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#tw: Suicide
cordeliawhohung · 12 hours
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I'm actually crying. I'm not being hyperbolic or anything. Actual tears. God poor Chip and the bathroom scene is what got me. I just wanna hold her and tell her it's gonna get better now.
I was half expecting her to be using the knife to carve the scar off the back of her neck or something. Core you never fail to absolutely RUIN me
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"You told yourself it would be easier for him to clean up the mess of your corpse if you killed yourself in the bathtub." it's probably my favorite line out of the series so far. Like she's about to take her own life and she's still worried about others. next to "It's okay... Marco didn't leave much of me to find." Just so brutal and she's just so broken ): poor girl
"I was half expecting her to be using the knife to carve the scar off the back of her neck or something" <<< I think you are the first person to mention the back of Chip's neck (: glad to see that foreshadowing was subtle yet still there enough to pick up on.
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fuck-customers · 1 month
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why-i-love-comics · 10 months
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DC's 'Twas the 'Mite Before Christmas #1 - "Streaks in the Sky" (2023)
written by Michael W. Conrad art by Gavin Guidry & Ryan Cody
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poppy5991 · 2 months
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Dabi: I’d take a bullet for you. I’m obviously the best league member.
Shigaraki: You’re suicidal. That means nothing.
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samgirl98 · 1 year
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DC X DP Prompt #4
It turns out that one of the things Danny inherited from Bruce was his need to make contingency plans.
Or: Danny's family finds out that he has contingency plans for all of them, including if Danny turns evil and how to permanently stop him
Bruce feels a certain way when he finds out his son has a plan to basically commit suicide.
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neil-gaiman · 1 year
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Hi Neil,
A recent ask has prompted me to ask, given my father also hanged himself and left me with a raging case of PTSD: would you be willing to please tag any suicide-related asks with a tw: suicide? I would appreciate it. (Answer not necessary, and if you can't or don't want to, I understand.)
I'll do my best. I cannot promise I'll remember every time, or even spot it every time.
Also, for people who are triggered, episode 3 of Good Omens Season 2 has a threatened (but foiled) suicide attempt, and a mention of a long-ago suicide.
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justoneotherthing123 · 5 months
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Okay but like he's not working as a video essayist anymore though. He was trying to rebrand on tiktok and the "free advertising" the "Online Leftist Discourse Industrial Complex" gave him made him stop doing that. It's because people keep pointing out that he lied and scammed people that he's not currently lying and scamming people on youtube and tiktok.
On the hbomberguy subreddit there's a weekly thread talking about good youtubers that aren't as famous. It's a weekly thread that's trying to give attention to people with less clout in their community who do deserve that attention. They've been doing that for months. By contrast, they spent five months NOT talking about James Somerton until they found out that 1) he was trying to go back to tiktok, 2) also he was never sorry about plagiarism, and 3) he was absolutely manipulating people with that suicide note.
I know that some people out there consider all criticism a personal and hateful attack, but do you maybe think there's a reason why The Left™ chose to show that this specific guy had two alt accounts? Do you think they chose to show the tweets in which he goes "plagiarism and lies are no big deal, stop being angry about it," "if plagiarism and lies are a big deal then his cowriter did it," and "you people made him kill himself" for some reason? Do you think it may have something to do with him trying to rebrand on tiktok after he wrote a suicide note that made a bunch of people call the people who accused him of plagiarism and lying of being murderers?
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gallifreyanhotfive · 2 months
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Random Doctor Who Facts You Might Not Know, Part 64
There is an entire mountain range in the TARDIS. Ace once climbed a snowy mountain inside the TARDIS, and she used to hide in the mountains when she and the Seventh Doctor would argue. (Audio: The Settling)
Ace learned to fence and swordfight from one of Cleopatra's guards. (Audio: The Settling)
The Fifth Doctor is scared of spiders. He has been known to freeze when he sees them, getting Peri to move them out of his way. (Short story: Light at the End of the Tunnel)
In the aftermath of his trial and getting Grant back to his homeworld, the Sixth Doctor contemplated suicide, thinking "it would be best to surrender; just let go of the rope and allow cold water to soothe him, to take his troubled consciousness away." (Novel: Killing Ground)
UNIT files list the Seventh Doctor as the most dangerous incarnation. (Audio: Persuasion)
The Eighth Doctor has been known to make "little piggy oink-oink" noises when he feels like pigs need to be comforted. (Novel: Dominion)
While imprisoned, the Fifth Doctor was once locked in solitary confinement for sixth months - long enough that when he got out, he was shaky on his legs and not used to daylight. (Audio: Doing Time)
Fitz Kreiner tried to kill a guy named Ed Hill. When this did not work, the Eighth Doctor picked up a gun himself and shot him to death. (Novel: Revolution Man)
The Sixth Doctor's pyjamas are loose and silver in color. They have prints of many different breeds of cats on them, all of which are wearing his signature coat. Mel almost "died of shock" when she saw them. (Novel: Instruments of Darkness)
The Fifth Doctor recalled that Jo once got herself into trouble with a lot of giant tortoises during one of the Master's evil schemes and that the Third Doctor had had to lower himself down on a three mile chain to communicate with winks and blinks and negotiate her release. (Audio: The Last Fairy Tale)
Ace was aware that the Seventh Doctor was not afraid of any monster, of pain, or of dying. He was afraid of being alone. (Novel: The Left-Handed Hummingbird)
The Doctor played a female incarnation of Omega in a school play at the Academy. (Short story: He's Behind You)
The Saga of the Time Lords was a theater performance said to portray the history of the Time Lords (although it was inaccurate). Notably, Omega became "the Hand of Meg," and "Rassilon the Dashing" was "President of Time." The other named character in the play was referred to as "Brother Braxiatel." (Short story: He's Behind You)
While talking to Rose about The Saga of the Time Lords, the Tenth Doctor compared it to fanfiction. Then he said that he loves fanfiction and thinks that Rose should read some of his. (Short story: He's Behind You)
During the Time War, the Eighth Doctor built an android companion named Ria. She was designed to be the perfect companion, to tell him that what he was doing was right. (Audio: Lies in Ruins)
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ozziescribbler · 7 months
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TW: suicide
Statements "James Somerton doesn't deserve to die and I hope he's okay.", "Harry, Kat, Todd or Jessie (?!) bear no blame for James' self-harm and calling them murderers is abhorrent." and "Threatening or committing suicide is often a DARVO manipulation/revenge tactic." are allowed to all be true at the same time and not mutually exclusive.
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merakiui · 1 year
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his blueberry eyes (anagapesis in paradise).
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yandere!azul ashengrotto x (female) reader cw: yandere, unhealthy behaviors/relationship, death/murder of reader, obsession, codependency, emotional manipulation, psychological abuse, mentions of self-harm/suicide attempt, brief mention of pregnancy + loss of baby, vague mentions of binge-eating/disordered eating, angst, characters written as 18+ note - the color blue haunts azul. // loosely based on clingy, codependent bf azul.
the prelude - forever lost in cerulean paradise.
