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Revolutionize Your Visual Displays with Optoma Projection Mapping Projectors

Projection mapping, a cutting-edge technology that transforms irregularly shaped objects into dynamic display surfaces, has revolutionized the way we experience visual content. Among the leaders in this innovative field is Optoma, a brand renowned for its advanced projection technology. In this blog, we’ll delve into how Optoma projection mapping projectors are changing the landscape of visual displays and why they are the go-to choice for professionals across various industries.
What is Projection Mapping? Projection mapping, also known as spatial augmented reality, is a technique that projects images and videos onto 3D surfaces. Unlike traditional flat screen projections, this technology allows for content to be mapped onto complex shapes and structures, creating immersive and interactive visual experiences. From art installations and concerts to corporate events and theme parks, projection mapping has opened up new dimensions in visual storytelling.
Why Choose Optoma Projection Mapping Projectors?
1. Superior Image Quality Optoma projectors are known for their exceptional image quality, which is crucial for projection mapping. With high resolution and brightness levels, these projectors deliver vibrant, sharp, and clear images, even in challenging lighting conditions. This ensures that every detail of your visual content is accurately reproduced, providing an engaging experience for your audience.
2. Advanced Technology Optoma integrates the latest technological advancements into their projectors. Features such as edge blending and warping, high dynamic range (HDR) support, and laser light sources make their projectors ideal for complex projection mapping tasks. Edge blending and warping allow for seamless image projection on irregular surfaces, while HDR enhances the color and contrast, making visuals more lifelike.
3. Versatility and Flexibility Optoma projectors are designed to be versatile and flexible, catering to a wide range of projection needs. Whether you’re mapping onto small objects or large buildings, Optoma offers a variety of projector models with different specifications to suit your requirements. Their compact design and multiple connectivity options also make setup and integration into existing systems straightforward.
4. Reliability and Durability Projection mapping often involves long-duration displays and installations in various environments. Optoma projectors are built to be reliable and durable, ensuring consistent performance over time. The use of laser technology in many models not only provides superior image quality but also extends the projector’s lifespan, reducing maintenance and replacement costs.
5. User-Friendly Software Optoma provides intuitive software solutions that simplify the projection mapping process. Their user-friendly interfaces and powerful tools enable users to design, map, and control their projections with ease. This makes Optoma projectors accessible to both beginners and experienced professionals, allowing them to bring their creative visions to life effortlessly.
Applications of Optoma Projection Mapping Projectors
1. Art and Entertainment Artists and performers are leveraging Optoma projection mapping projectors to create mesmerizing installations and live performances. The ability to project stunning visuals onto sculptures, buildings, and stages enhances the audience’s experience, making art and entertainment more immersive and interactive.
2. Corporate and Marketing Events Businesses are using projection mapping to make a lasting impression at corporate events, product launches, and trade shows. By transforming ordinary venues into dynamic visual landscapes, companies can engage their audience in unique and memorable ways, boosting brand visibility and recognition.
3. Education and Training Educational institutions and training centers are adopting projection mapping to create interactive learning environments. By projecting content onto 3D models and classroom walls, educators can provide a more engaging and effective learning experience, helping students to better understand complex concepts.
4. Museums and Exhibitions Museums and exhibition centers are utilizing projection mapping to enhance their displays and exhibits. By bringing static objects to life with animated visuals and dynamic storytelling, they can offer visitors a more captivating and educational experience.
5. High Brightness Projectors Optoma mapping projectors are high brightness projectors designed for exceptional performance in large-scale visual displays and immersive experiences. These projectors deliver vivid, detailed images with outstanding clarity, making them ideal for projecting onto a variety of surfaces in both indoor and outdoor settings. Featuring advanced technology, Optoma mapping projectors offer superior color accuracy, high contrast ratios, and reliable performance. Whether for architectural projections, live events, or digital art installations, Optoma mapping projectors ensure your visuals stand out with stunning brilliance and precision. Trust Optoma for high-quality projection solutions that bring your creative vision to life.
Conclusion Optoma projection mapping projectors are at the forefront of transforming visual displays into immersive experiences. With superior image quality, advanced technology, versatility, reliability, and user-friendly software, Optoma projectors are the ideal choice for anyone looking to explore the creative possibilities of projection mapping. Whether you’re an artist, educator, business professional, or event organizer, Optoma projectors can help you create unforgettable visual experiences that captivate and inspire.
Explore the world of projection mapping with Optoma and elevate your visual displays to new heights.
#projection mapping projectors#mapping projectors#optoma projector#4k laser tv#home projector#4k projector#4k home cinema
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04/Dg SL . 0674
#sci-fi#art#cyberpunk#ui#graphics#abstract#digital#digital art#gui#scope#seal#magic#magic seal#high tech#illustration#hud#graphic#projection#mapping#street art#projector#projection mapping#videograffiti#video graffiti#artwork#architecture#urban#town#city#exploration
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Wonderous Journeys Fireworks Extravaganza from Disneyland's It's a Small World

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#wondrous journeys#wondrous journeys fireworks#Disneyland#disney 100 years of wonder#Walt Disney World#disneyland 2023#Disney#wonderous#Fireworks#small world projections#It&039;s a Small World#projector#Disney Parks#disneyland 100 fireworks#Disneyland Park#disneyland small world fireworks#projection mapping#fireworks at it&039;s a small world#Alice in Wonderland#projections on it&039;s a small world#encanto#wonderous journeys#disneyland fireworks#Disney 100#2023#disneyland 100
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I don't have a projector I can cast on a table or anything fancy, so instead, my players get good old-fashioned whiteboard marker on laminated snow background. Sometimes w/ my shitty rendition of maps!
#its fine we have a great time#there is a projector in the room but that goes to a wall#i'd project a owlbear map on it but my players have so much fun moving their own physical minis it would be cruel#dnd
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Optoma's range of DLP home & business projectors, interactive flat panel displays, LED displays, projection screens & accessories.
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Optoma's range of DLP home & business projectors, interactive flat panel displays, LED displays, projection screens & accessories.
#3d holographic projection technology#video mapping projector#high lumen projector#projector installation near me#projection mapping projector
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Projection mapping, synchronising the dance with graphics....
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Meant To Be (3)
Summary: Bucky Barnes x fe!Reader -> Bucky helps you adjust to the modern world.
Disclaimer: This is part three to Meant To Be (2). Fluff, flashbacks/descriptions of life in the 40s with Bucky and the others, platonic!Sam, mention of character deaths, reader is on a little bit of an emotional roller-coaster when trying to adjust but Bucky helps, dancing in the kitchen to music, all the feels. Not Proof Read.
“Thought I might find you here.”
You turned your head to see Sam approaching you as you sat, alone, in the Smithsonian.
“Hey.”
Sam smiled. “Hey. Mind if I sit?”
“Go ahead.”
As Sam sat beside you, he looked up to the projector screen. Clips of your old life had been playing for the last two hours or more. It has taken all of an hour on the phone with Tony for the Smithsonian to consider sending the film reels over, and all of five minutes talking to Pepper for them to agree.
You’d seen a lot of the popular clips MJ had told you about; Steve and Bucky laughing, Peggy’s picture in Steve’s compass, the marching soldiers. You’d even seen some clips of you and Bucky. Moments you didn’t realise that had been recorded.
It made your heart ache.
“Wanna talk about it?”
You shook your head. “There’s nothing to talk about.”
“There’s everything to talk about. Food. Music. The fact Bucky still prefers 40s music over Marvin Gaye.”
You chuckled and Sam smiled, relieved to see at least a hint of a smile on your face.
You’d been in the future for almost three months. And, while he’d seen you smile around the boys and a few others. He still saw that longing look in your eyes. He still saw the hitch in your breathing every time you looked up and someone walked inside.
The others saw it, too. Especially Bucky. But parts of them were too afraid to ask. They’d lived in the future a lot longer than you. For Steve, he’d been asleep for most of it. And for Bucky, he’d been tortured. Made into someone else for seventy years.
