Tell me you have ADHD without telling me you have ADHD
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@blaidrwg
Tell me you have ADHD without telling me you have ADHD
Source: adhdadult
THE MAGIC BEGINS - A Harry Potter Challenge Day [02] Favourite book  Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, by J.K. Rowling
For twelve long years, the dread fortress of Azkaban held an infamous prisoner named Sirius Black. Now he has escaped, leaving only two clues as to where he might be headed: Harry Potterâs defeat of You-Know-Who was Blackâs downfall as well. Harry Potter isnât dafe, not even within the walls of his magical school, surrounded by his friends. Because on top of it all, there may well be a traitor in their midst.
I told you I thought about it.
Top 22Â âLittle Joe Thingsâ
I know Iâm two weeks late, but over the course of the last year I have saw Joe Idris-Roberts give some absolutely spectacular performances as Albus. He was funny, thought-provoking, moving, made me cry more than anyone else in the history of the show, and was an all-round good egg.Â
In honour of his departure from the show, I want to share my top 22 favourite iconic details (or âLittle Joe Thingsâ as Iâve dubbed them this year) from his portrayal of Albus. Some of them happened every show, some only once, but together they defined his Albus for me, and made this Albus one of the most vivid and beautiful ever.
Keep reading
Do you agree that Harry Potter (orphan and overall very lonely child) would ever tell Albus that he wishes he wasnât his son? I know people talk about how heâs changed in CC but Iâm interested to hear your thoughts on it.
Yes I agree, Iâm not sure how you can disagree, because it happened in canon? You can dislike it, but this isnât something to be agreed with or not
First of all, of course heâs âchanged in CCâ, heâs twenty years older and a father of three children now, of course that will change him! If he was still exactly the same as he was at 17 then that would be terrible character development.
Secondly, you cannot disregard the context in which Harry delivers this line to Albus. Itâs in the very peak of a huge argument which has come about after, in Harryâs eyes, he just tried to do something nice. He was so convinced the blanket was a good idea, so set on doing this, that he didnât really take the time to read Albusâ mood. Albus doesnât want his dad in his room at that moment. He doesnât want to talk to him and he certainly doesnât want to accept a deep and meaningful gift from him. Harry has misjudged things totally. One of his biggest problems with Albus (which he literally says in words later in the show) is that heâs trying to be the father he needed and not the father Albus needs. Thatâs where we see his being an orphan come into play, he doesnât know what having a dad feels like and he has nothing to emulate, so heâs trying to be what he thinks he would have needed at Albusâ age.
And Albus is difficult. Heâs not making it any easier for Harry, even though we as an audience can see that his dad is trying, however misguided his attempts are. Heâs in a bad mood and he needles and pushes Harry over and over again with his words and with his actions. His rejection of the gift (he literally calls it a âmouldy old blanketâ) cuts Harry so deeply, but Harry perseveres and keeps himself in the situation, and things get more and more emotional for both him and Albus. So of course things escalate, and Albus pushes Harry to say âthere are times I wish you werenât my sonâ. He really pushes him, he even sets up the moment with what he says before (no, I just wish you werenât my dad) like he wants Harry to say it back. Albus is difficult.
Itâs painful, the immediate regret is clear in Harryâs reaction. Because thatâs not what he means exactly. Albus makes him feel inadequate as a father; we know Harry takes on blame and guilt for otherâs pain, so seeing his son in pain triggers Harry to feel like heâs failing him. Itâs an emotional mess and he says those words in the heat of the moment. Thatâs what Harry Potter does, thatâs him. Heâs not the epitome of a perfect father, Iâm not sure how anyone expected that, and especially not when faced with a stubborn and difficult teenager. You donât have to be a parent to understand this (Iâm not) but I canât help feel that anyone who canât see how Harry could have possibly said that definitely doesnât have kids. Or know what kids are like.
Yes, he was an orphan and a very lonely child, but heâs also a human trying to be the best dad he can in a very difficult set of circumstances. He doesnât say it coldheartedly and out of the blue and then continue with his day, which so many posts seem to suggest. The context is integral here, and either you take the time to understand that or you donât, but itâs all there :) those are my thoughts
I remember reading this story of this guy who met his wife at a Star Trek convention but she spoke Portuguese and he spoke French but they both could speak Klingon and thatâs how they communicated through the first few months of their relationship until they learned each otherâs languages
Thoughts about the staircase ballet
Recently Iâve been thinking a lot about the choreography of the staircase ballet. Itâs something I wasnât really aware of before Joe and Jonathan came along, but it says so much about Albus and Scorpius and their relationship with Hogwarts.