Azul Ashengrotto, a man forever bound in burdensome blue, surfaces from the numbing sweetness of an all-consuming slumber and finds the tops of his hands are littered with deep, dark, desperate scratches. They’re furious and distinct, standing out like pearly teeth on black tile, spotting his pale, paper-thin skin like a child’s poor attempt at proper handwriting. Carefully, he runs a trembling finger over the length of one as it travels from ring finger to the delicate bone of his wrist. A wet laugh bubbles out of him, ink-stained and heartbreakingly pained. He wipes tar-colored saliva from the edge of his mouth, smearing it, and shudders through another laugh. The sound wavers as if caught in his esophagus, pronounced choked and raw.
“Ah… I did it again.”
He sits back on his haunches, small and scared like the squishy thing he once was all those years ago, and inhales a steadying breath. His vision, once narrowed so scarily slim, widens to encapsulate the rest of the sitting room, which is cast in a cool glow from the crystalline cityscape beyond. He spies his haunted reflection in the glass, his hair mussed and matted. From sweat, most likely. It’s unsightly, his unkempt, ugly appearance, but it’s him staring back. 
Looking on with those bewitching blueberry eyes.
Swallowing thickly, he pushes a swoop of silver hair out of his face and whispers, “I fell asleep…again. Right. Again. That makes it—what is it now? Four times in a week? No, not quite… I fell asleep, but then I…”
His gaze slides from the windows to the floor. Lying sprawled and stiff, amidst shattered glass and crumpled, lemon-hued tulips, is the love of his life.
“Ah, I see now.” He runs two fingers over the injuries on his hand. His nose wrinkles once and then twice. His throat is set aflame, constricting like a python coiled around its prey. Blueberry eyes sink in a rising tide, overtaken by tears spotting a weary lash line. “My world… My angelfish…”
He forces himself to stand on rubbery legs. He stumbles once, reaches for the coffee table’s reliable support like a newborn grasping their mother’s outstretched finger, and peers at a shattered portrait splayed on the floor. It’s you on your wedding day, flashing a toothy grin at the camera, while he holds you close, an arm secured around your waist. Clinging to you like you were the only buoy in a rocky sea. Planting parasitic roots by way of attraction, and you were simply too blinded by the charms of shimmering, sparkling cheer to realize. So was he in that regard—struck dumb with a too-large love, unable to handle the full capacity of what it meant to fall into a sugary-sweet romance.
It’s a happy picture, one of many, but then the memories of the many elude him at this moment. He, the brilliant, benevolent actor, struggles to differentiate the real from the fake. What is a smile if not another foggy reflection of something far sadder? What is laughter if not the sounds of a hollowed sweetheart howling joyous tunes to placate?
His fingers curl around the wooden table. It’s too familiar and, as if having touched something hot, he jerks away. Azul turns his hands over, searching for imperfections he’s already found. Slowly, he pivots to confront the body.
“My darling angelfish, please wake up. It’s not… It’s not very nice of you to play pretend. We’ve been over this.” He shakes his head and steps around the overturned vase and puddle of flower-spotted water. He lowers to your height, offering a hand you don’t take. “Please, my love. I’m sorry for scaring you. I won’t do it again. I… I’m getting better, you see. I’m doing it for us. I want to get better. I promised I would, didn’t I? Aren’t I a man of my word?”
You remain there, eyes shut in blissful permanence. Azul sucks in a breath through grit teeth. You’re always so…difficult. Sometimes. Not always. And even when you act like this, he still cherishes you. But fighting is not something he loves, and he wants this feud to end sooner rather than later.
Azul Ashengrotto hates the sharp, bitter sides to his marriage.
“I can be patient,” he says, though it’s more of a consolation than a promise. “I’ll be patient. But, really, being vindictive will get you nowhere, my dear. Haven’t we been over this?”
Still, no matter what he says, you don’t stir.
He allows silence to fill the room to a suffocating degree.
One minute passes. Then two. He drums his fingers along a newly forming bruise on his arm.
Now it’s three.
Four.
Five.
It’s too quiet without your pretty voice filling the empty room, filling the hollow in his heart, filling the gaps in his brain to snuff any other self-destructive thoughts from pushing through.
“I love you,” he whispers, less forceful this time. “And… And I’m sorry. Truly, I mean it. I’ll never put my hands on you again. Never. And I’ll go back to therapy. I won’t skip my sessions. I’ll even take my meds!” A crooked smile stretches across his lips. “I promise. I won’t lie to you. I’ll leave the cooking to you. I won’t touch sharp objects. I’ll stop hiding knives from you. I’ll be honest from now on. So please…” His voice cracks, weak and raspy. “P-Please… Please don’t ignore me…”
Azul reaches out to you, fitting his trembling hand in yours. It’s cold. He brings it to his face, kisses the top of it, and then cradles it close. His shoulders shake, wracked with silent sobs.
It’s cold.
His breath hitches.
You’re cold.
“Angelfish, please…” He sniffles. The tears are already falling in thick, salty rivulets. He’s always been an ugly crier. “Please don’t leave me. Without you I…”
His untrimmed nails dig into your palm, and a great sob shudders through his body when he presses his thumb into your wrist to check your pulse.
It’s stopped.
He scrubs his face with his free hand. A fruitless effort. The tears won’t cease.
Without you, I’m nothing.
He gathers you, stiff, cold you, in his arms and holds you like you’re a treasured childhood plushy who’s lost its stuffing. His reflection blinks back at him, blueberry eyes awash in watery tragedy.
Without you, I’m all alone.
He spies the markings on your neck and his throat closes up. He grabs your face between both hands, searching it for any indication of life. A lie, surely. You’re just pretending. You’ve always done that, putting on acts to keep him and everyone else pleased. You, the best actor, knew him better than he knows himself. Because, in spite of the loose, fraying seams, you took them, poured remnants of your heart into each tear, and stitched them up until they were better again. You’ve sewn him anew when he thought all hope was lost.
So it’s impossible. A lie, definitely.
You’re a pretender, and he’s the captivated audience member. Soon you’ll open your beautiful eyes and shout, “I got you! You should have seen the look on your face!” And the cycle will repeat itself. He’ll pretend to be okay and you’ll follow along with a sweet smile, chopping vegetables with the same knife he used to threaten his own life days prior.
You can’t fool him.
Only you do. And you have.
He peels your eyelids open. Your listless stare pierces something in his brain, wires the circuitry correctly so that Point A and Point B can connect.
With a horrified gasp, Azul drops your limp corpse. Your head smacks against the floorboards, but you don’t groan in pain. Because there isn’t any pain to be felt. Because you’re not going to wake up. Because this is the final act and the curtain has closed on your skillful pretending.