You? In the blink of an eye, you’d gone from living in 1944 to suddenly appearing in the home of, who would have probably been, your godson.
“Come on. Talk to me. I promise, I’m a really good secret keeper.”
You smiled and shook your head, letting some old clips run through. “I…” The tears came to your eyes. “I don’t know what I’m meant to do here. I-I know I don’t go back. And I know I’m probably here for the rest of my life but…I don’t know what I’m meant to do.”
Sam just sat and listened to you.
“One day I’m writing things down; military secrets, my own secrets, notes to share with the boys. One day I’m yelling at Howard to get up, threatening to throw a cold bucket of water over his head.” You laughed, but all it did was try to mask the pain. “The next…the next I’m being told one of my best friends didn’t get to live his life out with the love of his life, another went through seventy years of torture and the rest are dead.”
You took a breath and looked at the clip playing on the screen. Peggy and you directing where things would be taking place on the map table. Bucky was standing behind you before he carried a larger map over and Steve circled different spots where he knew camps had been set up.
For you, that clip took place six months ago.
“And now I’m watching clips of my life that to me…only just happened. And…I don’t know what to do with that information.”
“You’re grieving.” Sam told you. “You’re having to say goodbye to a lot of people very quickly. Which is insane. But it’s gonna be a process. Even if you think you’re ready to mentally accept it, sometimes your body isn’t. You need to give it time.”
You scoffed a little. “That seems to be all I have. Time. Time to think. Time to remember. Time to catch up on Time. Sam, if none of this happened, I’d probably be dead by now, if not, on my way out.”
“But you’re not. Instead, you’re here. You’re alive, and so is Steve and Bucky. Believe me, I get it. You’ve come from a war and, just because you’ve come home doesn’t mean that it’s stopped. But all you need to do right now is rest.”
You talked to Sam for an hour or more before eventually the conversation died away and you were both left to sit and watch the different film reels. But as the dates got slightly sporadic, the clips became more…intimate.
One started playing out from when you’d all been stationed in London. You’d all ended up at a dance hall somewhere outside the city. It was only a small space but people seemed to create enough room for couples to dance.
Peggy was in the corner, introducing Steve to some of her old friends. You were standing by one of the posts, watching everyone on the floor sway to the music and Bucky, like usual, had a crowd of girls around him.
You turned your attention away from the clip of Bucky in hopes to kill the pang of jealousy inside your chest.
“They really loved each other, didn’t they?”
You knew who Sam was talking about. And you nodded with a ghost of a smile. “They really did.”
But that was when Sam’s attention was torn from the happy couple towards Bucky who, although had been smiling and laughing with three girls who’d crowded around him, his attention was caught somewhere else.
Rather, on someone else.
You.
Looking over his shoulder at you, Sam watched your reaction before looking back to Bucky as he apologised to the girls and disappeared. He was heading straight for you. Taking your drink from you, he shocked you as he placed it on the table beside you before he took your hand in his and brought you to the floor.
Sam could faintly hear the music playing from the band. “We’ll meet again. Don’t know where. Don’t know when. But I know we’ll meet again, some sunny day…”
Never in his life had Sam seen Bucky dance. Not with anyone. But that wasn’t what shocked him. What shocked him was the look on Bucky’s face. A smile. A genuine smile. The kind a man only ever saved for the love of his life.
Unlike some of the other couples on the floor, Bucky held you close to him. His arm practically wrapped around you completely in comparison to some of the other dancers. This was not a man who was prepared to let you go.
With your hand in his, his fingers caressed the back of your hand and his feet led you both around in a small circle.
“When was this?” Sam asked quietly in order to not scare you. You were engrossed with the clip. Clearly, you were reliving the scene as you watched it play out.
You swallowed thickly. “1942…I think. We…we were stationed in London. He always saved me a dance. I’ve always had two left feet so I didn’t dance much but…”
“Doesn’t seem like you’ve got two left feet, there.”
You smiled, fondly. “He’s a good dance partner.”
Sam chuckled under his breath before watching the rest of the clip with you.
Sam had never asked Bucky complete questions about you before you appeared. Bucky wasn’t exactly a talkative guy, so he’d just wait for him to open up. But after you returned and he saw the way Bucky tried to never leave your side, he asked him the one question he’d been dying to ask since Bucky had first said your name.
“How long have you been in love with her?”
All Bucky could say was, “Too long.”.
And watching this clip, Sam realised what Bucky had meant. You’d been tattooed on his heart since he first met you. Even when he was the Winter Soldier, he still got flashbacks of you. Even when he left Wakanda, part of him still wanted you to be alive somewhere.
Whenever he went on a date, your name on his heart only burned deeper into his muscles. He’d been consumed by you since he probably first met you. And he didn’t want it any other way.
The clip ran out before a new one started up.
Home videos.
These were even more precious, because there weren't very many.
The first one to play was from the day you’d all been on the beach. Howard’s home led out to it.
“Dugan! Put that camera down and come and join us!” You heard Peggy yell.
You smiled, thankful to hear their voices again.
From the beach day, however, one clip stood out to you the most.
You were lying on one of the sunbeds under the shade, reading. And from behind you, Bucky had snuck up on you before plucking the book from your hands. Turning around, he read a few sentences out loud as he walked away.
“James! Hey, give that back!” You laughed as you stood up and followed after him.
“Who brings a book to the beach, doll? You’ll only be taking half of this place back with you.”
“Then I’ll collect it in a jar as a keepsake. Would you-just-” You gave a huff as Bucky held your book well out of reach.
“Join us. Just one game. Please?” He begged, his eyes softening.
“Yeah! Come on, sweet cheeks! You’re missing out!”
You turned around to look at Howard who hit the volleyball back to Peggy. Then you turned back to Bucky, his eyes somehow even softer.
You groaned. “Fine. But then you’ll give me my book back?”
Bucky stood to attention before placing a cross over his heart with his finger. “Cross my heart, doll…”
You eyed him up, humming. “I’ll hold you to that.”
You could remember that day. You ended up playing three rounds before the entire thing became a football game nobody kept score of. Peggy beat most of the boys, Steve stared at her in adoration.
But for the first time, you noticed Bucky looking at you.
You remembered turning around that day, thinking he’d been looking at Steve and Peggy. But…
From the clip, it was clear as day he was looking at you.
And it took your breath away.
You only spotted it more and more as the clips played through.
You and Bucky lay together, heads touching as you held your book above you both, reading out loud. Some of the Commandos had fallen asleep on the sofas, listening to your voice read. But Bucky hadn’t. His eyes were fully on you.
The clips from when a photographer had been hired to take a group shot of the entire team. The video was taken from behind the photographer.
You pointed out who everyone was to Sam and what they were doing. Then you both noticed Bucky looking at you before you turned your head to look at him.
Then something started to dawn on you.
Most of the time whenever you’d look at Bucky…
“He was already looking at you,” Sam said, out loud.
“Yeah…”
Sam had sat on the bench in front of you, stretching himself out as he propped himself up on his elbow. He looked up at you where you’d barely moved from your seat since he arrived.
And from the look on your face, Sam wondered if his bet with Steve wouldn’t run as long as he thought.
It was a few days later, when you were sitting in the living room, flipping through some fictional novels MJ had dropped off for you, that you saw Bucky again.
“Hey.”
You looked up. “Hey.”
As he stood by the door, looking a little awkward, he held a brown box in his arms. “I just…I thought you might…”
He walked inside before placing the box down carefully on the coffee table in front of you.
“What is it? I swear to god, Bucky, if this is some kind of makeshift animal habitat I’m gonna-”
Bucky shook his head, trying to hide his smile. There was only one reason why you thought that’s what it was and that was because you’d both been rooting through Howard’s basement one sunny afternoon before meeting the others at the beach.
That was where you’d found out Howard was thinking about starting an animal sanctuary for all kinds of animals.
“No. No, it’s nothing like that.” Bucky said, slight amusement in his voice. “It’s…after you disappeared, Colonel Phillips…” Bucky had never had to say the words out loud before.