When Albus climbs the stairs he comes to a dead end, and has to physically turn round and go back the way he came. Thereâs a tangible not fitting there, not being welcomed by the castle. Whereas Scorpius wanders the halls and thereâs always another staircase that comes up to meet him. Heâs so absorbed in his own thoughts that he doesnât even seem to notice it, but the castle is always providing a path for him. Itâs leading him on and in, taking care of him, guiding him to wherever he wants to go.
I think that makes so much sense, because Scorpius loves that space. He fits there. Itâs where he belongs. Perhaps he doesnât belong with the other students, but he certainly does with the castle itself. Itâs his dream. Itâs his home.
I actually donât think he even realises how it responds to him because his affinity with it comes so naturally. And of course heâs not there to see Albus getting lost in the maze and constantly hitting a brick wall. He doesnât see what itâs like to not fit, so perhaps he doesnât always feel that he belongs there, but he really does.
That scene is just such a brilliant, subtle piece of choreography that says so much about the boysâ relationship not just with each other (which has always been a given), but with the castle as a physical space. So much is said without words. And as always, Iâm in awe of the layers in this play â the gift that keeps on giving.
Re: Messy Scorpius
@huggingscorbus YES to messy Albus! Oversized hoodies, muddy converse, hair like a birdâs nest, destroyed jeans.
But messy Scorpius gives me life. Iâm completely in love with this concept. Just think about Scorpius stumbling over his own feet because he was so lost in thought he forgot to tie his shoelaces. The houseelves go crazy because all of his expensive fairy silk shirts have food stains (imagine Scorpius rambling about Goblin Rebellions at dinner, waving his arms about and knocking the pumpkin juice over). And his winter cloakâs pockets have gone all baggy because he keeps so many things inside. Sweets wrappers and a wrinkled embroidered handkerchief, and broken quills, chocolate frog cards, his wand and a bishop who belongs to Albusâ set of wizard chess. And thereâs probably a muggle fidget spinner somewhere too
bby yeeess!! scorpius has been raised to be well dressed and well mannered and always be presentable, but goddamnit honestly heâs just a lost cause sometimes. heâll leave his sweet wrappers at the bottom of his pocket until he pulls out whatever trinket that has been keeping his fancy, and about four yellow wrappers with Lucyâs Lemon Drops written on them come flooding out. the books on his shelves were originally ordered by either the authorâs surname or the topic it was about, but they end up becoming piles around his floor, the bookshelf soon becoming the home to cliche mugs and tourist-y snow globes and pieces heâs collected whenever heâs gone abroad and been unable to resist venturing into the muggle gift shops. so many his jumpers have loose threads around the wrists (that the house elves are always trying to repair) because heâs constantly tugged and twisting them between his fingers. half a dozen cushions have ended up on his floor from when heâs wanted to sit down there to read, or do homework during the break, or look through old photo albums. they regularly get dragged over to his windowsill when he wants to sit there and watch the peacocks chase the hedgehogs around the gardens, but they never really get back to his bed. sometimes heâs in such a rush to get ready that he buttons his shirt incorrectly, or puts his arms in the wrong hole of his jacket and spends a good thirty seconds trying to get it on that way, and the house elves go mental trying to stop him and correct him before he can leave the house like that.
Protect this bean
Reading amazing fanfiction, then forgetting to bookmark it
enter this into the Google search
site:<url of site where you read the fic> <a line you remember from the fic or character names plus a unique detail>
for example:
site:http://archiveofourown.org/Â Todd Margo pedicure
Google will search only AO3 and tell you which pages contain the words Todd Margo and pedicure.
REBLOG TO SAVE A LIFE
Getting older and then looking at all these teenagers who have to save the worldâŚ..why did I ever think that was acceptableâŚâŚ..theyâre so youngâŚ.let Katniss sleepâŚâŚ.let Harry Potter have a normal school yearâŚâŚ..Aang is literally 12, Iâm twice his age and incapable of 1 percent of his plot duties, these poor children, these poor acne encrusted puberty enduring babies
#honestly!!!#its really disconcerting like⌠being an adult now and seeing other adults not uh#question this or be uncomfortable with children in these situations#like even fictional ones?#i understand being a kid and not seeing it#but being an adult and looking at a piece of media about like#war or some shit#and being like âyeah putting kids in the middle of it is a great idea and messageâ#nnno??? (via @blazednarancia)
ok but did you forget what being a kid and reading/watching these stories was like? because actual real children do not live lives devoid of violence or responsibility or darkness.
kids have abusive families like Harry and live in poverty like Ron, they live in poverty as part of specific systems designed to keep them keep them there like Katniss, they live in situations that ask way too much of them like Aang and Harry and all of them.