Azul Ashengrotto, a man forever bound in burdensome blue, has lost the very person who once made him feel so whole.
the first vow - to have and to hold.
“We should make a baby.”
In the first month of being newlyweds, you’d told him that. He leaned over to nudge you with his hip while you painted swirling designs on a blank kitchen wall. “Yeah?”
“Yeah.”
“I’m not opposed to it.”
You pulled away from your canvas and grinned. “Neither am I.”
“Sooo,” he encouraged, nodding, unable to curb the glee in his curling smile. “What? Should we make one?”
“Can we?”
“This conversation feels rather circular, my dear.”
“You’re circular.” You stuck your tongue out at him and dipped your brush in a bright blue. “I’m gonna paint an entire field of cornflowers on this wall.”
Azul hesitated at the sudden change in subject, considered the meaning of a cornflower, and snorted in amusement. He came up behind you and wrapped his arms around your waist. “If you want a baby, just say so and I’ll give you one.” He nosed your neck, humming into your skin. Sneaky hands slipped under your loose cotton T-shirt to cradle your stomach. “I once read a statistic that claimed marriage improves the outcome of a pregnancy. Shall we see if it’s true?”
You rested your free hand over his. “If you help me paint.”
“You know I’m no good at art.”
“Anyone can be an artist.”
“Angelfish—”
You shifted in his arms and held up a clean paintbrush. “Anyone, Zul. That includes you.”
He stared at the brush, frowning. “I’m nowhere near as good as you.”
“I’ll have none of that talk.” You rested your head against his chest and peered up at him through your lashes. A pleasant smile softened your face. “I don’t want this wall to be my masterpiece. I want it to be ours.”
“Yes… Yes, I’m aware. But even so—”
“The best things come in two, don’t they? Come on. You won’t know if you’ll enjoy something until you’ve tried it.”
“But I have, dear.”
“Not with me you haven’t.”
Azul laugh-scoffed. “Stubborn,” he chided, pinching your side and shaking his head in disbelief. One hand slid out from beneath your shirt to grasp the brush. “I suppose I can try. An entire field of cornflowers won’t paint itself now, will it?” He winked.
“That’s the spirit! I think blue suits this room, don’t you?”
“I’m struggling to see your vision, darling.”
“It’s a nice color. One of my favorites. And…” You turned in his arms to press your lips to his cheek. “Blue is you.”
He was smiling; he could feel it—the tug of toothy jubilance. “Is that right?”
“It is! I thought that the moment we met. If it weren’t for your pretty eyes, I don’t think I’d have approached you.”
“Ah, right. You thought they were rather lovely, didn’t you?” His hold on you tightened as he recalled the memory. “How did you say it? ‘Sir, I just had to come up to you to compliment your eyes! They’re the nicest shade of bewitching blueberry blue I’ve ever seen.’ You said it like that, yes? And it was the first time I’d ever heard such a strangely specific compliment. Normally, most go for the outfit or the hair.”
“But you liked it, didn’t you?” you say, singing the question like a pansophical siren.
“I did. I…really did. I still do, in fact.”
Your body shook with your laughter. “Then it’s not so strange after all.”
“Not in the slightest.”
His fingers brushed your navel, a fleeting touch that turned giggles into shivers. You put your brush to the wall, but no designs bloomed. He did much the same, meeting your brush halfway, bristles dipped in friendly yellow. Only after he’d marred the wall with it did he realize his error.
You always ruin everything, he thought, resenting his clumsy ways. Everything you’ve ever touched, you ruin.
“Ooh, yellow and blue. That’s pretty. Like sunflowers and cornflowers!”
“But I… Your blue—I completely tarnished it.” He couldn’t help it; the words rushed out.
“What? No way! I like it.”
“You’re just saying that.”
“No, it’s true. It adds something to the blue. Makes it come together, you know?”
Azul stared at the wall, his face scrunched with poorly veiled vitriol. “I fail to see how that logic tracks.”
You gathered both brushes and set them down on the countertop before turning fully in his arms. “Hey, it’s okay. We can paint over it if you want. But… Well, personally, I think we should keep it.”
“Why?” It came out hushed, a broken murmur.
“Because it’s like happiness amidst sadness.” Like the angel you’ve always been, you reached up to cradle his face between your warm, gentle hands. He melted in your hold, weak to the ways in which you often lifted him up. “Too much of anything in abnormal amounts is unhealthy, so we need happiness to balance the sadness. Plus, if this room was solely blue, I might go crazy.”
He wanted to reject your explanation, gripe and groan about how it was much too fluffy and foolish, but you were right. You have always been right with emotions, reading him well enough to pick apart his tells.
It’s your lips on his that brought him back to himself. He blinked when you separated.
“You’re not perfect. No one is. Not even me, and this wall definitely isn’t going to be perfect either. But it’ll be special because we made it. Because it’s a unique combination of us.”
Azul felt himself nodding along.
“So don’t worry. Sometimes mishaps like these are for the best. They help put things into perspective—to show us something we might not have seen before.”
“Like painting a new picture.”
“Exactly!” You squeezed his hand. “So no pity parties, got it? Not unless we’re going to throw one together and have snacks and tea.”
He exhaled shakily, reciprocating your affectionate touch. “Thank you, my love.”
You smiled so beautifully that he was compelled to enshroud you entirely and keep you with him in a cage of limbs. To ensure you’d never leave. To keep you backdropped by a work-in-progress wall forever.
And for the first two years of your new life with him, you remained in that cozy, quaint house, adding details to the wall when you could. The kitchen shaped itself nicely, embroidered in an array of blue hues, accompanied by sunny yellows and frilly whites. Every morning, you’d stand at the counter and cook, ever the early riser, and he’d drag himself in just after the sun had peaked in the sky; and together you would eat in front of that wall, tied together by the bright, beautiful wonders of young love.
Sometimes it was the yummy temptations of good food that brought you together. Other times it was each other, bodies pressed flush. Clothes wrinkling and coming off in heaps. Windows left open in the aftermath to bring in sweet spring breezes. Gathering each other and sitting in the bath, giggling about something silly. More kissing and touching; playful squeezing while washing the other. If Azul’s life had been a tragedy before, then this was certainly something far better. A new chapter in a new book with crisp, unturned pages, each one ripe and ready to receive love in loads.
You fell pregnant just as the changing winds ushered summer in, and suddenly that storybook blossomed considerably, pages stained with all things good. He had pinched himself before just to ensure this wasn’t a delusion or a dream, and finding that it was neither proved that there was indeed tenderness in his world. It was destiny that you two would meet by pure chance, fall for the other’s quirks and charms, and agree to a whirlwind marriage, so swept up in the authenticity of redamancy.
