I deserve to be moaning in your ear right now as you slowly thrust in me grunting, but whatever I guess
seen from Germany
seen from China

seen from Malaysia

seen from Sweden
seen from Türkiye
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from Lithuania
seen from Türkiye
seen from Poland

seen from Germany

seen from Norway
seen from United States
seen from Lithuania

seen from Türkiye

seen from Norway
seen from United States

seen from United States
I deserve to be moaning in your ear right now as you slowly thrust in me grunting, but whatever I guess
I took a break from dogs to draw a bunch of kitty cats š± perhaps you see some familiar faces?
There was a guy I had a crush on as a kid. I donāt really have crushes, so that made this unusual.
I liked his face, I liked his body, I liked his sense of humour and his personality and his energy. He annoyed me sometimes, but I wanted to be around him, and I enjoyed his attention.
I was not the only one who liked him. Everybody liked him. Every girl I ever knew liked him. A few guys, too. And he knew it.
He was always dating someone. As long as I knew him, he always had a girlfriend. Sometimes for a week, sometimes a couple months. One after another.
I thought about shooting my shot a few times, but always found a reason not to. When he was dating someone, it was because I wasnāt a homewrecker. When he wasnāt, it was because I didnāt want to be just one more name on his list. One more person he could cross off the parade of people lining up to be with him.
He was cocky. Still is, honestly, all these years later. I think itās because he was handsome, and charming, and funny, and athletic, and even teachers and other kidās parents could be swayed to let him off the hook if he got caught doing something stupid.
We were just kids, and poor kids on top of that, but I always sort of got the impression that people didnāt often say ānoā to him. That he always- not maliciously, or selfishly, but perhaps in a naive and childlike sort of way- took it for granted that people could be persuaded to his side. If he was funny enough, or charming enough, theyād roll their eyes and let him carry on.
That became another reason to refrain. As much as I liked him, as good as being close to him felt, I felt like more than that- more than the compulsion to move closer- was the certainty that I shouldnāt. That as much as it may be what I wanted, he was the kind of person to push the envelope, and more than he needed one more person in the long long line of his admirers was the need for least one person in his life who could tell him ānoā.
You can love someone and tell them No. I am aware of this. But knowing how I think, and knowing how I love, I would have devoted myself to that role. To being the person who looked out for him, doing what he needed, not just what made him happy.
I know thatās who I am. Iāve had friends and family both, and acquaintances, who fell in and out of addiction and mental health crises and pyramid schemes and bad relationships, and I know I can be obstinate. I know that if I see someone I love doing something to hurt themselves, I will get in their way, even if they end up hating me. Because I would rather they hate me than be dead.
Iāve let go of people I loved because they refused to stop trying to die. Iāve held people back from cliffs while they cursed me out trying to throw themselves off. I will leave before I enable. If I am to attend a funeral, I will not sit there knowing I helped put them in the ground.
But I am also tired. And I want more for myself than to be a caregiver for someone else, to follow along and watch after someone elseās needs at the expense of my own. And imagining a future together as we were, that was all I could see: him, living life half-cocked like he always had, and me, trailing after like a nanny, being what he needed and not what he wanted and slowly growing to resent him for my choice.
We would have grown to hate each other.
So I said nothing.
And years later, drinking sodas together over a bonfire in the dark, he told me heād been a bit im love with me when we were kids.
And me, still a bit in love with him, said that Iād been a bit in love with him too.
We moved on as friends and never spoke of that again.
Years later once again, we meet by chance. He offers me a bottle, which I refuse. I donāt drink. I canāt start- not seeing what itās done. He teases, the way he does before he gets his way. Goes through all his charming persuasions, the ones Iād seen him pull on others when we were kids, and I tell him flat out: Iām not drinking. I said no. And if you keep thinking you can twist my arm, think again- ācause Iām far more likely to kick your ass.
He did keep trying- disappointing but predictable- but eventually dropped it with a laugh. Gave me a funny sort of smile, then, that felt fond, and told me Iād always been the hardest son of a bitch heās known.
Of all the things heās ever said to me, thatās the line that makes me proudest. Thatās the one that still makes me glow a little.
Weāre both adults now. Heās got a kid, and a wife, and a house. I see him around, but I donāt know if heās seen me. Heās scruffier than he was, but he still grins like he did when we were younger.
Sometimes I see him out and about with the beautiful woman he married and I remember drinks by a bonfire and a conversation we both pretended not to have, and I wonder if he remembers.
I donāt have a crush on him anymore. Canāt really even say I love him. Itās been too long, and I donāt know him well enough anymore to even say I know him. Weāve both changed. Weāve both grown different.
But I think about it a lot. Not what could have happened between us, but how it didnāt.
I know heās still cocky. Still flies a bit too close to the sun.
And to be fair, Iām still a bit too rigid. Still have to resist the compulsion to mother people instead of experiencing life beside them.
But I think about that negative space, mostly. How close we were as friends, as almost-more, moving together but still apart- like Icarus and gravity itself, him always flying higher and me the stubborn force fighting to stop him from flinging himself at the sun. How I knew that if Iād pushed too hard, I would have dragged him down to fall on the rocks instead. How he knew- maybe, maybe not- that the nature of gravity canāt be changed, that he had nothing to offer me that would turn me from my own stubborn march in my own stubborn way.
Want and need. Desire and require. Overthinking. Overstepping. Boundaries and persuasion. Opposites attracting, similarities that cause repulsion.
I think about that a lot.
And I wish I had a word for whatever special little thing we arenāt anymore.
happy ninjago day guys
I love how you can use the environment in baldurās gate.
for instance, I got my ass completely handed to me in a battle, so on my second attempt I piled barrels of gunpowder & wine near where the enemies would run out, and had one of my guys posed with a fire spell to ignite them. and THIS TIME, I triggered a massive explosion on my first turn of combat, instantly killing my entire party.
Me: I don't get hyperfixations
Me since August 2025: