New piece I'm quite proud of ^^ Always love how all the characters grow and change! <3
todays bird

oozey mess
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
almost home
$LAYYYTER
NASA

Janaina Medeiros
Cosmic Funnies
One Nice Bug Per Day
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

@theartofmadeline
Misplaced Lens Cap

pixel skylines

Andulka
Sweet Seals For You, Always
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
Monterey Bay Aquarium

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@sokkasganttchart
New piece I'm quite proud of ^^ Always love how all the characters grow and change! <3
Katara from ATLA
This is a prize piece for a ATLA stamp rally taking place in MCM London.
dipping my toes back in by getting a handle on the kids in whatever my style is now
Zuko and baby Izumi ❤️
🌸 :)
Mommy Katara
Sokka and Yue reuniting in the spirit world
I finally finished these Azula designs; I'm planning to do two more in addition to the Ty Lee ones.
I decided to add more flowers to really highlight Ty Lee's importance to Azula.
Love the designs!
why do you think tysuki is underrated? because honestly I don't remember them having any moments more than both of them existing in the same group, honestly ty lokka is far more underrated, they had a few tension in season 2,
well I just think ppl don’t consider their potential to be rly crazy together, and that’s a shame. like sure, in canon they fight each other in the boiling rock and that’s pretty much their only significant interaction, but then think about the aftermath of that… ty lee gets imprisoned with the other kyoshi warriors and is allowed to join them, unbeknownst to suki, their ostensible leader, who had no say in the matter. she finally reunites with her sisters in arms only to find a new addition to their ranks, that girl who helped capture them in the first place and then tried to prevent her escape by fighting her on the roof of a moving gondola. and she’s like wtf and they’re like she’s actually really nice and she taught us a bunch of new combat forms don’t worry about it and ty lee is like hehe yayyy!! and while suki is exceptionally forgiving, and probably would come around sooner rather than later, she is also incredibly prideful. she takes a lot of pride in being the best warrior in her village, and she cannot stand that ty lee is the better fighter in a similar martial art (nonbending, close range hand to hand combat, primarily defensive maneuvers). but ty lee is also gorgeous, and suki has a type. when sokka first beats her during their training, suki lashes out and claims she merely let him beat her (an obvious lie), but she’s also highly flustered, and I think that’s the first meaningful moment that she experiences attraction to him. and from that moment on, she is down horrendous for sokka, because he proved that he is just as prodigious, skilled, and talented as she is, and that’s what turns her on, even if it also pisses her off. and ty lee, being scarily perceptive and socially attuned and also just kind of a troll, would obviously pick up on suki’s inner tension — that confluence of mistrust, pride, humiliation, and grudging attraction — and flirt with her shamelessly. and suki of course knows that ty lee knows, and flirts back, just as calculated and competitive in their unspoken game to see who submits first. ty lee is the better fighter, the better schemer, the better coquette, but suki has her pride on the line, and — this cannot be overstated — suki is terribly proud. so the conflicting tensions in their dynamic would be so fun and juicy to explore (especially once you add mai and sokka to the mix), but people are fundamentally uncreative when it comes to f/f pairings, as we all have the misfortune of knowing, so there’s a tragic dearth of actually compelling tysuki content, despite their characters and hypothetical future dynamic being so ripe for further exploration…
They sicken me
The GOAT
I read your answer about Yue and Katara and now I want to ask about Mai and Ty Lee. While Katara never grew up where she was told she doesn't matter and she's only useful in her service to her society (I love you pointing out how Katara loving the world comes from her love for herself) I think Mai and Ty Lee grew up similar to Yue where they're told their individuality doesn't matter and they should be of use to their fascist country. But unlike Yue they neither of them have internalized it. Mai doesn't listen to her parents telling her what she /should/ be like and doesn't seem to like them or her brother much and Ty Lee literally runs away when she has the chance. The only reason they follow along is because of actual threat to their personal safety. As opposed to them, Azula seems to be someone who /has/ internalized what her duty and place is and doesn't value herself, much like Yue.