Azul thought his life couldn’t get any sweeter. A perfect wife, a perfect job, a perfect house, a perfect paradise built for two. It was a future he’d only ever fantasized about, an illusion he imagined to be forever out of his reach. But he had attained it, miraculously grasped it with both hands, and from here it would only be days and days of wonder and whimsy.
Thirty-one weeks into a perfect, pretty pregnancy, you fell again. Down the stairs, crumpled in a heap of limbs and broken promises. He stood at the top of the stairs, his chest heaving with the remnants of some animalistic emotion. You shattered like porcelain, a marionette cut free from her strings. The baby fell with you.
Then came the darkness: creeping, encroaching, all-consuming.
Then came the lies.
Then came the obsession with omniscience.
And all throughout it, you’d continue to imprison yourself in his eyes.
the second vow - to love and to cherish.
“You shouldn’t work so much.”
By the fourth year, he had told you that.
You looked up from your plate, which you’d spent most of dinner pushing the food around rather than actually eating. Meals carried out in this fashion, a cyclical routine you dreaded. Ever since he’d purchased a penthouse suite and moved you to the city, abandoning the life you had built in the tiny, two-story house with its friendly neighborhood of faces, your world became the sky: sad and cloudy. Always rainy. It was empty up there, and the luxuries he provided did nothing to fill the holes in your shattering heart.
You couldn’t paint any walls here, for they had already been colored in boring monochromes.
“But I like the coffee shop. Everyone’s really nice to me, and the hours are reasonable. I’m paid well, too.”
“It’s minimum wage, (Name).”
“Still…”
“I make enough to support the both of us.”
And it was true. He’d just opened the first branch of the Mostro franchise, an elegant, high-end eatery stuck right in the heart of the city. Money has never been an issue, not when he was so determined to see each of his dreams through to the very end. You were dragged along through the wild currents of those ambitions. Simple luxuries were no longer sleeping in on weekends or watching the sun rise and set in the garden. Now it was extreme excess and opulence, devouring you with designer brands.
“I’d rather not be home all day. It’s lonely.”
“Jade or Floyd can provide company should you need it.”
You stared at him, your mouth agape. “I don’t need babysitters. I’m an adult, Azul.”
“They wouldn’t babysit—” He sighed, shook his head, and pinched the bridge of his nose. “You’re welcome to accompany me to the office instead.”
“But I like my job. I like talking to customers and taking orders and making drinks. If I quit, I wouldn’t have anything else.”
“That’s not true. You’d have me.”
“The regulars would miss me. So would my coworkers.”
“Darling… Angelfish, I don’t quite care for them and I don’t think they care for you either. At the end of the day, all of you are working a dead-end job, putting up with nonsense from rude, impatient customers who never bother to tip despite having full pockets. You’re not working.” Azul smiled, his blueberry eyes ripe with a strange sort of light. “You’re surviving, and that’s not a quality of life you should shackle yourself to.”
You pushed food around on your plate, unconvinced. “I just don’t feel right about lazing around and doing nothing. It’s not very fair if you’re the one doing everything while I just sit back and reap the benefits.”
“Why not? I hardly mind. Besides, I enjoy spoiling you. You deserve this and so much more.” He made a sweeping gesture with his hand. “If I could, I’d package the world in a little box and give it to you, my dear.”
“We had that once and you broke it.”
His body stiffened, eyes flicking to your mouth. He couldn’t meet your eyes. He’s never been able to—not since that day. Neither of you can figure out whether it was intentional or an accident, or maybe it was something more: an intentional accident.
“P-Pardon?”
“I had the world and you broke it.” You set your fork and knife on your plate, perfectly vertical in accordance with proper etiquette. “Back at the old house.”
“Darling, you know we couldn’t stay… We were due for a change of scenery.”
Furiously, you opened your mouth, tears springing forth, but no words came. Instead, you clamped your jaw and stood from your chair, turning away from the table in a hurry.
“(Name), sweetheart, please wait!” He stood as well, nearly stumbling over himself as he moved to intercept you. “My love, you know I never meant for that to happen. If I could, I’d go back and I’d fix everything so that we’d never have to experience such sorrow again.”
He reached for your hands, but you slapped them away and took a grand step back. “You knew we were at the top of the stairs. You knew, Azul. You knew it was wrong because you moved me away so no one could question it!”
His face contorted with offense, nose scrunching as if he had just smelled something foul. “I did not.”
“You did! You pushed me down those stairs and you watched me. Watched me cry and groan because it hurt and the baby was hurt. You watched and you waited because you knew.”
“I did not!” he said, louder this time, his face blue with rising frustration. “I was in shock, (Name). You can’t possibly expect me to jump into action when I was frozen stiff and horrified. And it was an accident. We’ve been over this before. I’ve apologized numerous times.”
“Sorry, but words aren’t gonna fix anything. See? I’ve said it and nothing’s changed. It’s not words that fix broken things, Azul. It’s action.”
You stomped out of the room in a huff, blinded with tears and rage. You weren’t sure if you were more frustrated with the circumstances or Azul himself, but it might have been the latter when he pursued, insistent like the worst kind of thorn. One that’s wedged itself so deep you couldn’t possibly pluck it free with your fingertips.
You’re not sure tweezers would work either, for the hold he has on you was and still is a nasty vise.
“I… (Name), love, darling, I’ll do better. I’m trying.”
Though he made these claims, he expressed them rather pathetically—his arms outstretched, palms up, as if to show you he was no longer a threat to your mental and physical well-being. His face was in poor shape; he was blue all over, flushed from the rush of emotions, his eyes much too small. He looked almost deranged in a desperate, animalistic way. As if someone was cutting him into meticulous slivers with a precision so painful it would leave him to bleed out for hours.
You inhaled a deep, shaky breath, freezing the red-hot anger for a moment. I have to be the bigger, better person. Fighting isn’t going to accomplish anything.
“Look, if you want to make a conscious effort to be better I’m all here for it. But you have to actually try, Azul.”
“I am—I… I will!”
“I’m serious.”
“As am I.”
“Then please let me do things for myself. Marriage is about fairness. It’s you and me. We have to work together. And if that’s you supporting us with your business and me working part-time for extra cash, then let it be that way. That’s togetherness, not forcing the twins to babysit me like I’m senile or convincing me to quit a job I enjoy doing. Money shouldn’t matter if we’re both making it and we both trust each other to be responsible about it. So, while I appreciate surprise purchases, I’d much rather we do things together like before. That’s more meaningful and priceless to me than materialistic ploys meant to win me over.”
He swallowed thickly. Blue bled into the rest of his scleras. You watched him gradually inflate with relief. “I… I understand. I’m sorry. Truly, I am…”
“Stop telling me that. Show me. Please. And mean it.” You held your hands out. Hesitating, he fidgeted on his feet before gingerly placing his palms in yours. They were ice-cold. “Every relationship has its faults. Ours is no different. I’m forgiving you for the past, but I’m not going to forget and I’m not giving you a free pass either. I want to trust you, Zul, and I want you to trust me.”
