Name a better feeling than getting the first comment on a fic you were uncertain about and knowing that at least one person liked the tiny piece of your brain that you put on the internet

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Name a better feeling than getting the first comment on a fic you were uncertain about and knowing that at least one person liked the tiny piece of your brain that you put on the internet
I am no longer the Winter Soldier
I am James Bucky Barnes
And you are part of my efforts to make ammends
The clip that Hayward played of Wanda stealing Vision's body came up so suddenly. It's exactly the kind of information he should have given the people in charge from the beginning, but he didn't. So why bring it up now? What is he hiding?
Crying at how the concept art for Elrond in The Rings of Power looks so much like Hugo Weaving
Wanda reacting so strongly to Monica's SWORD necklace makes sense now. They were literally messing around with Vision's body five years after his death
People trashing Kamala's Mom don't seem to understand that it comes from a place of love and that Kamala knows that.
In the comics, she sneaks out to go to a party instead of Avengers Con and Zoe makes fun of her family, and you get this scene:
Which puts across Kamala's POV in a way the show couldn't when they changed her origin, but it's still relevant
Kamala doesn't dislike her Mom for saying no. Her Mom (and Dad) are not bad parents, nor are they in the wrong. She gets mad and sneaks out because she's a teen and figuring out who she is and who she wants to be, and it's complicated and confusing, and that's a part of Kamala's journey.
A journey that, by the way, is just as much about embracing her roots as a daughter of Muslim immigrants from Karachi as it is about figuring out her superpowers. And, spoiler alert, her parents are proud of who she is — even if they don't always know how to say it. Just like Kamala loves them, even if she doesn't always say it. That's just how brown families are
Me, realising that they took Sam’s shield and gave it to some random white dude:
Lauren saying that Richard's Ikaris represents the traditional idea of what a superhero is (the looks, the powers, the perfection) but Eternals is about how real superheroes need to be vulnerable and soft. Salma talking about how Ikaris is expected to be a perfect hero but is actually human on the inside and he struggles to balance the two. And Kumail bringing up the fact that any other superhero movie would have ended a big battle but Eternals is about duty vs love and Ikaris isn't defeated by a stronger hero, but by his inner conflict.
You can tell they get it. They get what makes this movie so beautiful and unique and they love it for that too.