yes, these are good points. if I had infinite time and energy, I could map the ways in which every atla character reflects every other character, how they parallel and differ from one another and why, what that signifies thematically, etc etc. but I’ll try to be brief, at least for now.
azula is very much like yue, in the sense that yue is very much like sokka, and sokka and azula are mirrors. the yue/azula parallelism feels especially potent because they are both princesses, and so they are parallel along intersecting lines of social status and gender. we don’t know much about arnook’s relationship to his daughter, although we can certainly infer a lot. and it’s evident that ozai abuses azula, and uses her fear of him to inspire undying loyalty. yue, azula, and sokka each do feel sincerely obligated to their fathers and their people (inextricably linked, almost metonymically, in each of their minds) and feel a deep sense of guilt and shame when their natural, human desires conflict with what they believe their fundamental purpose is. they are not people, they are mere vessels! how can a weapon, a shield, a doll, a humble servant want things?? azula is a child who wants love, companionship, comfort, reassurance, kindness. azula is a beautiful weapon who serves at the right hand of firelord ozai. his will is her will. long may he reign.
it is interesting though, that mai and ty lee are only externally loyal to azula, but inwardly prioritize their own survival above all else. it’s not even that they hate the fire nation and disagree with its conquest (if they do, we get no indication of it whatsoever), but that they value their freedom anyway. azula, who has been ruled by fear her whole life, couldn’t understand why mai and ty lee would betray her when she is so successfully fearsome. love cannot be stronger than fear, or else everything she has ever known in her entire life has been a sickening lie, so their fear-meters must simply be broken. she doesn’t like looking in the mirror.
so why do mai and ty lee not internalize their patriarchal upbringings that dictate that their only use is to their nation? mai’s parents clearly think that unless she can marry a high-ranking noble (aka the crown prince) she ought to sit in the corner silently for the rest of her life. ty lee’s parents don’t even seem to be able to distinguish her as an individual at all. both are told: be the playmate of the princess, serve your nation. both do as they are told, while secretly rolling their eyes. the part of me that ships them more than anything thinks that it must’ve helped them a lot to have had each other. unlike with azula, they are of equal rank (at least in terms of how they treat each other), which means that they can be honest with each other. ty lee can tell mai that her makeup looks like shit. mai can tell ty lee she’s not going into that yucky wall sludge juice no matter how much lightning azula shoots at her. that kind of friendship in an otherwise oppressive environment where true feelings are violently discouraged is invaluable. yue never had a friend who valued her before she met sokka, and she does begin to question everything she thought she knew about her duty in the limited span she spends with him.
it also helps that mai and ty lee do not have overbearing fathers. mai’s father never even speaks to her, only her mother does, and ty lee’s father can’t tell his own daughters apart, apparently. conversely, ozai has consumed azula’s entire world; he dictates the borders of her universe. yue, too, is sheltered by her father, and his limited vision of what her world ought to look like. sokka’s father tells him that there is nothing more important than protecting his sister, and since his mother just died doing that very thing, he takes that to heart. even if hakoda and arnook (and even ozai, to a degree) truly do want what’s best for their children, the circumstances in which they were raised have conditioned them into total obedience at the expense of their personhood. mai and ty lee, being (relatively) ordinary teenagers in (relatively) ordinary circumstances, with parents who want to inspire the appropriate level of nationalism in their daughters, but take a more hands-off approach to parenting, would produce children who know to do as they’re told, but mostly to keep up appearances. they are obedient because they have more reasons to be than not to be, but once they are presented with the opportunity to disobey, they do not hesitate.
ultimately, it’s not just about being told what to believe, but how that dogma is communicated.
