#ryland grace#phm#rocky the eridian#project hail mary spoilers




seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from T1
seen from United States
seen from T1
seen from Italy
seen from T1

seen from T1
seen from Puerto Rico
seen from Yemen

seen from United States

seen from T1
seen from T1

seen from T1
seen from Puerto Rico
seen from Malaysia

seen from T1

seen from T1
ilya trying to ease his love confession with his typical "i mean-" shen shane isn't responding for several moments and then shane stopping him with confessing his love for ilya before ilya can make some joke or take it back or whatever that was supposed to be followed by is just peak romance and so fucking telling about their characters i dont even know what to do with myself
Gee, I wonder why
@brazenlystrong
"Megumiiiii. Ya wanna tell me something? Like, dunno, maybe something's on your mind? Or someone?" You didn't delete your search history, rascal.
Unprompted harassment.
Megumi's pencil stops right over the feather of a peacock. Eye twitching slightly, he slowly squints at the page, frown deepening. He knew that tone of voice very well, and Satoru knew he did as well. This was the beginning of a game that had been played before and would be played again many times to come, both refusing to lose.
"No. Nothing." calmly focusing back on the book, he idly continues to color the drawing, as though the question barely deserved his attention, "What's for dinner? Can we get pizza? I kinda feel like mushrooms and cheese."
Called out
What do you do when something hits hard? When it strikes a nerve?
When someone calls you out on your BS? How do you respond?
Deny it? Deflect it, with some “what abouts?”
Or like the Pharisees in today’s Gospel, when Jesus strikes a nerve - get angry at the person who said it?
If we’re honest, you and I have done all of these at one time or another. Just like the Pharisees. Just like every other person in the history of ever. It’s human nature.
None of us like to be called out on our BS.
But none of those responses help. They don’t change anything.
And when we’re done reacting, we’re still stuck in our BS. Just like the Pharisees.
I like to think of interactions like we see in today’s Gospel as “missing the point moments.” Because Jesus has a point in calling people out on their BS.
It’s not the point I would have. If it were me, given the Pharisees constant efforts to embarrass and entrap Jesus, I would deeply enjoy publicly humiliating them. And I would do it every chance I got.
But that’s not who Jesus is (thank God). In spite of them absolutely not deserving it, Jesus loves them.
Which is why the point of what Jesus is doing is to hold up a mirror. To get them to look closely at themselves. To get them to ask themselves some questions. Questions like,
“Why am I having this reaction?” “Do I want to be someone who reacts like this?” “What is this telling me about me?”
The same questions you and I need to ask ourselves, whenever someone calls us out on our BS.
Whatever our answers might be, our answers will be pointing us to something that’s getting between us and God.
Something that we need to take to God in prayer. Something we cannot ignore.
Because anything that can make you and me react like that? It’s on the way to becoming the center of our lives. Whether we mean for it to or not.
It’s a subtle form of idolatry (not all false gods have statues) and one of the most toxic.
And if God puts it in your heart to ask whether you should talk to a therapist about it? You already know the answer.
Today’s Readings
Source: Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles [2003]
Realm of Magic: Dueling Box by TheOnlyException
Simultaneous Cast & Deflect > x (female) Simultaneous Cast & Deflect > y (male)