When he’d come home with a box of your things, Steve didn’t need to be told what it meant. The military saw you as dead and needed to replace you as quickly as they could.
“He had me clean out your desk and I couldn’t think about throwing any of it away.”
“Oh.”
Bucky carefully sat beside you as you reached over and pulled the lid from the box. It smelled like the 40s.
“I didn’t even know it still existed until I moved in here. They must have kept everything from Steve’s apartment after he went into the ice. I didn’t ask him where it went or how he got it back. I was just glad to know your things still existed.”
Reaching inside, you pulled out a few old notepads, aged with colour. To you, they’d been brand new, straight out of their packaging a few months ago.
Then you found the pictures. With a sad smile, you wiped the dust away from the frame. A picture of yourself, Peggy, Steve, Howard and Bucky. It had been a rare night out in Brooklyn.
Another picture of Steve and the Howling Commandos with Peggy beside him. One of yourself, Howard and Mr Jarvis. It was grainy, but you could still see the reflection of Jarvis’ wife in the gleaming windows behind you. She’d been adamant to not be in the picture since she wanted a copy of all three of you, too.
Scrap pieces of paper were bundled together. Notes to give Peggy her pen back, find Steve a pack of fresh pencils since he’d picked up a habit of breaking them. He still wasn’t used to his strength. A note to attend the meeting with Peggy and the Colonel on Thursday, a note to run your recruit papers down to City Hall since you’d agreed to take three trainees under your wing, and one final note…
Museum with James, this Saturday.
The ink had worn with time, but the sentiment had only grown.
He’d asked you to the new museum exhibit. He’d asked you that day. That morning.
“There’s also this.”
You turned and looked at Bucky before looking down at his hands. Your notebook. The one you kept locked in your desk drawer. It took your breath away as you took it in your hands.
All the conversations you’d had with him, all the dates you’d been on together. But after the day of your disappearance, the handwriting changed.
It was no longer yours, but Bucky’s. You’d seen enough of his half finished paperwork that he’d try to sneak into your pile to know his handwriting almost immediately.
It wasn’t listed by dates, but with a line drawn under each section, you knew they were day by day.
“I kept it with me.” Bucky told you. “Everything I wanted to talk to you about.”
You fought your hardest to keep your tears at bay. “These dashes? What do they mean?”
“They’re when I’ve talked to you.”
You were confused.
“The Colonel…he made sure you had a grave. Said it would help people move on if they wanted to. They’d have a place to still talk to you. It’s still there.”
You turned and looked back at the list. You’d seen your grave, once. You’d stand behind the cobble wall, looking at it under one of the blossom trees. You couldn’t bear to walk any closer.
“I knew I wanted to talk to you. Sometimes it was to the stars, but mostly it was to…to your grave.”
You quickly wiped away a tear. Something panged tight in your chest.
An image of Bucky kneeling at your grave, dusting the fallen blossom petals from the top of the marble stone. An image of Bucky kneeling at your grave, talking to you about; Meeting Sam, Working with Sam, his New Therapist, the WS Programme, Steve and Peggy, Steve and Natasha, his nightmare about the 40s…
The images killed you.
“Doll?”
Bucky laid a hand on your knee, his fingers reaching up to push some hair from your eyes. Without taking another second to think, you turned and hugged Bucky. Tight.
“I’m so sorry.” You could hear your voice shaking.
“Sorry? What for?”
You leaned back after a few seconds and wiped your eyes and shook your head. “Everything? I…I can’t believe I missed so much.”
Bucky shook his head. “You don’t have to apologise for that.”
“Feels like I do.”
“No,” Bucky told you. “Never. First, you have nothing to apologise for. And second,” Bucky brushed the hair clear from your face so he could see you properly. “Second,” he repeated, his voice a little softer than before. “You never have to apologise to me. You didn’t then. You don’t now.”
You managed to smile, and once Bucky recognised it to be genuine, he smiled, too.
“You eaten yet?”
You shook your head. “Book’s too riveting.”
You both looked at the red bound book on the coffee table. Agatha Christie. A publication from the seventies.
Bucky smiled. “Why am I not surprised? I’ll make us something.”
Bucky stood, surprising you a little when he placed a light kiss to the top of your head as he did so before walking towards the kitchen. “Do I wanna know how you found it?”
You smiled, following him with your book in hand. “MJ brought them over. Peter must have told her I was bored and she said her aunt had most of these books just laying in her attic taking up space. Told me I could have them.”
“How far are you?” Bucky was moving around the kitchen as you sat down at the kitchen island, watching him.
“Couple of chapters. Why?”
Bucky paused for a second and smiled. “Read it to me.”
“Are you sure?” You asked, already opening the book up.
He nodded. “I’m sure. I’ve missed hearing you read.”
You couldn’t ignore the butterflies that erupted in your stomach at hearing him say that. So, unable to hide your smile, you read outloud. And every time you tried to sneak a glance at him, you found him already looking at you.
It was a few more weeks before you actually asked him about it. About the way he’s always looked at you. And it had been after you’d watched Annie.
He’d been looking at you throughout the movie, and a few times you’d caught him, a light blush dusting his cheeks. But when you were both in the kitchen, cooking a meal together with the radio playing lightly in the background, you finally mentioned it.
“You’re gonna cut your fingers if you don’t pay attention.”
“I am paying attention,” Bucky said as he continued to chop.
“You’re staring again.”
Bucky smiled. “Can’t help it.”
You just looked at him and rolled your eyes lightly before turning around and dumping the chopped carrots into the pot.
“Fine. But don’t come running to me when you start bleeding.”
Bucky just held up his hand. “Can’t bleed.”
You looked up. He had you there.
“Do you wanna peel the sprouts?” You asked for the bowl on the kitchen island.
Dumping what he’d already chopped into the pot with yours, he came to stand beside you before picking each sprout out, peeling away a few of their layers.
But as time slowly passed by, Bucky’s presence becoming a true comfort to you, he stopped what he was doing before he silently took your hand in his.
“Bucky.”
“Dance with me. We don’t get to do this anymore.”
You sighed, but still agreed. And it wasn’t long before your brain took you back to that dance hall in London. The scent of Bucky’s aftershave consuming your senses in such a way you’d know you’d be able to still faintly smell him when he’d long left the room. His touch burned into your skin through your clothes, and the rhythm of your heart joined his.
“Can I ask you a question?”
“Always, doll.”
You smiled and leaned back a little in order to see his face. “It’s about your staring. You’re always looking at me. Why?”
“Straight to the point. I like it.”
You suppressed your laugh and hit it in the chest. “I’m being serious. Why? I didn't think I noticed it until I watched our home videos.”
“You’ve watched the home videos?”
You nodded. “Yeah. There were only a few clips that I could get fed through the film reel. But…you’re always looking at me.”
His smile softened. “That’s because you’re beautiful.”
You laughed. “Bucky, I’m being serious.”
He looked a little hurt. “So am I.”
You knew it had hit you, what he truly meant. You just hadn’t been expecting it to hit you so hard.
“Buck…”
“I’m always looking because I think you’re the most beautiful woman I’ve ever seen, doll.” Bucky told you, truthfully.
The song crackled and changed over the radio but neither of you stopped dancing together. Your hand was still firmly in his, your body was still flushed against him.
“I know you haven’t seen the last seventy years…but I have. No woman compares to you, Y/n. Not a single one…”
Bucky’s voice trailed away as he laid himself bare for you. Your heart was thumping in your ears, your lips parted and took in what air you could, which wasn’t much. And just as the walls around both of you started to fade away and the music became nothing more than soundwaves, you felt yourself lean closer to him.
“Doll…”
“James…”
It seemed to take forever for his lips to meet with yours, but once they did, there wasn’t a chance in all of the universe that you’d let yourself forget the feeling of his kiss.
His hand that wrapped around your lower back and held you in by your hips, tightened. With his other hand guiding your arm around his shoulders, he was quick to hold you closer to him; if that was even possible.
As your hands came to hold his face, his lips moving to kiss you even more, he lifted you from the floor a little.
By the time you both broke away for air, your eyes remained closed as his head rested against yours.
“Please tell me this isn’t just a one time thing,” Bucky asked you.
You shook your head, a little out of breath. “No. This…this isn’t just a one time thing.”
“Good.” He told you before finally opening his eyes to look at you. “I’ve waited more than seventy years to kiss you.”
Your hands linked around his neck as he stood there with you in his arms. “Was it worth the wait?”
A slight chuckle left Bucky. “Oh, most definitely, doll.”
He didn’t wait another second before capturing your lips in another kiss. He would have waited a thousand lifetimes for you, but he didn’t have to. You were alive, you were breathing, and you were kissing him back.
It wouldn’t be long before he’d tell you how deep his feelings ran for you. But you’d surprise him that day by beating him to it. Even if the last seventy years had been nothing but a blink of the eye for you, it had been almost a hundred for Bucky.
You loved him too much to make him wait any longer.
#bucky barnes x reader#bucky barnes#bucky barnes x you#bucky x reader#bucky fic#bucky fluff#bucky x you#bucky barnes fic#bucky angst#40s bucky#james buchanan barnes#james bucky buchanan barnes#james bucky barnes#the winter soldier#james buchanan bucky barnes#marvel#mcu#marvel x reader#plantonic!Sam Wilson#howling commandos#fluff#kissing#falling in love#life with bucky in the 40s#meant to be#bucky barnes meant to be#bucky
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Comprehensive Lexicon Guide for First-Time SW Fic Readers:
Flimsi/Flimsiplast = Paper
Flimsiwork/Datawork = Paperwork
Stylus = Pen
Datapad = Tablet
Comlink/Comm = Communication Device/Phone
Binders = Handcuffs
Chronometer = Clock
Spectacles = Eyeglasses
Chrono = Watch
Conservator = Refrigerator
Caf = Coffee
Nerfburger = Hamburger
Blue milk = Milk (literally blue)
Hubba chips = French Fries
Sweet roll = Doughnut
Flatcakes = Pancakes
Tabac = Tobacco
HoloNet = World Wide Web
Holovision/HoloTV = Television
Holodrama/Holovids = Movie/Videos
Holocamera/Holocam = Camera
Holomap = three-dimensional map
Holojournal = Newspaper
Holocube = Picture frame
Holotable = Projector
Holoscanner = X-ray machine
Holojournalist = Reporter
Flatholo/Holograph = Photograph
Sonic Damper = Active Noise Cancellation
Refresher/Fresher= Bathroom
Sonic Bath = Bath
Sanisteam/Sonic shower = Waterless Shower
Hydrospanner = Wrench
Hydro Flask = Water Bottle
Power Cell/Energy Cell = Batteries
Authorization Chip = Decryption key
Datatape = Disk
Datastick = Flash drive
(Personal) Com Code = Phone number
Datachip = SD Card
Synthflesh = Synthetic skin
Glowrod = Flashlight
Sparkstick = Match
Slugthrower = Gun
Slug = Bullet
Vibroblade = a blade that can vibrate at high frequencies, increasing its cutting power and penetrating ability (tactical knife)
Rangefinder = Rifle scope
Turbolaser = Cannon
Ion pike/Vibropike = Spear
Electro Staff = Stun baton
Blaster = Pistol/Rifle
Stun Blaster = similar to a Taser
Landspeeder/Airspeeder/Speeder = Car
Turbolift = Elevator
Slideramp = Escalator
Starfighter = Fighter jet
Rotorcraft = Helicopter
Hoverpack/Jetpack= Jet pack
Speeder Bike = Motorcycle
Skylane = Traffic lane
Railspeeder/Hovertrain = Train
Power Chair/Hoverchair= Wheelchair
Windscreen = Windshield
Podracing = Car racing
Dejarik = Chess
Sabacc = Poker and Blackjack combined
Galactic Rebels = Combat simulator
B'shingh = Dungeons and dragons
Jizz = Jazz music
Wailer = Singer (ie. Jizz Wailer)
Cantina = Bar or Pup
Para Sailing = Paragliding
Aurebesh = Alphabet
Credits = Money
Sleeping Pallet = Bedroll
Naming Day = Birthday
Youngling = Child
Galactic Basic Standard/ Basic = English
Medkit/Medpac = First aid kit
Hypo = Syringe
Medic/Healer = Doctor
Medcenter = Hospital
Bactapatch = Bandaid
Nanoweave = Fabric
Transparisteel = Glass
Plastifoam = Packing material
Durasteel = Steel
Plasteel = Plastic
Duracrete = Concrete
Slicer = Hacker (slicing = hacking)
Identikit = Passport
Minder = Therapist
Synthleather = Vinyl
Viewport = Window
Cooling Unit = Air-conditioning
Honeydarter = Bee
Slythmonger = Drugdealer
Spice = Drugs
Stimpill = Caffeine pill
Power Socket = Plug
Cutters = Scissors
Cycle = Day
Standard Cycle = 24h
Standard Week = 5 days
Standard Month = 35 standard days
Standard Year = approx. ten months
Tenday = literally ten days
Cigarras/Smokes = Cigarettes
Click = Kilometer or 'a moment'
Parsec = a unit of distance
Tweezers/Clanker/tin head/tinnie = Droid
Separatist = Seppie
Promise Ring = Wedding Ring
Body Glove = Jumpsuit
Slicksuit = Wet suit
Civvies = Civilian clothing
Carbonite = a metal alloy used to freeze a person in a state of hibernation
Hyperdrive = device that allows a starship to travel faster than lightspeed
Moisture vaporator = device that can extract water from the air, commonly used on tatooine
Glareshades = Sunglasses
Gasser = Gas Oven
Repulsorlift = technology that can create an anti-gravity field and is used for levitating heavy objects
Heating unit = Heater
Utility Droid = Roomba
Sunbonnet = a Clone trooper helmet
Bad Batcher = a defective Clone Trooper
Banthabrain = birdbrain/ a stupid person
Bantha fodder = waste of space/nonsense
Blast! = word of exclamation
Blasted! = s.o in anger or annoyance
Blaster-brained = dimwitted
Blaster fodder = cannon fodder
Blast off = Piss off
Brainless = Stupid
Bug/Bugger = used to refer to Geonosians
Forceforsaken = godforsaken
Full of Poodoo = full of shit
Poodoo = Shit
Kriff = Fuck
Jedi scum = derogatory term for jedi
Kark = derogatory expletive
Larty = LAAT/i gunship
Laserbrain = insult
Meat droid = derogatory term for Clone Troopers
Redrobes = Palpatines guard
Rookie/Shinie = newly recruited Trooper
Scum = insult to refer to bounty hunters/rebels
Sharpie = Sharp-witted
Sithspawn/Sithspit/Hellspawn! = expletive
Sleemo = Slimeball
Son of a bantha = insult
Wizard! = Cool
Spaced = dead
Hutt-spawn = Bastard
Karabast = exclamation of dismay
Stang = Crap
Buckethead/Bucketbrain = derogatory term for Stormtroopers
Bucket = Helmet
Nat-born = Natural Born
Roger Roger = affirmative/copy that
Droid poppers = EMP grenade
Sitrep = short for situation report
Backwater Planet = any planet that isn't part of the core system
Holocron = device that can project a three-dimensional image of a person/object and is used for communication or entertainment.
Kessel Run = a risky Operation. Commonly used as a metaphor in impossible situations.
Thermal Detonator= device that can create a powerful explosion like a grenade or bomb
Ray Shield/Energy Shield = creates a (protective) barrier
Rebreather = device that allows a person to breathe underwater or in toxic environments
Phrases:
Wild goose chase = wild bantha chase
That's bantha shit = that's bullshit
As slippery as a greased Dug = untrustworthy
Credit for your thoughts = penny for your thoughts
Cut the poodoo = cut the crap
to get your gills in a twist = get upset about something
Holy mother of meteors = holy mother of god
Oh my skies/ Oh my stars = exclamation of surprise
Stars' end! = exclamation of disbelief
What in the blue blazes = exclamation
When Geonosis freezes over/When it snows on tatooine = extremely unlikely
Who pissed in your power supply = who pissed you off
Blast it = damn it
By the maker = exclamation of surprise
Great karking Dragon = expression of disbelief
Lothcat got your tongue = equivalent of 'cat got your tongue?'