to azula (and zuko) it was communicated very effectively through unrepentant violence. to sokka, it was communicated through the establishment of traumatizing stakes. to yue, it was communicated as a given, an axiom that could not be denied. to mai and ty lee, it was communicated by annoying parents, their bossy friend from school whose only true superiority lies in her rank, and a country that boasts itself as the greatest in the world with little evidence. of course, they may as well do as they’re told. their parents have power over them, as does their bossy friend, and it’s not like they have an alternative. but then an alternative presents itself, a circumstance wherein the things they actually value are threatened, and they have to choose between comfortable complaisance and freedom at the cost of death. it’s surprising, to be sure, but it’s also inevitable. after all, they were never mere vessels; they have always valued their freedom.
https://archiveofourown.org/works/81875461
Summary: "I don't want Bolin to see my scars," he finally says, oh so quietly. Wu's eyes immediately dart toward Mako's arm. Mako catches the motion and shakes his head. He glances down the beach, sees the others still wholly wrapped up in their game, and quickly, as if he's trying to outrace his own doubts, lifts the hem of his shirt.
The first thing Wu notices is a starburst of red, raised skin, little branching lines trailing away from the point of impact like roots from a tree. A lightning scar, just like the ones twisting their way up his arm. It must have been nasty to blister the skin badly enough to scar. It sits on Mako's lower abdomen, over his left hip, like someone was aiming for his heart and missed.
commissioned
procrastinating on boarding my short film by doodling katara
yuppie adult gaang!!
@red-zora I hope you don't mind that i'm posting your ask in this highly irregular way, but it your message was so long I couldn't think of another way to post it without destroying everyone's dashboards, including my own. i've included the contents of your ask in the alt text, so that hopefully it can still be legible by screen reader.
as for your theory/idea/suggestion – whatever you wish to term it – regarding bending... i find it interesting. your analysis is obviously highly researched and well thought out. and i deeply appreciate your desire to mitigate the eugenicist implications of bending ability in lok. and i agree with your sentiments that bending ability is established in atla to be more about culture, access to adequate training, and deliberate practice than what is shown and implied throughout lok.
however, i'm not sure i agree entirely with your deduction that bending is solely culturally inherited and can be achieved by anyone with adequate resources to training... if that were the case, sokka would, at the very least, have learned waterbending alongside katara in the north pole. katara would not have known how to lift a fish in the first five minutes of the show, seeing as she is not performing any kind of martial arts move, but rather simply channeling the power inside her through, as sokka (correctly) terms it, magic!
i do think genetic inheritance and spiritual endowment are necessary factors in who can bend. the [pre-genocide] air nomad population is entirely comprised of benders due to their cultural emphasis on spirituality, whereas there are fewer earthbenders in the earth kingdom per capita due to not being a particularly spiritual culture. so bending is a spiritual and cultural practice, but there is also a genetic component to it. considering their high status and the valorization of firebending in the fire nation, it makes no sense that piandao, mai, and ty lee – all incredible fighters in various disciplines – would not be able to master the forms required to firebend. they would have been provided with the necessary training, and they would certainly all wish to firebend if they could. and let's not kid ourselves, sokka would be an incredible waterbender if not for lacking the innate ability. if bending ability could be taught, "sokka's master" would've begun and ended with katara going, "well if you're so worked up over this, then why don't you just learn how to waterbend? lazy ass..." but obviously, we know that bending ability is something you're born with, and talent, drive, and dedication to hone it is another matter. for better or for worse, that logic is baked into the premise of the show.
so while i sympathize with the desire to undermine the eugenicist logic upon which the avatar magic system is predicated, i think we do have to accept that the text of atla does suggest it, and instead of trying to explain it away, acknowledge the discomfort that comes with enjoying a show with inherently problematic fantasy worldbuilding. to what degree is bending ability reliant on genetic, cultural, and spiritual factors is certainly nebulous and up for debate, but i do think it's necessary in this discussion to acknowledge that each of these factors are established in the text, whether explicitly or implicitly. at the end of the day, atla is a show written by american liberals, and if we want to interpret it in any meaningful capacity, we have to acknowledge that fact, and the premises established by such an ideological foundation.