“I do…” he began, only to curb himself. “I… Well, you know I worry. I know you have good friends, but when you’re out so late… O-Or when you don’t text me back… I’m always worrying.”
“Don’t.” You smiled and squeezed his hands. “I can take care of myself.”
His face darkened at that, a slew of stormy emotions brewing behind blue eyes. “Still.”
“I don’t worry about you when you’re at work or flying out for business trips. I trust that you’ll be okay because you know what you’re doing.”
“That’s different… That’s—”
“I’m happy that you care so much, but I promise I’m always safe when I’m out. You know this.”
“Yes. But… Well…” He sighed and shook his head. “At the very least, please let one of the twins drive you to and from your destinations.”
You fixed your lips into a moue. “Azul.”
He squeezed his eyes shut, groaning softly. “Yes, I know how that sounds. I know.”
“I’m not asking you to change overnight. No one can. It takes time. Everything does. I understand that you worry, but I’ve proven to you more than once that I’m plenty capable on my own.”
“All right.” His eyes flicked open at that, and without warning he tugged you into his chest. The embrace was constrictive with an alarming tightness that seemed to mean: I can’t lose you, so I’ll never let go. He buried his face in your hair, clinging to you out of sheer need. “All right. From now on, let’s be together.”
You nodded, slow to reciprocate. “No more gloomy dinners?”
He shook with awkward laughter. “No more gloomy dinners.”
You thought you had it under control. You thought you could reel him in and sculpt him from the shards—take all of the hateful, broken parts he harbored and glue them whole. You thought it’d be safer to organize his medication with encouraging notes each morning in hopes that he wouldn’t neglect it. You thought you’d ease into discussions with a gentle approach, if only to avoid stoking the flames of something monstrous. If only to ensure neither of you would scream at each other until your voices were spent.
You thought you were making progress when he showed you all of the secret spaces in the penthouse, admitting to squirreling things away out of weakness, out of greed, out of some tangle of complicated feelings. The majority of his stash was comfort foods, each one more unhealthy than the last, accompanied with a tiny notebook he’d used to scribble calorie counts. The pages were brittle and stained when you flipped through them; he had been crying each time he documented the amounts. Pieces were beginning to fit themselves together. On days when he surpassed his recommended calorie intake, he hardly indulged in dinner, preferring to pick at his plate. Instead, he would feast on empty conversations with you and those would be enough to sustain him.
Throughout all of this, Azul kept his gaze firmly glued to the floor and tore at the skin near his nails. The tips of his ears were flushed blue with humiliation.
“I hate eating,” he muttered, tapping his foot in quick, anxious rhythms. “I hate it so much.”
“Azul,” you said, soft like linen, “do you really mean that?”
His eyes found yours, glossy and defeated. “I… I…” He shook his head, the truth spilling free like paint dripping from a slain canvas. His arms, trembling and twitching, rose to his face. “No, I don’t,” he wailed into his hands, the sound echoing in the hall. “I really, really don’t.”
You shut the diary. It’s because you love food so much that you hate it, you thought, pitying him and the self-deprecating notes he’d scribbled alongside columns of calculations. Because when you eat, you don’t want to stop. Because if you aren’t thinking about numbers, you enjoy it. It makes you happy. And you restrict yourself and this happiness because it hurts to have any more than the bare minimum. Because the bare minimum also hurts, but it feels better when you have less in your stomach so you can eat the rest in secret.
“Let’s start small,” you offered, placing your hand on his arm. He lowered it to reveal a snotty, teary face, blueberry eyes darting to and fro. “Let’s plan our meals together. If we know what we’re eating in advance, we can avoid falling into bad habits. And meal plans are a good way to budget.”
Wiping his nose with the back of his hand, he sniffled. “I’m…not opposed to the idea.”
You had it under control.
But then the knives would go missing, later turning up when it was most convenient. When he needed a clever way to get you to stay.
You had it under control.
But then you would forsake plans with friends and family in order to help him through another spiral.
You had it under control.
But then it felt like he was breaking himself into pieces nearly every day, at every hour, over the smallest of inconveniences. Working a minute too late. Eating dinner before he could get home to join you at the table. Going out on your own without supervision from Jade or Floyd.
You had it under control.
But then his shadow was stretching too far and too wide, swallowing you in a portrait of possession.
You had it under control.
But then that was at the cost of your sanity.
the third vow - till death do us part.
“Hypothetically speaking, if I were to die tomorrow, would you grieve me forever? Or would you simply get over it and remarry?”
By the sixth year, just a few hours ago, he’d asked you that.
You looked up at him from the notebook in your lap, where you’d been aimlessly scribbling in circles. The lines overlapped, ink blotting together in manic patterns. Originally, you were going to write a grocery list. But now all you had were jagged lines and not-quite-right geometry.
As if you had rehearsed it prior, you answered smoothly, albeit with an edge to your voice, “But you’re not going to die tomorrow.”
“I could.”
“You won’t.”
Azul slumped back against the sofa and pulled his knees into his chest. “Maybe not. I have a clean bill of health.”
Not mentally, you thought, morbidly wry.
“You shouldn’t sound so disappointed. It’s good to be healthy.”
“You won’t care for me as much if I’m healthy,” he mumbled, gazing out the window at the sparkling cityscape with those dull, dreary blueberry eyes of his. “I wish I was sick. Then I could take a week off from work and just…exist.”
You frowned at him from where you sat opposite in a comfortable chair. It was the only piece of furniture he took from the old house. For sentimental reasons, of course. Sometimes you thought it still smelled like home, even if the scent of home was so warped and far-off now.
“You’re the boss, aren’t you? If you need to rest, take some time off and recuperate.”
“I want to, but my schedule can’t afford any interruptions. Not now.”
“Don’t overwork yourself.”
“I’m not.”
The conversation flatlined, only to soon breathe again when he suddenly added, “We should go on a trip.”
“A trip?”
“New scenery would do us a world of good.”
“Oh. Um, okay. Where should we go?”
“Anywhere.”
“Anywhere is too broad. Plus, we’d have to plan it in advance. Make sure everything’s covered. Expenses and whatnot.”
Azul’s expression soured. “Ah. Right.” He hummed his contemplation, drumming his fingers along the sofa’s armrest. “We could go somewhere nearby. Hospital food sounds good.”
You speared him with a sharp, stern look. “Don’t joke about that.”
“I’m not!”
You set your notebook and pen on the coffee table, aware of his powdery hues tracking your every move. “Azul?”
“Mhm?”
Your heart wouldn’t stop pounding. Relentless, the sound skyrocketed into your eardrums and joined in chorus with rushing blood. But you had to tell him. You had to broach this subject. It had been gathering dust and cobwebs, aged by many tiresome years. You couldn’t do this anymore.
