★ 【osu】 「 2000’s shoujo animes in my style 💗💗💗 」 ✔ reprinting permitted (5.29.2026) ☆ follow our YT interview show!

shark vs the universe
dirt enthusiast
YOU ARE THE REASON

roma★

blake kathryn
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
we're not kids anymore.
Stranger Things
h
Three Goblin Art

★
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

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Cosmic Funnies
Jules of Nature

Product Placement

oozey mess
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
$LAYYYTER
ojovivo

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@furuuuba
★ 【osu】 「 2000’s shoujo animes in my style 💗💗💗 」 ✔ reprinting permitted (5.29.2026) ☆ follow our YT interview show!
★ 【osu】 「 Fruits basket!🍙🐱🐀 」 ✔ reprinting permitted (5.20.26) ☆ follow our YT interview show!
Fruits Basket: abusive systems perpetuate themselves, and they will continue to do so until conscious efforts are made by many to end the cycle of abuse
Fans: BuT hOw MaNy YeArS sHoUlD aKiTo Go To PrIsOn?!!?!??!?
fruits basket is the greatest manga ever written almost solely for the fact that from the first chapter we’re supposed to be mystified and curious about these elusive shape shifting boys that are so incredibly rare and impossible and secretive. meanwhile one of the protagonist’s best friends and her little brother are also just casually psychics and everyone seems to be vaguely aware of it??? and they also literally never use their powers to do anything about the sohma family curse they’re just twinning in goth fashion and making biting remarks???
@cuunos
huge fan of the depth of a good purple but another area that draws me is definitely around aquamarine/turquoise/seafoam. you can not go wrong once the green starts getting just a tinge more blue. a gal could certainly do worse than to pull over there and stay a while
something earth shattering going on here
this is why one of my favorite all-time paintings is Ship in Stormy Seas by Ivan Aivazovsky... he was really onto something there
a close up to just... light shining through those waves, makes me feel faint with exhilaration every time
THERE IS A BOAT BY IVAN AIVAZOVSKY!!
Ivan Aivazovsky could paint glowing water. One of the GOATs for sure.
Maybe I'm not a parent and therefore don't "get it", but if my child turned into a bunny rabbit every time I hugged them, I would simply love my bunny son? Like that's objectively adorable, wtf
I miss this show man they make me so happy
Also I need to draw Tohru more she’s so cute
When I first watched this scene, I remember scoffing at this idea. "Really? The curse binds this abusive false God who treats living breathing people like his playthings?" Something along those lines was my gut reaction thought process. It was around the reveals about Kureno and Ren that I started to realize and accept that yes this story was really going to humanize a very abusive character.
Most media doesn't really do that, likely because it's a tough pill to swallow. Abusers in fiction are either depicted as pure one-dimensionally evil (something I'm guilty of writing myself admittedly) or, in the far worse scenario, they're seen as "misunderstood" and ultimately nonsensically forgiven just because they're "family". See Assassination Classroom or most of the Yugioh spin offs for that loathsome second option.
I DREADED Fruits Basket doing the same as those shows... and it didn't. Akito is humanized, the audience is expected on some level to understand her as Tohru does, but she is not excused or forgiven. Maybe by Tohru and Shigure but not by any of the others.
Even still, an abusive character like Akito being understood, being allowed to move forward and heal like the other Sohmas did despite all the pain she caused them instead of, I guess dying or suffering every single moment of her life afterwards? It was never going to be something everyone could accept.
I have seen firsthand that the ending of Fruits Basket alienated some people and that's their business, I can't speak for them or why they may feel that way. All I can give are my words that this aspect of Fruits Basket is really nuanced and interesting to me and that Akito is up there as one of my favorite characters in the series.
I’m not one of those people who finds Akito’s actions justifiable because of her trauma, but I really appreciate the parallels between her and Tohru. They both have a desire to keep their connections eternal and unchanged. For Tohru, this began after her father’s death. Kyoko was so focused on her grief that she neglected Tohru and nearly took her own life. In an attempt to give her mother something to live for, Tohru took on her father’s polite/formal speaking style and became the perfect daughter. The belief that she needs to act a specific way to maintain her relationships spread to the rest of her life. While Tohru’s kindness is genuine, her motivation isn’t completely selfless. She’s nice to people because she wants them to stay. The show portrays her extreme kindness as a strength, but her motive is cast in a negative light. When Kyoko passes, Tohru is scared to love anyone more than she loved her mom because that might weaken their connection. This fear stopped her from moving forward in life. Bonds are not meant to be eternal. Change leads to growth. (TOHRU IS NOT A MARY SUE BTW!!)
Akito also lost her father at a young age, but unlike in Tohru’s situation, her mother permanently rejects her afterwards. This gave Akito a fear of abandonment and causes her to aggressively cling to the other zodiac members. As the head of the family, she believes that she’s owed a relationship with them. She maintains these bonds with extreme force, lashing out at the possibility of them caring for anyone else.
The protagonist and antagonist having the same core fear allowed the story to explore the theme from both angles. Whether you’re convincing people to stay through carefully crafted kindness or needless cruelty, it won’t guarantee genuine connection. Choice > Obligation. Growth > Comfort.