Sod it = expression of frustration
#shitpost incoming#I'm converting my friend into a star wars fan so I thought why not make a dictionary for every new fic reader lmao#star wars#writing star wars#star wars languages#star wars lore#im definitely missing some but these are words I've seen most commonly used in fanfic#userlumi#writing star wars fic#aurebesh#galactic basic Standard#as long as one person finds this post helpful it was worth it#youre all welcome to add to it#im stopping now coz otherwise I'mma clog the dash
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Preloader (2018)
#sci-fi#art#cyberpunk#ui#graphics#abstract#digital#digital art#gui#scope#seal#magic#magic seal#high tech#illustration#hud#graphic#projection#mapping#street art#projector#projection mapping#videograffiti#video graffiti#preloader
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fem reader. nsfwish. you ride anaxa while stargazing.
i
"you brought me here to see the stars," you say, reclining back on the cool marble of the dome's floor. your crystalline lashes catch the moonlight.
it's cloudy tonight. your fingers trace the edge of the starmap projector.
"no," anaxa answers softly, setting his coat beside you before lowering himself down. "i brought you here to be seen."
you turn to look at him. you never smile wide, but tonight, it’s nearly there.
ii
"you don't need to explain constellations to me, anaxagoras."
"i don't. i know," he swallows, eyes flicking up to the way occasional moonlight wraps around your collarbone. "but I still want to."
your silence isn't permission. it's invitation.
"that," he continues, brushing his fingertip just below your clavicle. you're seated in the way that lets the projector move the constellations onto your body, and anaxa has never been so grateful. "is where orion's belt stretches, when the clouds clear. and just beneath it—" he touches the hollow of your throat "—nebula, shaped like a kiss you forget to return."
you huff softly, low and too close. "you're sentimental tonight."
"i'm... learning," he breathes you in like a prayer. "you're the best proof i have that wonder survives reason."
your kiss him first. he forgets every nebula he's ever known.
iii
anaxa lays flat against the marble floor, stars blinking down at him, and you lower yourself onto him like a prayer.
his hands grip your thighs, thumbs tracing constellations into your skin. you feel like the divinity he is meant to defy.
"go slow," he breathes. "i want to remember every second."
"we’ve had centuries," you whisper. "but this… is the one i'll keep."
iv
"say something," you murmur, brushing a thumb under his eye, where tears threaten but never fall.
he opens his mouth. closes it. then finally:
"you’re beautiful when you look down at me like that."
you let out the gentlest laugh—one he feels in his bones.
"then look up," you say. "and see it again."
v
you press a kiss just below his eye patch, featherlight.
"i've seen you teach ridiculous equations, crush religion, and reject fate," you whisper, fingers threaded with his. "and yet here you are, letting me pull you apart with nothing but me."
"it's always been you," anaxa says, so quietly you almost don't hear. "even before i understood."
the projector flickers, constellations spiraling across the dome. one lands between your shoulder blades.
he touches it with his mouth.
vi
"you don't fall," you tell him, lips against his jaw. "you choose." and anaxagoras—philosopher, skeptic, logician—tilts his chin, bares his throat, and says your name like it's the first law of the universe.
vii
you move slowly, so slowly it’s not about chasing the high. it’s about existing, being, folded into each other.
you press your forehead to his. "say something incomprehensible," you breathe.
"i am completely undone by the weight of you," he replies.
you shudder.
"you’re supposed to say it in logic-speak."
"i did."
viii
you press your palm over anaxa's sternum.
"still composed?"
he exhales shakily.
"only in theory," he mutters weakly.
"and practice?" your lips hover just at his jaw.
"currently unraveling."
ix
he maps you like the stars—carefully, with awe—and memorizes every soft gasp like it's his only truth.
x
you lie still, only heartbeat against heartbeat now.
"so this is the grove's most brilliant professor," you tease softly.
"devastated," anaxa agrees, brushing a hand up your spine. "and happily ruined."
#literally no idea how old anaxa is can anyone pls indulge me if ive made a mistake in “centuries”#can you tell i still havent even gotten to meet him in ampho#also written for my oc should i make a series or smth#anaxa x you#anaxa x reader#anaxa smut#hsr anaxa#hsr x reader#hsr x you#hsr smut#honkai star rail smut#honkai star rail x you#honkai star rail x reader
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It all seemed to start within a snap of Time; the tick of a clock; the drop of a hat; the blink of an Eye.
Just before any of the assembled Justice League could leave the Watchtower, every alarm went off and pandemonium re-erupted across the space station.
"What the hell is going on?" Batman demanded as he and Robin re-entered the meeting room they'd just left.
Constantine and Zatanna were both using several different ways of communication, talking in frantic tone and jumping between conversations without losing any of them. Deadman had disappeared completely. The America based heroes were all getting calls, all just as confused as each other as to what was going on.
Batman pulled up a map on the projector, the one that was shown in the Observation part of the Watchtower, and glared at the red dot that was slowly taking over Illinois. "Constantine, Zatanna. What is this?"
Constantine glared back at Batman, "What we were trying to avoid by calling a meeting today!" He went right back to whatever conversation he was having in Esperanto.
"Yeah, look what good that did us anyway," Zatanna scoffed between conversations, "We were both late and ignored." She, too, had started speaking on Esperanto.
"That's where Red is based," Robin said quietly from beside Batman. "I-I need to call- make sure she's alright!"
Batman put his hand on Robin's shoulder. "Don't panic, chum, we'll get a plan started and then you can all Red Huntress." The boy nodded, but opened his own communicator anyway, likely to contact his team. Batman turned to the heroes in the room. "Everyone!" He waited until all eyes were on him before continuing, "Calm down. Constantine, Zatanna, find out what's going on-"
"Already doing that, Batsy!" the man hollered before jumping into a fourth conversation.
Batman's eye twitched behind the white lenses of his mask, but he otherwise didn't react to the interruption. "-the rest of us need to go and isolate the threat. We'll plan from there. Make sure your comms are on. Robin, get your team ready for rescue efforts and try to contact Red Huntress to see if she knows what's going on." When the heroes started moving, he grabbed Superman. "Where's Deadman?"
Superman shook his head. "No idea. He was gone by the time any of us came back in here."
Batman nodded and let him go. Everyone was on their way to Illinois right now, but there was something that Zatanna said that struck him as strange. He didn't have to wait ong before her three ongoing conversations all came to a stop. "Earlier, you said that Amity Park liked to stay in Illinois. What did you mean?"
Zatanna jumped when he spoke, obviously not realizing he was still there, but she answered him, "The city's been prime for supernatural activity since its founding. On top of the two dimensional rifts, that much magic contained in one area is bound to give it some form of sentiance, especially because most of that magic is death and life focused."
He hummed and left the room with a sweep of his cape. Containing the issue will be tricky if the source manages to move around them. Regardless, it needed to be done fast.
***
It took another twenty minutes before all five on Constantine's conversations ended. He had gotten the same unfortunate answer from all five of them, and, judging by the look on her face, Zatanna had been given the same news as him.
"We tried to warn them. We fucking tried-!" she slammed her fist down on the table, "But we were too fucking late!"
He ran a hand down his face with a heavy sigh. "C'mon, mate, let's go make sure they don't fuck anything else up."
"And help them defend the idiots that started all this? No way. Let them lie in the grave they dug."
"Horrible metaphor, love. And, as much as I hate to say it, we can't let the world get taken over."
"Why not? They've been practically begging for it to happen since Superman was first introduced. That's why the Green Lanterns had to step in and lay down the law, quite literally." She huffed. "Besides, the Realms won't be gunning for the world. They're looking for their child."
