Patricia A. McKillip, from her book titled "The Book of Atrix Wolfe," originally published in 1995
Stranger Things

★
sheepfilms

No title available

Kaledo Art
DEAR READER
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
noise dept.
h

Origami Around
KIROKAZE
Peter Solarz
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣

pixel skylines

oozey mess

if i look back, i am lost
Cosmic Funnies
NASA
Keni
seen from Pakistan
seen from Belgium

seen from Ukraine
seen from Armenia

seen from Malaysia
seen from Ukraine

seen from Malaysia
seen from Chile

seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
@reveurciel
Patricia A. McKillip, from her book titled "The Book of Atrix Wolfe," originally published in 1995
I'm thinking about what makes Will and Mack's friendship different from a lot of hockey pairings and I guess it is the tenderness of it all.
Sure, they bonded over shared laughs, and we might view them as chaotic kids with prefrontal cortexes yet to develop. But the deepest layer of their relationship, I think, is they see in each other something that very few people around them can truly understand.
When Toff said they are respectful of each other, I think he means the two are not just respectful in the sense that they’re polite or get along, but respectful because they understand exactly what the other person carries. They know the pressures. They know the sacrifices. They know the burden of expectations. And because they recognize those things in each other, they treat those parts of one another carefully.
Both know what it feels like to be told from a young age that they’re going to be great. Both know what that greatness demands. Both know that people are expecting them to save the franchise. Because of that, I think there’s an emotional depth to their relationship that they only fully reveal to each other. They share vulnerabilities they could never trust with anyone else, completely secure in the knowledge that they would never use those weaknesses as a weapon against the other. The vulnerabilities, fears, insecurities, and frustrations that come with being an athlete are things they can discuss with each other without worrying they’ll be judged or misunderstood. There’s a complete trust there.
Will and Mack are also incredibly indulgent of one another. They give each other the space to be the truest versions of themselves whenever they’re together.
Mack lets Will plan their hangouts and happily goes along with whatever Will wants because he knows how much Will enjoys being the planner. He lets Will drag him into starting a book club despite openly admitting before that he doesn’t read much, simply because he knows how much it means to Will. He lets Will take the bed furthest from the door because he knows Will sleeps better when someone else is in the room and acts like his guard. He always puts himself between Will and the other player whenever a scrum breaks out because he knows Will isn’t one to fight. And that’s okay, Mack has never seemed to mind doing enough of the fighting for the both of them. He even gives Will his customized Olympic stick because he knows Will is a huge gear guy, and what better gift than something as personal and unique as a stick that no one else can easily get?
Then there’s the way Will lets Mack be imperfect. He knows Mack lives under constant scrutiny. He knows Rick instilled discipline, humility, hard work, and sacrifice into him from such a young age. Somewhere along the way, Mack learned that he always had to be better, work harder, and be the poster hockey boy. Yet with Will, Mack gets to be a little brash, a little mean, a little hot-tempered (windshield gate, anyone?), a little imperfect. And Will loves and accepts every part of him anyway. He follows Mack’s instructions during games and on the bench to the point where everyone jokes that he’s Mack’s dog, because he understands how much Mack needs that sense of control and how much pressure he carries every single game night. He handles the smelling salt ritual even though Mack is perfectly capable of doing it himself because he knows Mack is already carrying enough before he even steps onto the ice, and that's one small way of taking something off his plate.
I think that’s why Will chose Mack as the person he leans on within the team, and why Mack says he trusts Will’s opinion so much. They just get each other.
Their mental and emotional wavelength are so similar. They’re attuned to one another in a way that goes beyond friendship born from proximity or shared interests. There’s a mutual understanding that they’re building something bigger than themselves; that they’re trying to leave a legacy that neither of them can do alone, that they genuinely need each other, and most importantly, they want to do it together. And despite the crushing weight that comes with chasing that kind of legacy, there's comfort in knowing that there is another person carrying it with them.
Honestly, with how Will and Mack move and how incredibly private they are about the things they do, I wouldn’t be surprised if they’ve already seen each other this offseason and we’ll never know.
Maybe they flew out and met somewhere in the middle during that radio-silent week in June. Maybe Mack went to Cape Cod right after that fan meetup, stayed only for a few hours or a day to see Will, his family, and his friends, then flew back to Vancouver. Maybe Will quietly surprised Mack during his birthday week in Vancouver, then just as discreetly flew back to Boston.
The beauty of RPF is that you get to imagine a thousand different possibilities, and one of them could’ve actually happened in this timeline, we will just never get to know.
