big alpha, big knot💦 😈
𝛼!🌙/Ω!🏹
//cw: dub con implied, humiliation, sadism, omegaverse
uncensored view: bsky
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
i don't do bad sauce passes

JBB: An Artblog!
Claire Keane
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
Game of Thrones Daily
styofa doing anything

No title available
$LAYYYTER

★

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
noise dept.
almost home
Three Goblin Art
trying on a metaphor
todays bird
dirt enthusiast
🪼
cherry valley forever

seen from United States

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@erakubi
big alpha, big knot💦 😈
𝛼!🌙/Ω!🏹
//cw: dub con implied, humiliation, sadism, omegaverse
uncensored view: bsky
I am so tired of short-attention-span, trim-the-fat culture. All writing advice these days is for how to write like Chuck Palahniuk. "Cut 'think', cut 'feel', cut 'wonder' - only action, only pushing forward, show and move and move and move." What if I could emulate this style, and still don't want to? What if I want to write like Henry James, with three paragraphs of introspective musings between each dialogue line? The music advice is, "make it shortform, make it Tik-Tok compatible, make it punchy, hit the refrain as soon as possible." What if I want that 10-minute prog rock piece? What if I want that symphony? What if I want it slow and luxurious and lazy? Movies. Series. Poetry. Bodies. Everything is "trimmed trimmed trimmed trimmed, stripped bare, you have three seconds to win me over, make it airport chic." I don't want to win you over, then, I guess. I want the fat left it. I want the pleasure and the indolence and the indulgence. Fuck this art-advice that's always "your art needs Ozempic."
thank you ao3 for protecting writers and never allowing censorship to plague your platform. we love and respect you for this
Hey guys LiveJournal is rumored to be going down permanently, this guy is archiving pages and communities for people for free if you ask. He has a program to do it yourself but will help you if you only have a Mac and can't run it or something. Takes some time but 100% legit
LJ ArchivrI helped create an application to help those interested in Archiving archive their user & community Livejournals. You can find
It's still up ATM but welp, and please remember that Dreamwidth can import your entire LJ.
i never used this but if i had I'd want to know about this
nyaathulu the nsfw protector 🐱👾🌈✨🧡
he will be protecting all my nsfw works from now on
some creachers i saw online
he always gotta be glamourous
Just a little snippet of some Kagome pinups (full view/more on patreon) wearing some of Sesshomaru's clothes <3
Okay I think I have sufficiently scratched my nostalgia itch lol
『𝓢𝓮𝓼𝓼𝓴𝓪𝓰 Sun & Moon Shine Together • 6th|11:00 2/14』
💜 A Sweet Date 💚
A lovely couple going on a date and shopping on Valentine's Day.
Commissioned by: yeah Fanhualuojin
Do not repost, edit, use commercially or feed to AI.
Please credit the original artist if you share.
"they should be in a healthy relationship with good communication" they should be obsessive freaks who stalk each other and have zero boundaries
vlady's closet
Sometimes victory belongs to mercy and looks like failure
had to share this brilliant discussion - source: X
At the most important moment in modern fantasy, the hero fails. Not quietly. Not ambiguously. He stands at the edge of the world, feels the full weight of evil loosen its grip, and chooses it anyway.
At the edge of Mount Doom, with the fate of the world balanced on a single will, Frodo Baggins does not throw the Ring into the fire. He claims it. The moment every heroic narrative has trained us to expect as triumph becomes instead a confession of failure. Tolkien does not flinch. He lets the hero break.
And yet the world is saved.
This is not a plot twist. It is a moral thesis. The destruction of the Ring happens not because Frodo earns victory, but because mercy extended long before the ending finally comes due. The quest resolves because of a chain reaction of restraint. The decisive force is not discipline, not optimization, not grit. It is pity.
This is where Tolkien quietly dismantles the moral machinery of hustle culture decades before we had language for it. We live inside a story that teaches us effort converts cleanly into outcome. That endurance guarantees reward. That suffering is a down payment on success. Tolkien offers a colder and far more honest truth. Sometimes you do everything right and still cannot finish the job.