“Azul, I think—” You swallowed hard, your fingers curling up into tight fists. “I think we… I think we should get a divorce.”
His head snapped up from where it had previously rested on his knees. He stared at you for a long, silent time.
And then, sucking in a breath, he asked in a fragile, breathless whisper: “What?”
“Um… I… We…” Your chest heaved with your exhalation. “We’re not happy.”
“We are.” He blinked at you, owlish and unwilling to look past the gilded lie. Unable to stop playing pretend. “We’ve always been.”
“No… No, we haven’t. Azul, it’s—really, it’s so exhausting. I’m so tired.”
“Then let’s sleep.” He lowered his feet onto the floor, intending to stand.
“Mentally, Azul. I… Fuck, I’m so tired. I really can’t do this anymore.”
Color seeped from his eyes. His pupils widened and shrunk, and then a wobbly smile overtook his gaunt features. “Angelfish, that’s not a very pleasant joke…”
You could only offer him your most forlorn look, finally defeated after six years. Six years of pushing a stone up a hill, never to advance and never to succeed. This conversation was well overdue.
Azul rose to his feet, his apparent horror dawning. It molded his features into something wrong and fearsome. Something panicked and cornered. “Darling, you’re not serious about this, right? You… We’re just going through a bit of a rough patch, but we’re okay. I’m okay. Yesterday’s session went so well. I’m getting better. I… I’ve done all of this for you—for us! So we don’t need to do anything rash. We don’t need to get divorced. We just need to—”
“You’re not okay. Azul, I’ve tried so hard. I really have. I’ve done everything, but I just can’t keep exhausting the same tricks.” You heaved a dry, tearless sob. “I can’t keep doing this anymore. I want to go back to work, but I can’t because I never know if you’ll be okay on your own. I want to trust you, but I can’t. We’re not communicating. We’re just—we’re playing the same delusional game and it’s getting us nowhere. You and I both know we’re not working. We stopped working the day you pushed me down those stairs.”
He froze, his lip quivering. “Darling, please… Please don’t say that. You don’t mean that.”
“I want you to get better—genuinely get better—but I’m not the help you need.”
“That’s not true. You’re all I need—all I’ve ever needed. With you here, I’m whole. I’m happy. What was it you told me? That marriage is togetherness? That it’s you and me? So as long as we’re together—no matter what may come between us—we’ll always be happy. We have our disagreements, yes, but every relationship is like that. It’s normal, my dear. So please don’t say those things. I am better, and I’ll continue to be better until my final breath.”
“Azul, you’re not listening.” Now you were standing from your chair. “Togetherness is not this. This—” you gestured to yourself, to the way your clothes hung from your body, a size too large, before pointing at him— “isn’t healthy. We’re not healthy. Every day I’m with you is hell. I need a break as much as you do. We can’t keep doing this. Let’s save ourselves the insanity and misery, and let’s be sensible adults. A divorce is the only—”
“You’re wrong.”
The rest of your tirade stuck in your throat. “W-What?”
“Divorce is an expensive, lengthy process.” Azul stepped around the coffee table, his stare blank and haunted. Twin pools of the darkest ocean bored into your skull. “I can easily afford it, but it’s a price I’m not willing to pay.”
Despite what little confidence you had before, it’s all but diminished now. You shrunk away from him. “A-Azul, calm down. You… You’re scaring me.”
“Well, that’s nothing new now, is it?”
“Azul—”
“You want sensible adults? Very well. Let’s have an actual discussion instead of picking each other apart like this.” He peered down at you from where he stood, his head angled in such a way that his acknowledgement of you appeared contemptuous. “So sit back down in your chair and talk like a sensible, mature adult.”
Opening your mouth, you intended to respond. But the words wouldn’t come. They were lodged in your throat, coagulating with raw, rich fear.
“Well? I’m waiting.”
I can’t say anything, you thought, your body petrifying with every passing second. I’m scared…
“If you put just a little more thought into your brainless idea, you’ll find it’s quite…lacking. Divorce ruins our togetherness, splits us apart and condemns us to two different worlds. And if I’m no longer able to cross into your world—if you forbid it and leave my world—I’ll truly die. I refuse to let that happen. So, no, darling, we won’t be getting a divorce. I won’t agree to it.”
Perhaps it was the hopelessness in your heart that forced fresh tears from your ducts, or maybe it was the final straw in your weakening defenses, but the words came bursting out in a hurry.
“I don’t care anymore! I want you to die!”
You slapped your hands over your mouth. Azul stared at you, stupefied.
“I… I want to be rid of you,” you continued, your words muffled and distraught. “I’ve always thought… Always hoped you might just disappear one day and I’d finally know peace… Please, Azul. Let’s end this. I don’t want to be stuck in this cycle. I don’t even love you anymore. I’m just…done.”
“You don’t mean that…” He made a strange sound, a hybrid between a gasp and a laugh. “Y-You’re just saying that. You still love me. You don’t actually want me gone. You love me… R-Right? Please say you do. Please, angelfish. My love… Please…”
“You’re not well, Azul. I think… I think this is for the best.” You turned away from him. “I’m going to stay in a hotel tonight. Please take some time to calm down and then we’ll talk more in the morning. I… I’m sorry. I really do want you to get help, but I can’t be around you any longer than I already have. It’s draining. You’re draining.”
You took one step further and something inside him splintered.
His power was cut, a line between consciousness and reality severed.
You did not love him. You wanted a divorce. You did not love him. You wanted a divorce.
Did not love him. Divorce. Did not love him. Divorce.
Did not love did not love did not love did not love not love not love not love.
Divorce divorce divorce divorce divorce.
Not love not love not love.
All alone.
Alone like before.
Back to the disgusting creature he once was.
You were walking away, your back turned on him.
He was going to lose his world. It was slipping through his fingers, fleeting and frail.
He couldn’t lose his world, for it’s all he’s ever had.
Azul lunged, seizing your wrist and dragging you down.
Your scream was cut short when his hands clung to your throat.
From then on, everything was a blur.
Two blueberry eyes swallowed you whole, entrapping you in cerulean paradise.
the epilogue - there will never be two without you.
“They used to call me all manner of cruel things when I was a child,” Azul admits to the desolate quiet of his penthouse suite. “I was ridiculed every day. I couldn’t even recognize myself in the mirror. Isn’t that just terrible?” He leans against the sofa and exhales slowly, running a hand through his disheveled hair. “But then you told me I was pretty and suddenly the mirrors blinked back at me. Suddenly the world looked just a little wider and…brighter. So bright! The sea swallows so much color, my dear, and so you’ll never know just how vibrant the surface is to us merfolk.”
He deflates with a wet, wheezing laugh. “No one’s ever told me I was pretty. No one’s ever loved me. Not in the way that you did.” Sighing, he runs a hand down his face. Tears track his cheeks; his blueberry eyes exist in a field of splotchy red. “You were such an angel. To love a filthy, hideous thing like me… Only an angel could do that. Only an angel could look beyond every flaw of mine and love so gently.”