"And if they don't find the kid in perfect condition?"
"...I see you're point."
"Good! We're on the same page, then."
She sighed again. "How're we going to play this? Are we running interference?"
"No," he shook his head, "The only thing we can do is keep anyone from dying or attacking."
"Without Deadman to talk to the Realms?"
"Yep,"
"You realize how hard this is gonna be, right?"
"I'm gonna make Batsy pay me in hard liquor."
"Agreed."
***
The Justice League had set up a perimeter around the town of Amity Park, Illinois. They were a few miles out from the town, close enough to see it but far enough away as to not set off any panic. When Constantine and Zatanna arrived, they had made it very obvious that the town and it's citizens were probably very aware that they were there. They called another meeting, though only taking a few heroes away from watch. Zatanna was the one to explain things to them while Constantine kept tabs on the town in case it decided to move.
The heroes still weren't exactly sure what they meant by that.
Zatanna stood at the front of the heroes she'd pulled aside. Batman, Wonder Woman, Superman, Aquaman, The Flash, and Green Lantern stood in a half circle, all very clearly anxious to keep their eyes on the town. Too bad for them, this was her specialty, so she got to keep facing it while they turned their backs.
"They aren't going to listen to you guys," Zatanna said, "Like we tried to warn you earlier, their looking for a child that the US Government took from them."
"The one in the pictures?" The Flash asked.
"Yep," she affirmed, "His name's Phantom, like we said. He's this town's hero."
"I thought Robin said Red Huntress was the town's hero?" Aquaman wondered.
Zatanna pushed down the flare of anger with a deep breath. "Phantom has been operating for several months longer than Red Huntress. she is closer to being a hero while Phantom leans more towards being a vigilante."
"Is that why he doesn't stick around after his fights?" Superman tilted his head slightly in question.
"Yes," she glared, "Can I get back on topic, or are we wanting to waste even more time?" The heroes fell silent and she waited for a few seconds before continuing. "From what Deadman explained, Phantom is technically still a baby ghost because he's only been dead for about a year." She ignored the expressions on the heroes faces. "Not only that, but he's the favorite of several Ancient Beings. Think Primordials or Titans."
"Oh, dear," Wonder Woman whispered. Several had paled slightly.
Zatanna nodded. "Don't attack any of the Realms' people, not even in self defense. We're going to have to help them find Phantom, keep them from attacking the US Government, and keep the Government from attacking them."
"A bit late for that!" A new voice joined the group. They all startled, reaching for weapons and dropping into ready stances.
Above and slightly to the side of the group was a girl who looked to be in her late teens. She had teal-grey skin, a slight teal glow, and flaming teal hair tied in a high pony, bangs framing her face. Her eyes glowed the same radioactive green as Phantom's had in the picture, though less so. She was wearing black pants, a black crop-top, grey knee boots, and a single black elbow glove. There was a guitar strapped to her back that gave off a slight purple glow. Even from where the Justice League heroes were standing, they could feel heat radiating off of here.
"And you are?" Batman asked.
"Don't matter who I am, does it?" the girl sneered, "What matters is that you dickheads took one of ours." She very obviously assessed the small group, looking each person up and down with a frown on her face. "Phantom told me that this place had other heroes, so where were you?"
Superman blinked. "Excuse me?"
"Where were you?"
"I'm, uh, not quite sure what you mean."
"You're talking about when this place was catalyst for world threats, right?" Zatanna stepped forward.
The girl turned her full attention to the magician. "So, you knew?"
Zatanna nodded. "Me and my colleagues were keeping on eye on Amity Park after the rifts opened up last year."
The girl seemed to reassess the magician. "You're one of the ones Deadman told us about."
"You know Deadma?" Green Lantern asked. He was ginored.
"Yeah?"
"I'm Ember." She landed and held her hand out for a hand shake. "Deadman got the Council to agree to hold ourselves in Amity until the end of the day. After that, we move on our own."
Zatanna shook her hand. "I'm Zatanna. We're gonna find him."
Ember glared, tightening her grip, "You better. He's done more for this world than you heroes even know." She turned her glare on the others before flying back up. "And once he's back with us, where he belongs, we'll think about a cease fire." She left before anyone could get another word in.
Zatanna fell into a squat, her hands covering her face. "This is a nightmare," she whispered, "That definitely could've gone much better." She popped back up to her full height. "Well, you heard her. We've got 'til the end of the day to find Phanom."
The group shared looks, nodding at each other before separating to spread the word to everyone else
The first plan was the same one they had for every mission that needed quick recon done. Flash was sent out to get a location. Once he had one, they'd set off.
Part 1 Part 3
#Time Loop: Ghosts of the Present and Future#part 2#dcxdp#dc x dp#dcu#danny phantom#writing#my writing#justice league#justice league dark
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orphic; (adj.) mysterious and entrancing, beyond ordinary understanding. ─── 008. the email.
-> summary: when you, a final-year student at the grove, get assigned to study under anaxagoras—one of the legendary seven sages—you know things are about to get interesting. but as the weeks go by, the line between correlation and causation starts to blur, and the more time you spend with professor anaxagoras, the more drawn to him you become in ways you never expected. the rules of the academy are clear, and the risks are an unfortunate possibility, but curiosity is a dangerous thing. and maybe, just maybe, some risks are worth taking. after all, isn’t every great discovery just a leap of faith? -> pairing: anaxa x gn!reader. -> tropes: professor x student, slow burn, forbidden romance. -> wc: 3.3k -> warnings: potential hsr spoilers from TB mission: "Light Slips the Gate, Shadow Greets the Throne" (3.1 update). main character is written to be 21+ years of age, at the very least. (anaxa is written to be around 26-27 years of age.) swearing, mature themes, suggestive content.
-> a/n: yum. good night, see you next week <3 -> prev. || next. -> orphic; the masterlist.
On the board: a rough, sketched spiral that narrowed into itself. Then—without explanation—he stepped back and faced the room.
“The Julia Set,” he began, “is defined through recursive mapping of complex numbers. For each point, the function is applied repeatedly to determine whether the point stays bounded—or diverges to infinity.”
He turned, writing the equation with a slow, deliberate hand, the symbols clean and sharp. He underlined the c.
“This constant,” he said, tapping the chalk beneath it, “determines the entire topology of the set. Change the value—just slightly—and the behavior of every point shifts. Entire regions collapse. Others become beautifully intricate. Sensitive dependence. Chaotic boundaries.”
He stepped away from the board.
“Chaos isn’t disorder. It's order that resists prediction. Determinism disguised as unpredictability. And in this case—beauty emerging from divergence.”
Your pen slowed. You knew this was about math, about structure, but there was something in the way he said it—beauty emerging from divergence—that caught in your ribs like a hook. You glanced at the sketch again, now seeing not just spirals and equations, but thresholds. Points of no return.
He circled a section of the diagram. “Here, the boundary. A pixel’s fate determined not by distance, but by recurrence. If it loops back inward, it’s part of the set. If it escapes, even by a fraction, it’s not.”
He let the silence stretch.
“Think about what that implies. A system where proximity isn’t enough.”
A few students around you were taking notes rapidly now, perhaps chasing the metaphor, or maybe just keeping up. You, however, found yourself still. His words hung in the air—not heavy, but precise, like the line between boundedness and flight.
Stay bounded… or spiral away.
Your eyes lifted to the chalk, now smeared faintly beneath his hand.
Then—casually, as if announcing the time—he said, “The application deadline for the symposium has closed. Confirmation emails went out last night. If you don’t receive one by tonight, your submission was not accepted.”
It landed in your chest like dropped glass.
It’s already the end of the week?
You sat perfectly straight. Not a single muscle out of place. But you could feel your pulse kicking against your collarbone. A kind of dissonance buzzing at the edges of your spine. The type that doesn’t show on your face, but makes every sound feel like it’s coming through water.
“Any questions?” he asked.
The room was silent.
