[18+] pairing: euijoo x gender neutral reader (no reader pronouns or anatomy descriptions) / word count: 379 words / warnings: exhibitionism, consensual dubcon (kinda), chikan-esque elements i suppose
notes: first kinktober post (lol), 400th post on my blog, and a wonderful (late) celebration for inkigayo mc juju's debut !! we love to see it
9am, rush hour. the air feels sticky and heavy in the subway car, with countless people breathing both metaphorically, and physically down your neck. euijoo stands pressed against the door, with his back towards you, exactly as you instructed him to do prior to stepping into the terminal. you scan your peripheral, it seems everyone else on the train is absorbed in their own world; staring at their phones, reading, you even manage to witness the occasional businessman catching a few minutes of extra sleep. nobody is aware enough to catch you slipping your hand under euijoo’s shirt, to watch as you drag your fingers down his spine. fingertips ghosting over the skin of his waist, to the front of his abdomen. you feel his muscles tense as your hand slides down his lower stomach, dipping your fingers into the waistband of his pants. his breathing is slow and intentional, pausing when he feels your hand plunge lower. he’s already hard, dick tenting in his light brown khakis. he grabs the metal bar next to the door as your hand wraps around his dick, grips almost mirroring each other's. wet and sticky on your hand; you focus most of your attention on his sensitive tip, grinding it against the palm of your hand. his whole body trembles and his breath comes out as a wet hiccup when you pull his cock over the top of his waistband. you begin pumping him earnestly now, you have approximately 2 minutes before the train pulls into the next station, you need him to cum now. you squeeze the head and flick your wrist at just the right angle and you immediately feel his cock pulsate in your hand, the inside of his shirt catching the majority of his cum. you watch the rest dribble down to the floor, tucking him back into his pants before wiping your dirty hand on his stomach. you pull your hand out of his shirt at just the right time, feeling the slight sway of the subway arriving at your stop. the doors open, and euijoo reaches backwards for your hand, leading you out. feet dragging slightly to smear his mess into the floor, you make a mental note to clean the bottoms of your shoes later.
Seizures suck :/ 32, had them my whole life. Thankfully they found a med that works for me when i was 19 but for years it was trial and error. Im sorry yours are getting worse. They are never fun. I always feel like i had the life sucked out of me after having one.
-FBK.
Mine are pretty managable f9r the most part if i have someone who can watch me when i want to be up and around. From what i can tell theyre micro absence seizures, so mostly my head feels really fuzzy and like someone is rubbing it with a microfiber cloth or a minky blanket.
Ive learned that i dont have a tumor so at least thats good. Im waiting on an eeg. Currently i am decorating a journal with a fraction of my /many/ stickers. :)
So VFD was translated as ”FBK” in Swedish. And FBK also happens to be the name of a football team.
Now, for a while in my teens I hung out on a Swedish forum trying to talk about asoue, hoping to find some other Swedes who had especially read the books, because it just seemed like everyone had watched the 2004 movie and nothing else. And I wanted to bond over the books, and the funny translations, etc.
Anyway, I used to make a joke about ”Other people think about the football team when they hear FBK. But I think about a series of unfortunate events!”
Every time I brought up FBK, I was very clear about this distinction. ”Not the football team, the secret organisation!”
And every time I mentioned FBK, someone in the comments said ”omg FBK yas! Love them! I saw them play!”
I didn’t think too much of it, but then one day the people on the forum found out where I lived (context there had been a giant lightning strike waking the whole city up so we talked about it). And that commenter said to me ”Huh. I tbh thought you lived in Karlstad because you talked so much about FBK” (Karlstad is the town FBK is from).
I then realized this person had never actually read any of my posts. They had just seen FBK and assumed it was about the football team even though I made it clear it was NOT what I was talking about 😭
‘My husband is in prison just for telling the truth, my husband is in prison just for defending democracy,’ says dissident’s wife.
Excellent news. Daniel Roher’s documentary about Russian dissident Alexei Navalny won an Oscar early this morning.
This validation from Hollywood demonstrates that nobody has forgotten the illegal imprisonment of Alexei Navalny by the Russian state. People like Yulia Navalnaya, his wife, have kept track of every human rights abuse of Navalny since he was unlawfully detained in January 2021. The pile of fraudulent charges levelled against Navalny, including claims of parole violation and fraud, are not recognised in the civilised world.
It is important to keep Alexei Navalny’s name in the news for this reason and to validate the struggle he has led against Russian state corruption and lawlessness.
Navalny’s wife, Yulia, sent a great message at the acceptance speech. Also present were her daughter, Daria, and her son, Zakhar. Head of investigations at FBK, Maria Pevchikh, was also present.
Director Daniel Roher noted that the Oscar was also dedicated to other Russian political prisoners, as well as political prisoners all around the world. It should be noted that Putin has increased his arbitrary imprisonment of Russian dissidents, especially since February 2022.
Vladimir Kara-Murza is currently under arbitrary detention for opposing the Ukraine war. Another Russian politician, Ilya Yashin, is also in prison for the same reason. Many others have been locked up, charged with spreading disinformation about the Russian army and the war.
Prior to this, many were imprisoned for protesting against Putin’s corrupt and lawless regime. Navalny himself was imprisoned before, including during the assassination of Boris Nemtsov in February 2015. Russian prisons are infamous for squalid conditions and multiple human rights abuses. Once again: it is absolutely essential to keep the spotlight on Russian political prisoners: dictators get away with their crimes when they think the civilised world doesn’t care.
Therefore this Oscar, along with news that the Georgian parliament has withdrawn its pro-Kremlin ‘foreign agents’ bill, is a victory against Vladimir Putin.