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we're not kids anymore.
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occasionally subtle

Origami Around

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Jules of Nature
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Mike Driver
Xuebing Du
Not today Justin
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
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祝日 / Permanent Vacation
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DEAR READER
Claire Keane
taylor price

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@dandelionfield
neptune.
https://www.instagram.com/p/CAsPoKmgIWQ/?igshid=fyls4d93qbik
In the context of Philippine culture, the Tagalog word kilig refers to the feeling of excitement due to various romantic situations. There is no exact equivalent English term for kilig.
happy birthday, killua!
7/7/2020
7/7 is killua day✨
early morning mist
Some paintings from my project linked here. Also related to the drawings I posted a little while ago!
Photography by Frida Vega via instagram
It drives me nuts that Meruem/Komugi’s relationship was about as explicitly romantic as Gon/Killua’s, as in, it is never actually said that they are in love, but the fact that they are in love can be surmised from their interactions; and yet, only one of these pairings—the heterosexual one—is accepted as canonical. This reception would be less wacky if there were no direct parallels between the two, but there ARE direct parallels. The entire CA arc draws parallels between the Meruem/Komugi relationship, which everyone accepts as romantic, and the Gon/Killua relationship, which is speculated to be romantic by “wishful thinkers”, but by and large is seen as fully platonic
It’s wild. Absolutely bonkers. Meruem and Komugi died together just Killua initially intended to die with Gon. If Killua had gotten his wish and Gon hadn’t been “a jerk,” as he’s been read by many in the fandom, Komugi and Meruem wouldn’t have been the only ones to die holding hands.
Gon pushed Killua away in part because he loves him so much, he realized he did not want Killua to die with him; Gon wanted Killua, who he viewed as innocent in Kite’s death, to live on, while he died to atone for what he viewed as his mistake. Killua, self-sacrificing as he is, could not fathom a life without Gon, and had always viewed himself as nothing but a tool, anyway—that’s how his parents raised him, to be their tool, and that’s the only way in which he can imagine being “loved”.
Gon actually loves him as a person, not as a tool, and thus did not want to use Killua as a means to an end; namely, killing Pitou. But as viewers, we’re mostly seeing through the perspective of Killua, not Gon, in this arc. It’s Killua’s hurt that we are feeling, and for many viewers, the fact that Gon is trying to push Killua out of this literal suicide mission—that’s what this is; when Killua says they’ll die in battle together, he’s being realistic—is taken only as a rejection, because that’s how Killua sees it. It’s established in the fish darts ordeal, wherein Killua is literally about to bleed out and his only regret is not being “more useful” to Gon, that dying for Gon is, in Killua’s mind, the way he’ll express his love.
When Gon says “this has nothing to do with you,” effectively telling Killua not to get involved, that comes across to Killua as a rejection of that love. But in truth, it’s Gon’s way of saying “this is my mistake, not yours, and *I* will die to atone for it, not you”. He knew it would hurt Killua. He wanted to push Killua away so he would live. Before literally imploding, when Gon said, “it’s okay, Killua,” he is trying to offer comfort: the comfort that Killua will live even as he dies, paying for what he perceives as his murder of Kite (remember that one of the thoughts going through Gon’s head upon finding out that Kite can’t be fixed was “I did this. I killed Kite”).
Killua isn’t the only one who thinks that, to love and be loved, he must get hurt. Gon thinks the same of himself, it just manifests differently. When he refuses to give up even as Hanzo breaks his arms, when he allows his arms to be blown off in order to defeat Genthru and thus Greed Island, when Pitou slashes his arm off, etc, Gon is reaching for Ging even as the hand he reaches with is literally broken or severed. He has accepted pain as part of the love that he should be given unconditionally and without pain. He wants so desperately for his father to love him, that he gets hurt over and over again in an attempt to earn that love. Finding that Kite can’t be fixed, to Gon, means that he has lost any hope of ever being loved by Ging. Feeling undeserving of affection, he can’t be with Killua anymore, either—not even in death.
Ultimately, Gon and Killua are in love, but because they have grown up feeling undeserving of unconditional love because of their respective parental situations, they collapse. In their separation, Killua and Gon will both receive unconditional love from family members that are not the parents that damaged their views of themselves, and thus be able to return to each other, open to the unconditional love they initially did not know how to accept from each other. Their story is that of two people who are very much in love, but needed to start healing from their respective traumas in order to really allow themselves to love and be loved romantically without self-destructing.
It’s a complex relationship between two complex characters, and tbh, the target audience of the story by and large just does not know how to handle it, at least in part because when reading shounen, you tend to expect the least complex explanations possible; there’s an inclination to not try to read too deeply into it, because shounen isn’t supposed to be deep.
But as hxh actually offers something a bit more nuanced than Dudes Punch Each Other as of Chimera Ant onward, you gotta discard that mentality. It’s still shounen, but it’s also a love story and an anti-war narrative, even an anti-imperial narrative as of Dark Continent arc, with statements on class and power. It’s not TOO deep, it’s plenty accessible, but it sure as hell cant be read as if it’s Naruto. You have to read between the lines for, idk, a few minutes to notice that at every possible opportunity, Togashi invites you to compare Gon and Killua to a heterosexual couple. Just as Alluka being trans doesn’t have to be stated outright for it to be damn obvious, the fact that Killua AND Gon—not just Killua! Gon returns his feelings!—are gay as hell is damn obvious if you think critically and entertain the notion that, perhaps, over 20 years after having his gay baseball story shot down by shounen jump, the old man behind this manga actually might write some gays
couple outfits ♥
i should have known better than to be mentally ill in high school
people are still patriotic in 2020? grow up? do not ask for what you can do for your country but what human rights violations they are currently committing and why you should hate them.
Frank Wilbert Stokes
Moonlight, Starlight, Atlantic Ocean, 1902
The Phantom Ship, Atlantic Ocean, ca. 1903, oil on canvas
via: Smithsonian American Art Museum
When Kurapika's eyes finally glow red from a positive emotion we're partying for seven days and seven nights
We can all use a little magic
larsvandegoor
john fowles / clementine von radics / georgia o'keeffe / andrés cerpa / josefina vicens
Lads, we've all been looking away from Israel for a minute, what with a pandemic and these world wide protests, but I urge you to focus some of your attention and activism on what they're doing in Palestine right now,
the Israeli government has recently leaked and heavily circulated a plan for official annexation of the Palestinian West Bank (x, x, x)
Although Israel’s presence in Gaza and the West Bank has long been criticised and condemned by the UN and the international community (bar the US and a few other allied countries), Israel is now seizing the chance to make this official. Since the world is looking away, mostly turned inwards because of corona and poor economic circumstances, this significantly lessens international pressure on Israel.
Israel tries to claim support for it’s egregious actions and humanitarian violations by saying that they represent the voices of Jews all around the world, which they don’t. Please focus some of your attention on the voices of Palestinians at the moment, and stand in solidarity with them. Here are some fantastic resources. Be more vocal about this issue, because the media has been almost radio silent, and we can’t let something this extreme pass quietly.