Dystopia is not tragedy.
Milton, a Christian, had to take sides, and couldnât avoid comedy. He could approach tragedy only by making Evil, in the person of Lucifer, grand, heroic, and even sympathetic â which is faking it. He faked it very well.
Maybe itâs not only Christian habits of thought but the difficulty we all have in growing up that makes us insist justice must favor the good.
After all, 'Let the best man win' doesnât mean the good man will win. It means, 'This will be a fair fight, no prejudice, no interference â so the best fighter will win it.' If the treacherous bully fairly defeats the nice guy, the treacherous bully is declared champion. This is justice. But itâs the kind of justice that children canât bear. They rage against it. Itâs not fair!
But if children never learn to bear it, they canât go on to learn that a victory or a defeat in battle, or in any competition other than a purely moral one (whatever that might be), has nothing to do with who is morally better.
Might does not make right â right?
Therefore right does not make might. Right?
But we want it to. 'My strength is as the strength of ten because my heart is pure.'
If we insist that in the real world the ultimate victor must be the good guy, weâve sacrificed right to might. (Thatâs what History does after most wars, when it applauds the victors for their superior virtue as well as their superior firepower.) If we falsify the terms of the competition, handicapping it, so that the good guys may lose the battle but always win the war, weâve left the real world, weâre in fantasy land â wishful thinking country.
Homer didnât do wishful thinking.
Homerâs Achilles is a disobedient officer, a sulky, self-pitying teenager who gets his nose out of joint and wonât fight for his own side. A sign that Achilles might grow up someday, if given time, is his love for his friend Patroclus. But his big snit is over a girl he was given to rape but has to give back to his superior officer, which to me rather dims the love story. To me Achilles is not a good guy. But he is a good warrior, a great fighter â even better than the Trojan prime warrior, Hector. Hector is a good guy on any terms â kind husband, kind father, responsible on all counts â a mensch. But right does not make might. Achilles kills him.
The famous Helen plays a quite small part in The Iliad. Because I know that sheâll come through the whole war with not a hair in her blond blow-dry out of place, I see her as opportunistic, immoral, emotionally about as deep as a cookie sheet. But if I believed that the good guys win, that the reward goes to the virtuous, Iâd have to see her as an innocent beauty wronged by Fate and saved by the Greeks.
And people do see her that way. Homer lets us each make our own Helen; and so she is immortal.
I donât know if such nobility of mind (in the sense of the impartial 'noble' gases) is possible to a modern writer of fantasy. Since we have worked so hard to separate History from Fiction, our fantasies are dire warnings, or mere nightmares, or else they are wish fulfillments."
- Ursula K. Le Guin, from No Time to Spare, 2013.
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poison type gym leader who's an insanely rich snob and has some involvement with the evil team mood board
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my adhd is worse and more severe than anyone elses in the world bevause im so special
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youâre twelve years old and you break your fatherâs hand when he hi-fives you. the first thing you learn is that the smallest slip up can hurt the people you love. your (foster) father smiles and says itâs okay (itâs not).Â
your parents are not your parents. the idyllic farming community that raised you is not your home. youâre a You-Donât-Know-What from You-Donât-Know-Where. all you know for sure is that youâre not human.Â
so you can fly. so you can run fast. so you can lift cars. so what? why do you even have this power? what should you even do with it?Â
your father said do whatâs right, so thatâs what you do.Â
you stop a robbery. the manâs knife shatters against your skin and you see the same fear in his eyes that you saw in your fatherâs when you were twelve. you catch a falling child before it can hit the water. his mother looks at you like youâre a god.Â
they love you, even though they donât know you. the most powerful man in the world hates you because they love you.Â
you wanted to write when you were younger. you wanted to tell stories that needed to be told. you never wanted to star in them. you never wanted super-geniuses and demi-goddesses looking to you for advice; like you have any idea how to handle threats to reality itself. youâre just a kid from smallville whoâs trying to do the best he can with what heâs given.Â
you try and get back to the farm as much as you can. it feels normal being back among the open wheat; where everyone smiles because youâre that nice Kent boy.Â
when you were younger, you pretended to fly, hands out to your sides and running through the tall grass by the river. it doesnât look as beautiful from on high; the details get lost and the colors of your hometown blur together from a mile above ground.Â
the problem with flying is that it puts you so far above people you care about
#lemon squares#bruce wayne#clark kent#martha kent#impossible to write for ha#dcu#cartoon reply#friday night clearning out my drafts
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OOC. clearning out my drafts bc they've been sitting so long (sorry >.<). so!!!
like this for a smol (probably one-liner) starter
#â ooc.#distracting myself from the crushing weight of anxiety and life and I miss raven#she's so nasty <3#I might try and work on some branwen tribe hcs today
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((My brain is a MUSH, so instead of pushing out some halfhearted ic reply, Iâve attempted to learn Blumenkranz on my violin. Itâs extremely fun. ANYWAY I apologize for being a snail lately when it comes to writing, tomorrow, I will work on clearning out my inbox and probably reblog a smaller meme to get the muse going. Drafts will have wait for a bit. The ones I know I owe are to @arastiia and @rosecarnage, if I have missed a reply, let me know.))
#e flat major makes EVERYTHING fun#tbd#đđđ˘đđ đđđđđ: đ˝đ´đ
đ´đ â ooc
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They look pointed, like if he were on Star Trek
The Sideburns of John Wayne
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