Are you afraid of water?
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from Pakistan
seen from United States

seen from Maldives
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from Netherlands
seen from China
seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Netherlands
seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from Germany
Are you afraid of water?
Welcome, Lovro and Ivan 🌠
[inspiration]
evak’s first kiss in every universe
i still can't get over the fact that isak and evan talk about parallel universes and how there are probably infinite versions of them and their relationship and then we get to see those parallel universes. and it was done before the remakes were a thing. like how crazy is that.
no matter how fast you run you can never escape this show
me
Isn’t it always so heartwarming, so special, to watch the Even characters fall in love with the Isak characters?
I mean, there’s this undeniable charm to the Evens. They’re charismatic, cool without trying, bold and loud and beautiful. They have their little artsy hobbies, their eccentric quirks, their confidence that fills a room. They take up space. But the Isaks… the Isaks are different. They’re the quiet ones. Introverted. Sad on the inside, numb on the outside. Carrying so much weight through their lives while no one around them really seems to notice. No one truly sees them. They’re just there; existing in the lives of their friends, their moms, their (sometimes shitty) dads. Loving people they think they’re not supposed to love. Keeping everything locked inside. Bottling it up until it hurts too much. Using substances to dull feelings that are already too heavy. Convincing themselves that this might just be it. That this is life now. That it won’t ever really change.
We often tell the story this way: the Isaks are the ones who save the Evens. Who love them through their darkness. Which is true. But what we miss, what happens so quietly it almost goes unnoticed, is that it’s the other way around first.
Because long before the Isaks learn how to love loudly, how to fight, how to be, the Evens see them. They choose them when no one else really does. They pull them, gently, back into the world. They show them that being seen doesn’t have to hurt. That being loved doesn’t have to be something earned through suffering. The Evens save the Isaks in small, almost invisible ways. And then, only then, the Isaks learn how to save them too.