You waited until most of the students had filed out, notebooks stuffed away, conversations trailing toward the courtyard. Anaxagoras was still at the front, brushing residual chalk from his fingers and packing his notes into a thin leather folio. The faint light from the projector still hummed over the fractal diagram, now ghostlike against the faded screen.
You stepped down the lecture hall steps, steady despite the pressure building in your chest.
“Professor Anaxagoras,” you said evenly.
He glanced up. “Yes?”
“I sent you an email last night,” you said, stepping forward with a measured pace. “Regarding the papers you sent to me on Cerces’ studies on consciousness. I wanted to ask if you might have some time to discuss it.”
There was a brief pause—calculated, but not cold. His eyes flicked to his watch.
“I saw it,” he said finally. “Though I suspect the timing was… not ideal.”
You didn’t flinch. “No, it wasn’t,” you said truthfully. “I was… unexpectedly impressed, and wanted to follow up in person.”
You open your mouth to respond, but he speaks again—calm, almost offhanded.
“A more timely reply might have saved me the effort of finding a third paper.”
You swallow hard, the words catching before they form. “I didn’t have anything useful to say at the time,” you admit, keeping your voice neutral. “And figured it was better to wait to form coherent thoughts and opinions… rather than send something half-baked.”
He adjusts his cuff without looking at you. “A brief acknowledgment would have sufficed.”
You swallow hard, the words catching before they form. “Right,” you murmur, choosing not to rise to it.
Another beat. His expression was unreadable, though you thought you caught the flicker of something in his gaze.
He glanced at the clock mounted near the back of the hall. “It’s nearly midday. I was going to step out for lunch.”
You nodded, heart rising hopefully, though your face stayed calm. “Of course. If now isn’t convenient—”
He cut in. “Join me. We can speak then.”
You blinked.
“I assume you’re capable of walking and discussing simultaneously.” A faint, dry smile.
So it was the email. And your slow response.
“Yes, of course. I’ll get my things.”
You turned away, pacing steadily back up the steps of the hall toward your seat. Your bag was right where you left it, tucked neatly beneath the desk—still unzipped from the frenzy of earlier note-taking. You knelt to gather your things, pulling out your iPad and flipping open the annotated PDFs of Cerces’ consciousness studies. The margins were cluttered with highlights and your own nested comments, some so layered they formed little conceptual tangles—recursive critiques of recursive thought. You didn’t bother smoothing your expression. You were already focused again.
“Hey,” Kira greeted, nudging Ilias’s arm as you approached. They’d claimed the last two seats in the row behind yours, and were currently sharing a half-suppressed fit of laughter over something in his notebook. “So… what’s the diagnosis? Did fractals break your brain or was it just Anaxagoras’ voice again?”
You ignored that.
Ilias leaned forward, noticing your bag already packed. “Kira found a dumpling stall, we were thinking of-”
You were halfway through slipping your tablet into its case when you said, lightly, “I’m heading out. With Professor Anaxagoras.”
A pause.
“You’re—what?” Ilias straightened, eyebrows flying up. “Wait, wait. You’re going where with who?”
“We’re discussing Cerces’ papers,” you said briskly, adjusting the strap across your shoulder. “At lunch. I emailed him last night, remember?”
“Oh my god, this is about the symposium. Are you trying to—wait, does he know that’s what you’re doing? Is this your long game? I swear, if you’re using complex consciousness theory as a romantic smokescreen, I’m going to—”
“Ilias.” You cut him off with a look, then a subtle shake of your head. “It’s nothing. Just a conversation.”
He looked at you skeptically, but you’d already pulled up your annotated copy and were scrolling through notes with one hand as you stepped out of the row. “I’ll see you both later,” you added.
Kira gave you a little two-finger salute. “Report back.”
You didn't respond, already refocused.
At the front of the lecture hall, Anaxagoras was waiting near the side doors, coat over one arm. You fell into step beside him without pause, glancing at him just long enough to nod once.
He didn’t say anything right away, but you noticed the slight tilt of his head—acknowledging your presence.
You fell into step beside him, footsteps echoing softly down the marble corridor. For a moment, neither of you spoke. The quiet wasn’t awkward—it was anticipatory, like the silence before a difficult proof is solved.
“I assume you’ve read these papers more than once,” he said eventually, eyes ahead.
You nodded. “Twice this past week. Once again this morning. Her model’s elegant. But perhaps incorrect.”
That earned you a glance—quick, sharp, interested. “Incorrect how?”
“She defines the recursive threshold as a closed system. But if perception collapses a state, then recursion isn’t closed—it’s interrupted. Her architecture can’t accommodate observer-initiated transformation.”
“Hm,” Anaxagoras said, and the sound meant something closer to go on than I disagree.
“She builds her theory like it’s immune to contradiction,” you added. “But self-similarity under stress doesn’t hold. That makes her framework aesthetically brilliant, but structurally fragile.”
His mouth twitched, not quite into a smile. “She’d despise that sentence. And quote it in a rebuttal.”
You hesitated. “Have you two debated this before?”
“Formally? Twice. Informally?” A beat. “Often. Cerces doesn’t seek consensus. She seeks pressure.”
“She’s the most cited mind in the field,” you noted.
“And she deserves to be,” he said, simply. “That’s what makes her infuriating.”
The breeze shifted as you exited the hall and entered the sunlit walkway between buildings. You adjusted your bag, eyes still on the open document.
“I marked something in this section,” you said, tapping the screen. “Where she refers to consciousness having an echo of structure. I don’t think she’s wrong—but I think it’s incomplete.”
Anaxagoras raised a brow. “Incomplete how?”
“If consciousness is just an echo, it implies no agency. But what if recursion here is just… a footprint, and not the walker?”
Now he did smile—barely. “You sound like her, ten years ago.”
You blinked. “Really?”
“She used to flirt with metaphysics,” he said. “Before tenure, before the awards. She wrote a paper once proposing that recursive symmetry might be a byproduct of a soul-like property—a field outside time. She never published it.”
“Why not?”
He shrugged. “She said, and I quote, ‘Cowardice isn’t always irrational.’”
You let out a soft breath—part laugh, part disbelief.
“She sounds more like you than I thought.”
“Don’t insult either of us,” he murmured, dry.
You glanced over. “Do you think she was right? Back then?”
He didn’t answer immediately. Then: “I think she was closer to something true that neither of us were ready to prove.”
Anaxagoras led the way toward the far side of the cafeteria, bypassing open tables and settling near the windows. The view wasn’t much—just a patch of campus green dotted with a few students pretending it was warm enough to sit outside—but it was quiet.
You sat across from him, setting your tray down with a muted clink. He’d ordered black coffee and a slice of what looked like barely tolerable faculty lounge pie. You hadn’t really bothered—just tea and a half-hearted sandwich you were already ignoring.
The silence was polite, not awkward. Still, you didn’t want it to stretch too long.
“I’d like to pick her mind.”
He glanced up from stirring his coffee, slow and steady.
You nodded once. “Her work in subjective structure on pre-intentional cognition it overlaps more than I expected with what I’ve been sketching in my own models. And Entanglement—her take on intersubjective recursion as a non-local dynamic? That’s… not something I want to ignore.”
“I didn’t think you would,” he said.
“I don’t want to question her,” you said, adjusting the angle of your tablet. “Not yet. I want to understand what she thinks happens to subjectivity at the boundary of recursion, where perception becomes self-generative rather than purely receptive. And many other things, but—”
He watched you closely. Not skeptical—never that—but with the faint air of someone re-evaluating an equation that just gave a new result.
You tapped the edge of the screen. “There’s a gap here, just before she moves into her case study. She references intersubjective collapse, but doesn’t elaborate on the experiential artifacts. If she’s right, that space might not be emptiness—it might be a nested field. A kind of affective attractor.”
“Or an illusion of one,” he offered.
“Even so,” you said, “I want to know where she stands. Not just in print. In dialogue. I want to observe her.”
There was a beat.