Azul lowers his arm and peers at the knife clutched tightly in his other hand. “I never deserved you. I’ve treated you so horribly. I—” He chokes on a rising sob and shakily lifts the blade to his wrist. It presses against his skin for a moment before he’s yanking it away.
“Fuck,” he spits, his voice trembling. “I… I can’t do it.”
You’re a coward, his inner critic berates. A cowardly, clumsy fool of an octopus.
Gritting his teeth, he steels himself and tries again. The blade digs deeper into his flesh, enough to draw the tiniest pinprick of blood. Pain flashes through his nerves, prey instincts firing off commands. He attempts to push past the curtain veiling his thoughts—Stop before you hurt yourself! Stop before you kill yourself!—but then he spies the blue rising to the surface, pooling under the blade, and he retreats immediately. Horrified, he discards the knife at once. It soars across the room in an imperfect arc before settling on the floor with a clatter, just inches from your body.
“Fuck,” he whispers, closing his hand around his wrist to halt the bleeding. “Fuck. Fuck!”
I really can’t bring myself to do it…
He throws his head back against the cushions, eyeing the ceiling. “I’ve done such an unforgivable thing to you and yet I… I can’t do it to myself. I just can’t.” He shuts his eyes, inhales deeply, and opens them again. “I so selfishly took your life, but I’m clinging to mine like a spineless loser.”
Azul lowers himself onto the floor, curling into a fetal position. He grips his wrist in a tighter hold. His glasses are somewhere in the room, likely cracked or worse. He can’t be bothered to seek them out.
“Did you ever believe in soulmates? Ah, what am I saying? Stupid… But I truly think we were soulmates. Perhaps not in this lifetime. But somewhere on a distant horizon…” He smiles dreamily, pressing his cheek against the cool floorboards. “I wonder if we’ll ever meet again. It’s a matter of luck and fate. Sea Witch below, I hate those odds.” Another noisy sob bubbles up in his throat. He shakes with the force of it, his throat raw and ruined. Another onslaught of tears pours from his eyes. “I was r-really happy that day you approached me. I was so happy… More… More happy than you’ll ever know. Thank you for looking at me and seeing me and opening your heart to me. I’m sorry I couldn’t cherish you more than this.”
He forces himself up onto his arms and then, as if just learning how to walk again, rises to his feet on wobbling legs to cross the slim distance to arrive at your body. Like a sinner on trial, he drops to his knees and gathers you in his arms as if you are his Madonna della Pietà.
“Without you, there is no world,” he murmurs, holding you close for a moment longer before lowering you to the floor. His tears dot your cheeks like somber rainfall. He reaches for the knife next, his mind made up. “Thank you for loving me. Sincerely. Truly. You’re the only one I’ll ever love. For that, I’m grateful. Because of you, I was able to know the taste of romance. And…” He hiccups through his bawling. “And it’s so very sweet.”
Blue blood spatters the floor, spilling from a messy gash in his abdomen. The knife is sharper than he thought.
Azul flops onto his stomach beside you, reaching out to run his fingers over your cheek. He inhales a weary breath and agony fills his lungs.
The world is dyed a brilliant, burdensome blue.
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Azul Ashengrotto wakes in captivity. Bandaged, dressed in a plain gown, and cuffed to the bed, he is alive.
He moves his wrist, each of his senses filtering in at once. His other arm is turned over and pierced with an IV. Groggily, he lifts his gaze to the machines humming around him. Blue blood sits heavy in a bag, and he watches the liquid travel down, down, down through the tube. He blinks. His eyes are crusty. Has he been crying?
Assessing the handcuff once more, he turns up empty.
Why is he here?
Why does it hurt to move?
Why are there so many bandages around his stomach?
Most of all, where is his world?
What is this place?
It’s a hospital, yes, but why is he here? He has a clean bill of health.
Where is his world?
It’s when he starts actively struggling against the restraint, his breath coming in terrified huffs, that the nurses file in to tend to him. They check his vitals, run some harmless tests, ask him a few questions—it’s a lot all at once. He goes through the process as if stuck in sludge.
“My… My wife,” he croaks, unable to think of anything else. His heart tightens in his chest. “Where is she? What happened? Is she okay?”
Nervously, the nurses skirt around his questions until, eventually, he loses patience and tries to tear himself free from the bed that confines him.
“Where is she?!” he’s screaming, thrashing on the bed like he’s Frankenstein’s monster—a haunted reanimation shocked with electricity. “Answer me! Where is she?! She has to be here. Please… Please tell me she’s safe. I need to see her—need her here right now.”
They hurry out just as he curses at them.
“You can’t keep her away from me! She’s my wife—mine! If you lay a hand on her—”
A new face appears in the doorway; it’s a man dressed in striking attire. A police officer. Azul stares at him, his nostrils flaring wildly. For a short beat, they simply watch one another. Eventually, the officer nods towards a chair.
“May I?”
“What do you want?” He narrows his blueberry eyes, immediately suspicious.
“I’m here to have a chat with you. It’s about your wife. Is that okay?”
At the mention of you, Azul’s thoughts stall out. “Do you know where she is? Is… Is everything okay?”
The officer lowers into the chair and casually crosses one leg over the other. Casual in the friendly sense, Azul realizes. He really doesn’t like this man. Any longer here and he’ll start trying to build rapport.
“We’ll get there in a second. First, I’d like to introduce myself.” He goes through the motions; Azul is only half-listening, replying when it’s beneficial.
(Name). She’s safe, right? She must be. She has to be. Everything’s okay.
(Name). (Name). (Name). (Name). (Name). (Name). (Name).
Where are you? Do you realize how worried I am? Oh, this must be my fault. I did something foolish again.
I must have tried to hurt myself. Angelfish, please wait for me. I’ll be okay. You’re safe and so am I.
Safe. Yes. Right. Safe. Safe. Safe.
Safe… Right?
Right.
Right?
“Had your friends not called in, you wouldn’t be here right now.”
That brings Azul back to the world. He blinks at the officer, one eye at a time. “What?”
“You were on the verge of bleeding out.”
“Friends?” He’s slow on the uptake. “Jade and Floyd?”
The officer nods. Silence fills the space. Azul wonders when he’s going to open his mouth again.
“What about them?” he asks instead.
The officer frowns. “Do you not recall anything?”
Azul thinks long and hard about this. “I… I was having a discussion with my wife. It was something about a trip. No, not that. Um… Something…important. Something else, perhaps?” He shakes his head, unable to turn up anything useful. “I haven’t a clue. Why? Is something the matter? Where’s my wife?”
Silence is his only reply.
Somehow that tells him everything and nothing all at once.