Scholars have long noted that Frodo’s failure is not a betrayal of his character but the completion of it. The Ring is not a fair test of willpower. As J.R.R. Tolkien wrote plainly in his letters, the will is not infinite. Power erodes agency. The closer one comes to absolute domination, the less freedom remains. Frodo is not weak at the Crack of Doom. He is human at the end of an inhuman burden.
By the time he reaches the Fire, Frodo has endured starvation, sleep deprivation, repeated physical injury, and sustained psychological terror. Modern neuroscience would describe this as cumulative trauma. Tolkien simply wrote it as reality. Expecting one last burst of perfect moral clarity from a nervous system already wrecked by suffering is not heroism. It is wishful thinking disguised as virtue.
The quest only succeeds because of Gollum. And even that rescue is not redemption in the sentimental sense. Gollum does not transform into goodness. He falls into the fire because of what he already is. The deeper truth is that Gollum is alive at all only because he was spared when mercy looked foolish. First by Bilbo. Then by Gandalf. Then most dangerously by Frodo himself.
The Ring is destroyed not because Frodo conquers it, but because Frodo once chose not to destroy someone else.
This is a devastating inversion of the moral economy most of us were raised to believe in. We are taught to look for visible proof that goodness works. Tolkien gives us an older logic. Moral victories are often retroactive. The most transformative decisions rarely announce themselves as such. They look inefficient. They look naive. They often look like failure.
In the medieval moral tradition that shaped Tolkien, mercy was not sentimental. It was strategic in a way power could never be. Mercy refused to close the future. It kept outcomes unresolved. It preserved the possibility that evil might one day undo itself. Tolkien does not sanctify Gollum. He allows evil to collapse under its own gravity because mercy refuses to force a premature ending.
This alone would be enough to unsettle the reader. But Tolkien goes further. He denies us the fantasy that salvation heals everything.
After the Ring is destroyed, Tolkien insists on the Scouring of the Shire. Home is violated. The saved world is not the same world. The victory does not restore innocence. Frodo returns permanently wounded. He cannot sleep without pain. He cannot fully enter the peace he helped secure.
The modern myth is that collapse will be redeemed by recognition. Tolkien refuses that lie.
We want the hero to stand at the end and receive the moral reward. Tolkien lets his hero sit down and admit he is finished. Frodo does not recover because recovery would falsify the cost.
This is why The Lord of the Rings remains psychologically modern beneath its ancient scaffolding. The story already understands what burnout culture would take another century to articulate. Some burdens cannot be survived without damage. Some systems demand more than one conscience can sustain. Sometimes the bravest outcome is not conquest but survival long enough to make mercy matter.
We live in an age that worships visible dominance. We measure virtue through performance. We reward leaders who claim they can bend chaos through sheer will. Tolkien issues a quiet warning instead. When power becomes the proof of goodness, goodness collapses.
Frodo fails because no one was ever meant to pass that final test.
The world is not saved by the flawless execution of the righteous. It is saved by the accumulated weight of restraint. By choices made without assurance of payoff. By mercy that looked wasted at the time. By patience that looked irrational. By hands that refused the easy kill and kept the future open instead.
The modern fantasy is not Middle-earth. The modern fantasy is that effort always guarantees justice.
Tolkien tells a harder truth. Sometimes the most important moral decisions you will ever make will feel powerless when you make them. Sometimes the victory will not belong to your endurance at all. It will belong to mercy that looked like weakness years earlier.
Frodo does not win.
Mercy does.
And it does not feel triumphant.
That one particular bts picture made me sob, that’s his real dad right here 🥹
my knight you have to live you have to get up you have to put your hand over your wound and hold it there. you have to keep walking and walking and walking because you cannot lay down yet, it’s not time. wipe the blood off your breastplate and look up into the sun. lean on your sword if you need to. lift one foot after another. get up. get up. this would be a pitiful grave.
this would be a pitiful grave.