Then, quietly, Anaxagoras said, “She’s never been fond of students trying to shortcut their way into her circles.”
“I’m not trying to–.” You met his gaze, unflinching. “I just want to be in the room.”
There was a pause—measured, as always—but he understood your request.
Then, Anaxagoras let out a quiet breath. The edge of his mouth curved, just slightly—not the smirk he wore in lectures, or the fleeting amusement he reserved for Ilias’ more absurd interjections. A… strange acknowledgment made just for you.
“I suspected you’d want to attend eventually… even if you didn’t think so at the time.” He said, voice low.
He stirred his coffee once more, slow and precise, before continuing.
“I submitted an application on your behalf.” His eyes flicked up, sharp and clear. “The results were set to be mailed to me—” After a brief pause, he says, “I thought it would be better to have the door cracked open than bolted shut.”
Your breath caught, but you didn’t speak yet. You stared at him, something between disbelief and stunned silence starting to rise.
“… And?”
He held your gaze. “They approved it.” He said it matter-of-factly, like it wasn’t a gesture of profound academic trust. “Your mind is of the kind that Cerces doesn’t see in students. Not even doctoral candidates. If you ever wanted to ask them aloud, you’d need space to make that decision without pressure.”
Your heart skipped a beat, the rush of warmth flooding your chest before you could even fully process it. It wasn’t just the opportunity, not just the weight of the academic favor he’d extended—it was the fact that he had done this for you.
You looked down at your tablet for a beat, then back up. “You didn’t tell me.”
“I wasn’t sure it would matter to you yet.” His tone was even, but not distant.
Your chest tightened, heart hammering in your ribcage as a strange weight settled over you.
You leaned back slightly, absorbing it—not the opportunity, but the implication that he had practically read your mind.
You swallowed hard, fighting the surge of something fragile, something that wanted to burst out but couldn’t quite take form.
“And if I’d never brought it up?” you asked.
“I would have let the approval lapse.” He took a sip of coffee, still watching you. “The choice would have always been yours.”
Something in your chest pulled taut, then loosened.
“Thank you,” you said—quiet, sincere.
He dipped his head slightly, as if to say: of course.
Outside, through the high cafeteria windows, the light shifted—warmer now, slanting gold against the tiles. The silence that followed wasn’t awkward.
You’re halfway back to your dorm when you see them.
The bench is impossible to miss—leaning like it’s given up on its academic potential and fully embraced retirement. Dog is curled beneath it, mangy but somehow dignified, and Mydei’s crouched beside him, offering the crust from a purloined sandwich while Phainon gently brushes leaves out of its fur.
They clock you immediately.
“Look who’s survived their tryst with the divine,” Mydei calls out, peeling a bit of bread crust off for the dog, who blinks at you like it also knows too much.
“Ah,” he calls, sitting up. “And lo, they return from their sacred rites.”
You squint. “What?”
“I mean, I personally assumed you left to get laid,” Ilias says breezily, tossing a leaf in your direction. “Academic, spiritual, physical—whatever form it took, I’m not here to judge.”
“Lunch,” you deadpan. “It was lunch.”
“Sure,” he says. “That’s what I’d call him too.”
You stop beside them, arms loosely crossed. “You’re disgusting.”
Mydei finally glances up, smirking faintly. “We were betting how long it’d take you to return. Phainon said 45 minutes. I gave you an hour.”
“And I said that you might not come back at all,” Ilias corrects proudly. “Because if someone offered me a quiet corner and a waist as sntached as his, I’d disappear too.”
You roll your eyes so hard it almost hurts. “You’re projecting.”
“I’m romanticizing,” he counters. “It’s a coping mechanism.”
“So,” you ask, settling onto the bench, “Mydei, did you get accepted?”
Mydei doesn’t look up. “I did.”
Phainon sighs and leans back on his elbows. “I didn’t. Apparently my application lacks ‘structural focus’ and ‘foundational viability.’” He makes air quotes with a dramatic flourish, voice flat with mockery. “But the margins were immaculate.”
Ilias scoffs immediately, latching onto the escape hatch. “See? That’s why I didn’t apply.”
“You didn’t apply,” you repeat slowly, side-eyeing him.
“I was protecting myself emotionally,” he says, raising a finger.
“Even after Kira asked you to?” you remind him.
“I cherish her emotional intelligence deeply, but I also have a very specific allergy to what sounds like academic jargon and judgment,” he replies, hand to chest like he’s delivering tragic poetry.
You snort. “So you panicked and missed the deadline?”
“Semantics.”
The dog lets out a sleepy huff. Mydei strokes behind its ear and finally glances up at you. “I still can’t believe you didn’t apply. The panel was impressive.”
You hesitate, staring down at the scuffed corner of your boot, when your phone dings.
One new message:
From: Anaxagoras Subject: Addendum Dear Student, I thought this might be of interest as well. – A.
There’s one attachment.
Cerces_MnemosyneFramework.pdf
You click immediately.
Just to see.
The abstract alone hooks you. It’s Cerces again—only this time, she’s writing about memory structures through a mythopoetic lens, threading the Mnemosyne archetype through subjective models of cognition and reality alignment.
She argues that memory isn’t just retentive—it’s generative. That remembrance isn’t about the past, but about creating continuity. That when you recall something, you’re actively constructing it anew.
It’s dense. Braided with references. Challenging.
You hear Ilias say your name like he’s winding up to go off into another overdramatic monologue, but your focus is elsewhere.
Because it’s still there—his voice from earlier, lodged somewhere between your ribs.
"A brief acknowledgement would have sufficed."
You’d let it pass. Swallowed the dry implication of it. But it’s been sitting with you ever since— he hadn’t needed to say more for you to hear what he meant.
You didn’t know what to say. Maybe you still don’t.
But you open a reply window. anyway.
Your thumb hovers for a beat.
Re: Still interested Nice paper, Prof. Warm regards, Y/N.
The moment it sends, you want to eat your keyboard.
He replies seconds later.
Re: – “Warm” seems generous. Ice cold regards, – A.
The moment it sends, you want to eat your keyboard.
It’s a small, almost imperceptible warmth spreading across your chest, but you force it back down, not wanting to make too much of it.
Then you laugh. Not loud, but the sort of surprised, almost nervous laugh that catches in your chest, because somehow, you hadn’t anticipated this. You thought he’d be... formal. Distant. You didn’t expect a bit of humor—or was it sarcasm?
Your fingers hover over your phone again. Should you reply? What do you even say to that? You glance up, and that’s when you see it—Ilias’ eyes wide, his face scrunched in disbelief, like he’s trying to piece together the pieces of a puzzle.”
He points at you like he’s discovered some deep, dark secret. “You’re laughing?”
You groan, dragging a hand over your face, trying to will the heat out of your cheeks.
He doesn’t even try to hold back the mock horror in his voice after peeping into your phone. “Anaxagoras is the one that;s got you in a fit of giggles?”
Ilias gasps theatrically, pressing a hand to his chest. “Wait. Wait wait wait. Is he funny now? What, did he send you a meme? ‘Here’s a diagram of metaphysical collapse. Haha.’” He deepens his voice into something pompous and dry: “Student, please find attached a comedic rendering of epistemological decay.”
You’re already shaking your head. “He didn’t even say hello.”
“Even better,” Ilias says, dramatically scandalized. “Imagine being so academically repressed you forget how greetings work.”
He pauses, then squints at you suspiciously.
“You know what?” he says, snapping his fingers. “You two are made for each other.”
Your head whips toward him.
He shrugs, all smug innocence. “No, no, I mean it. The dry wit. The existential despair. The zero social cues. It’s beautiful, really. You communicate exclusively through thesis statements and mutual avoidance. A match made in the archives.”
“I’m just saying,” he sing-songs, “when you two end up publishing joint papers and exchanging footnotes at midnight, don’t forget about us little people.”
You give him a flat look. “We won’t need footnotes.”
“Oh no,” Ilias says, pretending to be shocked. “It’s that serious already?”
You stomp on his foot.
-> next.
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