Somehow he suspects it. His body knows. His fingers twitch with phantom spasms, curling inwards to cut off airflow. The puzzle is scrambled and the image is fuzzy, but he knows.
He knows because he’s already crying, and there’s only ever been one thing that can bring out the inner crybaby he despises so.
It’s always been you.
Azul Ashengrotto is the sole speck of blue in this white hospital room.
And he certainly feels it.
He’s right back where he began: alone and clumsy, an octopus out of water, viewing the cramped, compact, colorless world with his bewitching blueberry hues.
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trashmancer · 2 months
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Okay, I have to get it out of my system. The thoughts I had on what The Dragon Prince did and why, deep down, it repulses me on a profound level. (I’ve shared these thoughts elsewhere but here’s my analysis on Viren’s arc and ending in season 6.)
The season begins with Viren waking from what was teased to be death (and viewers were left thinking he died for a year). He feels free and unburdened and has hope. Maybe things can be better, maybe he can change, maybe he can fix what he has broken.
Spoiler alert: He doesn’t even get off the starting block. From there it is a descent towards despair and his self-inflicted death.
After he wakes, he encounters his bloodied daughter Claudia. This shock smacks back to reality and he sees what he has caused. He realizes the cold truth: his daughter is better off without him so he leaves her despite her cries for him to stay. It is worth noting as he leaves, he openly acknowledges it may kill him—and he doesn’t much care if it does.
He goes back home to Katolis searching for anyone to talk to. He begs to speak to King Ezran and is denied and told he deserves “no mercy.” He reaches out to his son Soren in an attempt to reconcile, to apologize, and Soren accuses Viren of trying to manipulate him. Viren realizes he will receive no help or solace here as he’d hoped, and despairs.
His feeling of hopelessness is symbolized by the show panning to a fly trapped in a spider’s web about to be consumed. The abject image of being trapped with nowhere to go except death.
Next we see him, he is alone in his cell, penning a letter of his regrets, which is not that dissimilar to one's final thoughts in a suicide note. But he reconsiders. After all, this is self-indulgent pain to burden the living, so he burns it. His last thoughts and words gone.
It isn’t much after this moment Soren tells Viren the only thing he has of value to offer is his ability to do Dark Magic—the thing Viren has been running from, the thing he now hates, the thing that ruined his life. Throughout the show, dark magic can be allegorically read as a form of self-harm, done out of fear and trauma while causing lasting scars to the user. And Viren succumbs to it. He agrees. With the biggest expression of it: offering his own body to feed the spell. He stabs a knife into his own chest (reminiscent of Shakespearean suicide). And he dies.
What happened here wasn’t just a blaring example of a heel-face door slam where a character vying to change their life around and be better is coldly denied. It was also a suicide—a glorified one at that.
For a show supposedly about hope and forgiveness and breaking cycles, having a character who for three seasons is striving to walk a different path take his own life in an act of despair when he has nowhere else to go is... well. Sure is something. Nothing good in my world.
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dduane · 1 year
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Unnerving. …But nonetheless worthwhile—not just for the anecdotes associated with the practical advice, but for the reminder about the Thoreau quote: “The cost of a thing is the amount of what I will call life which is required to be exchanged for it, immediately or in the long run.”
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sm-baby · 8 months
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but what would happen if he DID forget his name?
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kcggggg · 1 year
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CULTISTS! in:
"Fluoride"
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batrachised · 2 months
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Did LMM have a good relationship with her husband? Was it a love match?
oh ho ho, this is a bit of a thorny question to answer!
The answer writ large is no - at least, LM Montgomery would not have us believe so. The picture she paints in her (notoriously unreliable!) journals is a rather miserable one. To be clear, there's no huge reason to doubt her when it comes to her marriage, if only because only she and Ewan would know the truth behind closer doors. However, LMM was fully aware when writing her journals that she was also writing her autobiography if that makes sense, and she characterized people accordingly; you could argue she almost cast them in the role she wanted them to play with her keen narrative sense.
That being said, this is not my attempt to argue that Ewan was actually great. I just wanted to make clear that what follows is what LM Montgomery wanted us to believe, which as proven in other instances, was not always the same thing as the truth!
LM Montgomery was blunt from the start in her journals that she did not love Ewan. She claimed the only man she ever loved was a man named Herman Leard, something that his family was taken aback by when her journals were published (questionable point number one!). However, the general consensus of biographers to my understanding is that LM Montgomery was getting older, was unmarried, and wanted children. On top of that, her personal life was destabilizing; the home she'd always stayed in had been bequeathed to a relative whom, to my impression, would not have taken care of an aging spinster relative. So LM Montgomery married Ewan, the minister.
What seems to be a decent enough marriage turned miserable after they had two kids. While it was never a "love match" according to LM Montgomery, she seemed content enough (besides despising being a minister's wife, which required a public role that could be grinding, and her struggles with mental health that followed her her entire life). Then, several years into their marriage, Ewan started exhibiting severe signs of religious melancholia. He essentially believed he was damned to hell; there was nothing he could do about it; and that he was helplessly waiting for the inevitable. This manifested in him being severely depressed and withdrawn for months on end, occasionally popping in and out of recovery with no apparent trigger or explanation.
Obviously, this would be an extremely difficult burden to bear nowadays when we have a much better understanding of mental health. Back then, there was basically nothing LMM could do. This was especially difficult because Ewan was a minister, and so she felt like she had to keep his ailment largely secret. In her journals, she frets about what would happen if their congregation found it, and how she'd take care of her boys if Ewan had to end up going to a sanitarium. This was also after the death of her beloved friend Frede, so according to LM Montgomery, she truly had no one to talk to about this--not a friend in the world.
Ewan's problems reached the point to where at one point, he was driving LMM (can't remember if their children were there, believe they were) around and they got into a horrible accident - and when LM Montgomery wrote of it in the journal, she questioned whether he had done so deliberately, implying that he was suicidal and trying to take down his family with him.
As you can see, this was not the recipe for a healthy or happy marriage. Additionally, I have heard although I can't recall the source that some believe that he resented her for her success and that's why you have the common figure of "husband supporting wife's ambitions" in her stories.
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justoneotherthing123 · 5 months
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Okay, look, we need to talk about this "you are the bad person for not believing the suicide note" thing
You have to assume every suicide note is real, and you have to act accordingly.
"Acting accordingly" means do a wellness check. Find out that they're okay. If you can, send help. "Acting accordingly" does not mean forgive and forget.
If Some Guy has manipulated people and then says he's gonna kill himself because people are saying that he manipulated people, you do a wellness check. You don't stop telling people that he manipulated people, or act as if he never manipulated people.
I'm sorry, i know this is uncomfortable to talk about, but you gotta understand that. Not every single person who said they knew James faked it is mean. Some of them can just read the subtext, and you gotta learn how to read the subtext because it's actually not kind to just blindly believe everything in good faith.
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