Tohru🍙✨
tohru honda… the shoujo girl of my dreams 🐱🎀💕
🌸
Commission info in bio!!
The Sohma Family: The “Ie” System
Introduction
The “ie system” is a traditional family and household system of Japan that appears to be a key inspiration in developing the uniqueness and complexities of the Sohma family in Fruits Basket. If you have ever wondered how the Sohma are able to do and get away with so many things, with no one outside or within the family trying to stop it or alert authorities, you are right to notice that its highly unorthodox - but the narrative is not without its own explanation and internal reasoning as to why. That explanation lies in large part in the “ie system” and understanding that the Sohma are not simply a family - they are a specific type of family, somehow existing in near perfect form in a world where they are not supposed to exist at all. It is that very premise that makes up the foundation of the plot of Fruits Basket.
[SPOILER HEAVY POST]
Families in Modern Day Japan
So, why is the “ie system” important to understanding the Sohma family? Firstly, we must understand that the Sohma do not resemble a normal Japanese family for the time in which the story takes place. Some readers unfamiliar with contemporary Japanese culture might take for granted the nature of their existence, but for a family that resembles anything like theirs to exist in late 90s - early 2000s Tokyo, Japan would be incredibly unusual.
The story itself highlights this, when Tohru first goes to visit the Sohma’s main estate in chapter 10 after Hatori has requested for her to come speak with him. Tohru is surprised by a number of things, including the grandeur of the estate, its size once she’s inside, Momiji using the terms “inside” and “outside” to talk about the family, when he explains that the estate is in fact even bigger than she initially realized, and when he tells her the family has over 150 living members.
The setup of the Sohma family is something unique and essential to the world building of Fruits Basket and its overall story. It cannot be taken at face value that Tohru has found herself entangled with a family or even simply a large and wealthy family.
As Hatori comments upon Tohru’s utter shock at everything Momiji has said, the family isn’t “exactly common” and understanding that is a key factor in understanding the family overall. In fact, when taken altogether in reference to the real world, Hatori’s comment is an understatement.
At the time Fruits Basket was being written (20 years ago), nuclear families had already been the standard in Japan for several decades. Some would argue nuclear families had been the standard in Japan for even longer than that, but regardless, the “ie system” was officially abolished following World War II and as its systems and social customs declined, nuclear families spiked. The single family home, consisting of parents and their children, had become the norm.
Grandparents living with their grown children was still somewhat typical but it was not under the same sort of strict patrilineal scheme as the traditional “ie”. It was more likely that grown children who had moved out and started their own families would move back in with their aging parents in order to take care of them (think Tohru’s grandpa and her other relatives) rather than living with the parent throughout their life. Grown children leaving their parents’ home to start their own family, as well as their own family register, was the new norm.
The “ie” existing in the form of a large extended family system made up of a main household and branch households (a dozoku) would be especially unusual. Already in the mid-1900s, when some extended studies were conducted on existing dozoku, they were understood as dying out and only found in rare instances in very isolated areas, not even existing in their ‘pure’ form.
While much research has been done on how the “ie system” has had a lasting social impact and persisted in small ways and new forms, its literal formation and existence as it shows itself in the Sohma family was already long gone. In the same way, knowledge of its system would also be uncommon among the average Japanese person, as can be seen in Fruits Basket through Tohru’s shock and awe at her introduction to the ins and outs of the family.
Inheritance & a Family Head
Aside from the basic formation of the family as an “ie” versus a nuclear family, the legal functions of the “ie system” had been abolished, such as the authority of the Head of the Family and primogeniture inheritance, and its related social customs had largely faded from practice and societal consciousness. Due to the family register system and other legal processes and documents it would be easy to discover if a family was still functioning like an “ie system” in illegal ways - for example, if they were consolidating property and power through a single line of inheritance and by “buying in” branch households.
This is probably why Takaya stated in an interview that she pretends “family registers and whatnot” don’t exist in the world of Fruits Basket. Relatedly, actions like the Sohma handling children in the family who had been abandoned by their parents (Kyo, Isuzu) by having them taken in by whatever other family members were willing are the kind of matters that outside governing bodies would become involved with in real world, modern day Japan, but that the “ie”/family might have had sole authority to determine in the days before.
Fruits Basket seems to be operating in a world where the legal system of the “ie” is still the law but culturally most families and general societal understanding have moved beyond it, given Tohru’s surprise and the makeup of most of the families in the story.
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girl godhood is a spectrum 🙏
🍙 redraw for some practice, I’m feeling so rusty