less willmack divorce arc more 'what kind of convoluted offseason scenarios can we cook up instead'
picture this: two planes landing in cities that are close together, connected by miles of highway. in the middle, there's a cabin with multiple bedrooms but only one that's used.
picture this: a first class flight into houston, sunglasses on and cap pulled down low. a penthouse in a five star hotel that has two keycards and a room service tab that keeps getting racked up.
picture this: a resort in the carribbean that's filled with older couples who have no idea what an offside rule is, and staff that don't look twice at two young guys sunning themselves on the beach together.
picture this: daily facetimes and links to apartments in san jose and a shared text thread with so many video links that it's basically a fulltime job catching up on them all. it's a doordash account with a flag that the address that's been inputted is far away from the user, and do they want to double check that. it's a synced up livestream and a private draft board in a shared google doc. it's a 'i skated with him last month. you'll like him, don't worry'. it's a 'when does your flight get in, i'll sync mine up'. it's a whispered 'this offseason felt weird without you' and an affirmative response that's given without hesitation. it's a thousand little things that nobody else ever sees, nor should they.
there's not a single casual bone in my body. everything means something to me
Wishing you a relaxed nervous system
Lovesick Boy's Prays
To say we were 'in love', that vague weakened phrase, cannot express it. We loved each other, we lived in each other, through each other, by each other. We were each other.
Iris Murdoch, The Sea, the Sea
fic that's like. offseason is about establishing boundaries, right? it's about creating places where the two of them aren't two halves of one messy whole. they don't talk about it, but it's how it is, and when they leave their 1-bd in beacon hill, mack goes to europe to win, and then he loses instead. loses with the c on his chest and his dad watching. thinks maybe if he'd insisted a little harder, they would've given that c to sid, and then canada would've won, and mack would have a gold medal for his country. something he could lay at the feet of hockey and say look what i did for you.
instead, he gets on a plane with no medal at all. flies to van to turn twenty - sticky, hazy, gorgeous van - and that's it. no longer the league's favorite teenager, no longer hockey's favorite boy. he's a man now - it really does happen overnight - and it doesn't matter what records he broke last year, because he's got nothing to show for it now that he's twenty. no gold medal and no cup and no girlfriend and no playoff-ready team. his best approximation of a friend sits in a brother who resents him and like, connor bedard? who does not have time for mack's shit, too deep in his own 1oa tragedy, burning himself out in chicago or maybe he's being burnt out in chicago? either way, mack can't win and connor's got no one to play with, and they run mountains together and don't talk about it and skate marathons together and don't talk about it and get drunk on gross, cheap beer together and don't talk about it. they aren't really friends, but misery loves company and it's something to do, someone else to lean against who is hockey to his bones. mack watches will's private stories over and over and over - sun-kissed, happy, rosy, loved - and wonders if that untagged hand in that one photo is leonard's. navigates to their messages: hbd mack. read at midnight. no reply, because mack couldn't bring himself to write anything other than i want you to be here. which is cringe, and he's a man now, so instead, he wrote nothing at all.
and it's like this - will's never been to van, and mack thought that might be a good thing, to be in a place that's just for him. a place he can map in his head without every touchstone equating to a sense memory of will. that's all boston is anymore - a city that used to feel like maybe something that could be mack's, which has become a minefield of will: this is what will smelled like when we tried blank street for the first time, and this is where we got brunch with gabe and will laughed at my joke about french fries, and this is the bar where will said my name in a way he's never said it before and this is the esplanade where i swear i could've kissed him and he would've let me. san jose is even worse. was never mack's to begin with, not in a way that mattered, not in a way that could compete with the san jose that is ours. our favorite tequila bar and our favorite jewish deli and our favorite to-order sushi and our favorite early-morning run and our favorite drive down the highway, ourourourourourourourour, an unending tangle of it, from the ocean to the hills to the bay to the rink. the center of mack's universe: hockey, and will, and these days it feels like they are one and the same. where hockey is, is where mack's home is, and where will is, is mack's hockey.
but van is just mack's. and it seemed like such a good idea at the time. mack, middle child, is not good at sharing. mack, a burgeoning star from the very beginning, has been raised selfish, and he's learned to live with that. never been good at blurry lines: not mine, but not yours, either. never been good at ambiguity or doubt. clear, defined boundaries. clear, defined rules: yours; mine. but mack - twenty, loser, tired - sits on the back porch of his parent's new house and watches the sun paint pink over blue, nice breeze and the evening birds calling, and he has never wanted a place to belong to him less. has never wanted to share a thing more than he wants to share this sunset with will. feels will's absence like a presence, like a second person inside of him, slightly smaller and made up mostly of the bruised, gooey, awful-good hurt that he feels every time he's ever rolled over in a hotel bed and found will still asleep: mouth open like a loser, delicate blond hair, skin sticky because mack runs too hot. mack's winger, his partner, his best friend.