My little sisterâs graduating class had a lot of dead parents. There were all kinds of reasons, drug overdose and sudden illness and motorcycle accident and long battle with illness and ââŚ.ehhh probably heart disease? they didnât do a real autopsyâŚâ. For the long battle with an illness category, Sarahâs mother got cancer not long after giving birth to her much younger sister. Not only did Sarah have to watch her mother slowly lose that battle over the last years of Sarahâs childhood but she had to basically raise that baby because her father was busy trying work and care for their mother. Sarah didnât have to save the world but you donât think it didnât feel like it some times?
Itâs like JKR has said, kids donât hear these stories and suddenly realize monsters are real. They already know. These stories tell you monsters can be defeated. That you can survive. That it might get worse some times but you can win. And yeah it would be nice if in the real world kids never had to do it themselves but thatâs just not true.
Harry Potter didnât make me feel like it was fair or reasonable for teens to save the world, it made me feel less alone in my struggles. Reading about kids fighting the world made me feel like I could make it through too. One of the reasons these stories are so popular is that they give you hope, they give you characters to fight along side during the dark and hard moments in your own lifeâwhether thatâs imagining your math test as a Hungarian Horntail you have to get past, or struggling to leave your own abusive family like Harry having to go back to the Dursleys every year, or watching violence and drugs take your friends like the Battle of Hogwarts killed so many.
These stories donât normalize kids saving the world, they tell kids who already have to that they can survive it.
This response is beautiful and I donât think I have anything to add.
also they told me to grow up into an adult who would fight to make the world better and apparently thatâs a generational thingÂ
âWhen I was fifteen I wrote a letter explaining how I felt and that I knew I was gay. But after I had finished it I just couldnât give it to my mum, so I hid it between the books on my desk and went outside - to fly and cry and get a clearer mind. When I came back to my room I noticed that mum had tidied up in the meantime. Of course, the letter was gone. But then I opened my wardrobe and saw that she had sorted my clothes by colours and arranged them like a rainbow, and that was literally the most perfect way to tell me itâs okay.â
- Albus Potter for Sonorus Magazine, Â How did you come out to your mum? (March 2025)
The original seven of Harry Potter and the Cursed Child: Jamie Parker as Harry, Noma Dumezweni as Hermione, Paul Thornley as Ron, Poppy Miller as Ginny, Sam Clemmett as Albus, Anthony Boyle as Scorpius, and Alex Price as Draco. Today, they take their final bows after two record breaking seasons in the West End and on Broadway.
Anything From the Trolley, Dears? gives me major Tim Burton vibes and I drew it accordingly.
An official behind-the-scenes book of the record-breaking play "Harry Potter and the Cursed Child â Parts One and Two" will be published by Little, Brown.
An official behind-the-scenes book of the record-breaking play âHarry Potter and the Cursed Child â Parts One and Twoâ will be published by Little, Brown.
Harry Potter and the Cursed Child: The Journey will be published in hardback on 17th September. It will be made available in collaboration with Scholastic in the US and an ebook will be published by Pottermore Publishing. Rights were secured from The Blair Partnership.
Put together by Harry Potter Theatrical Productions Ltd and writer Jody Revenson, the book will cover the earliest phases of the playâs development, how the eighth Potter story was crafted with JK Rowling and the assembly of its artists and actors.
The publisher said: âWith stunning photography, insightful interviews and never-before-seen sketches, notes, candid backstage photos and more, this full-colour deluxe edition offers readers unparalleled access to this unique production, and is a beautiful gift for Harry Potter fans and theatre-lovers alike.â
One example is the moment a collection of levitating suitcases morphs into the top of the Hogwarts Express. Harryâs son Albus (Sean Rees-Wemyss) is on the roof, facing Draco Malfoyâs boy Scorpius (William McKenna). As the train speeds along a twisting track, with a fierce wind whipping in all directions, they struggle to keep their balance.
Glimpsing a few of the technical manoeuvres makes this scene no less impressive. During intermission, the couple beside me wonders aloud how the actors didnât fall off. Straps over their shoes, maybe, or Velcro soles and hidden handrails?
It took two years for this scene to come to fruition. Many ideas were devised, tested and scrapped; the process repeating until everyone was satisfied. Some pointed out it would be simpler if they ditched the suitcases, but Tiffany and Hoggett held firm.
For Hoggett, it was more than a bit of fun â he had to ensure his performers didnât tumble off the Hogwarts Express and wind up on crutches. So he installed a discreet ridge on each side of the roof, giving the boys something to push their feet against. The mental hurdles were tougher.
At first, Rees-Wemyss and McKenna practiced on the floorboards, then climbed on the prop and did it again. Once theyâd mastered this, Hoggett threw new elements at them one-by-one â wind, synthetic smoke, costumes, sound â then plunged the stage into darkness.
The Sydney Morning Herald
First look at the Australian cast of Harry Potter and the Cursed Child! Photography by Matt Murphy
Look at them all they are wonderful đ