Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
will byers stan first human second
NASA
styofa doing anything
cherry valley forever

titsay
Misplaced Lens Cap

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
Cosmic Funnies

Kiana Khansmith
almost home
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
🪼

⁂
Cosimo Galluzzi

Product Placement

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
Claire Keane
occasionally subtle

izzy's playlists!
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@jimapologist
yooo how do I get out lol 😂 how do i get out of here 😅😭
People don’t hate Jim because he’s a bad husband and father, they hate him because he is a good husband and father. People love flawed men. But they seek out the negative side of that representation. Jim is a Good man with flaws. He is emotional and people don’t like that. He cares deeply for his family and their wellbeing. But he struggles. And because he is already good, people have raised expectations for him. Jade comes to town and he is a terrible person, who then experiences incredible growth, and so when he does the bare minimum, people cheer him on for it. Jim comes to town emotionally wounded, on the brink of divorce, a divorce triggered by a fracture formed in the structure of his marriage when his and Tabitha’s youngest child, Thomas, rolled off the changing table and died. The entirety of his time there is then spent trying to figure out how to navigate the situation in a way that won’t result in his entire family dying, trying to figure out how to support them, protect them, and heal them, but he can’t be perfect in that pursuit. He can’t be perfect, but he can try his best. Jim and Tabitha are two halves of a failing marriage and they try their best despite the obstacles they face. They try their best because they love each other and they love their family. Someone else pointed this out, but I’d also like to ask you this: In a show with overarching themes of family, generational trauma, and breaking cycles, what do you think it means, narratively, that Jim swore off alcohol the day Julie was born, because he didn’t want to be like his father? What do you think it means when the MiY, the “writer” of this story, and very likely the one who preyed upon the temptation of humans to sacrifice others for their own benefit, who is all too familiar with weakness and cowardice, has something to say about how Brave Jim was? Before Jim died, he had to let go of the idea that he could protect his family with the approach he was taking, and he had to put faith in his wife. Despite the tragic disconnect present in their understanding of this strange place, even up until the very end, if he had survived, perhaps that faith is what could have pulled them back together and allowed him to become closer with his family again. Perhaps, if they ever went home, it could have formed a bond that would never break. To quote Eion on his farewell post: “So thank you. And last but not least, to the fathers who desire above all else to keep their families together and heal their wounds, knowing it a sacred duty. Thank you again and see you on the next one.” Rest in peace, Jim.
if FROM weren't so low-budget you'd be calling it a masterpiece and you'd be praising this season finale as one of the best episodes of the year but no, you're all so obsessed with your theories and your holier-than-thou mindset you're not even connecting emotionally with what we're shown on our screens.
FROM's writing is truly excellent, i understand that we're visual creatures and so the writing's not always best conveyed (see above: low budget) but please... we're talking abt trauma and grief and the sacrifices we have to make to get a chance at happiness and you're overfixating on supposed plothole n.8. just stop.
getting something off my chest i do not know why jade didn't piece together WHY the bottle tree was important when victor busted in saying that it was important...it was CREATED by the HOPE of the children & he knew that...i get the desperation, but My GOD!
boyd: victor was right
me:
i feel extremely nervous about this season finale because of Everything, but especially because i am wondering what makes julie storywalk again. she's so opposed to trying anything or trusting the ability that it feels like it may have to be something catastrophic to the point she tries to go back to where it feels like it "started." jim's death/the surrounding events obviously being a major catalyst to the events that lead to the upcoming uprooting of the tree.
Just watched this interview and this tidbit from John Griffin is so important to me because it is how I have felt since the beginning and it is the driving factor behind why I love FROM. Things may be especially bleak at this point in the series, but, generally, when I think about FROM, what comes to mind for me isn't the horror, but the hope. And while there may be much tragedy, the tragedy is not the point- it's the perseverance in spite of it. I believe, that, to have FROM end in total tragedy would be to betray its core message.
(John Griffin: And I think also too, um, it was really important, even in the selling of the show. Um. To convey, like, this is not a show about hopelessness. You know, this is a show about people in the worst of circumstances, finding a way not just to survive, but to live.)
every day of my life i read someone being like “why doesn’t this story just solve the problem immediately and casually? they just drag it out and make it an issue” well. because that’s the Story
he was So funny
not a fan of the way some people have come to view tabitha over time. she isn't and was never meant to be a character who boils down to "jade's love interest." that doesn't mean there isn't jaditha potential or anything, but i have noticed there are people who essentially view tabitha's character as just an extension of jade's at this point. while jade gets to enjoy all the freedom of full complexity even after the past life lovers reveal, people seem to get genuinely frustrated at tabitha's character for...continuing to exist without the constant need to interact with jade. she is her own person and her characterization is done a disservice when viewed only through the lens of her relationship with jade.
was discussing the marielle, kristi, and kenny dynamic with my dad, and he said "so kristi is the B in LGBT?" 💀
1000 years of misfortune upon ethan haters
family portraits
JIM MENTION!!!
Ricky is the most funniest ever