he'd share anything with will, he thinks. gladly and without thought. every memory he's ever made, every win and every loss, every night and every morning and every greasy breakfast and every terrible hangover and every time he's ever thrown a punch and every home he's ever had and every hotel bed and ice rink and game-winning goal. he'd give it all to will, would lay it all out at will's feet, if that would make will his. for good this time; not just the season. thinks maybe it all belongs to will already, anyway.
takes out his phone. hbd mack.
i want you to be here, he writes. deletes. writes. deletes. takes a picture of the sunset. doesn't capture it right because he's a twenty-year-old hockey prodigy with no gold medal and the closest thing to a soulmate that anyone has ever had, so what would he know about art?
his thumb hovers. he hits send. waits. thinks about the apartment waiting for them in san jose. waits. thinks about ours. waits. thinks about how everything in his life is so saturated in will that it probably makes sense that his first big win won't happen until it's something they share, too. something that he can lay out at will's feet. i won this for you, i won this with you.
his phone buzzes.
will [photo attached]: northeast haze with a yellow circle hovering above the horizon line in scorching orange-amber.
mack doesn't know anything about art. but he wants his best friend to share a sunset with him, so he sends the sunset to will, and will sends the sunset right back.
For the sake of your mental health, let people think what they want. Their fiction is not your truth.
I think one of Mack's biggest fears is injury, because he always mentions his dad's career ending due to injuries. An injury means no more hockey, which is unthinkable. But then last December he realized with horror that an injury might also mean no more Will. I think that's why he looked so traumatized during his media interview after the dec.13 game.
"I held you once...", Tathev Simonyan
I am going to be one of those people who don't believe in the Willmack divorce narry lol
Think about it:
Point 1: During the exit interviews, Will mentioned that he and Mack are considering training in Boston and Vancouver for a week each. Of course, Will Smith the planner already has their schedules mapped out. (Honestly, I wouldn’t be surprised if all his hangouts with friends are scheduled in Google Calendar too.) Based on the timeline, I’m guessing the training starts sometime in July, which means that’s probably when they’ll see each other again.
Point 2: There isn’t really a reason for Will to fly all the way to Vancouver just for Mack’s birthday. Hear me out: that’s a five/six-hour flight just to wish him a happy birthday and have dinner together. Then what? Fly straight back to Boston afterward? What else would he even be doing in Vancouver when they’ve already talked about their offseason plans, including when they’d be visiting each other’s hometowns and probably what they’d be doing together? There are also plenty of other possible explanations for why he’s not there. Maybe: 1) Mack has a family trip planned for his birthday, 2) Mack already has plans with friends in Vancouver, or 3) Mack simply has other commitments for his birthday.
Point 3: I think people are putting way more importance on birthdays than Will and Mack probably do. Plenty of people celebrate with their friends and family before or after the actual day because of travel, work, or other commitments. I’ve done it myself. Will and Mack can always celebrate when they see each other again. I feel like the expectation comes from Will and Mack being together on Will’s birthday, but relationships don’t operate on a birthday-for-birthday exchange system 😭
Point 4: Guys, it would honestly be weirder if Will and Mack were constantly hounding each other’s attention both during the season and the offseason 😭. As much as we joke about them being co-dependent, there comes a point where that wouldn’t be healthy anymore. They’re allowed to spend time with other people, especially their family and friends whom they barely get to see during the season. We can RPF all we want and speculate about whether they’re dating or not, but even if they are (or aren’t), their entire worlds don’t revolve around each other.
And that doesn’t make them any less close, or make whatever relationship they have any less meaningful. That just means they have lives outside of each other, which is exactly what we’d want for them. Healthy relationships leave room for family, friends, personal interests, and time apart.
Point 5: I also don’t think Will’s TikTok is him being shady or sending some hidden message. It’s literally the Finals game. That’s probably all there is to it. For all we know, he could’ve already greeted Mack over FaceTime, texted him privately, or spent half the day yapping to him about whatever he’s planning to do in NYC. Not everything has to be public for it to happen.
So please, please avoid flooding his TikTok comments with Mack-related comments. That’s exactly the kind of thing that has made heavily shipped friends start distancing themselves from each other in the past. We can have our fun with RPF, but let’s keep it in RPF spaces and not bring it directly to the players’ social media 🙏🏻