Dylan Sprouse in the movie Beautiful Disaster (2023)
AnasAbdin

roma★
taylor price
will byers stan first human second
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

pixel skylines
dirt enthusiast

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Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

Andulka

Love Begins
d e v o n
wallacepolsom
Misplaced Lens Cap

Janaina Medeiros

#extradirty

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titsay
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
Sweet Seals For You, Always
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@xtianincapeside
Dylan Sprouse in the movie Beautiful Disaster (2023)
Dearest Chenford gif makers,
MAKE ALL THE GIFS. EVERY SCENE. 400 TIMES IN 400 DIFFERENT COLORING/EDITING STYLES. PARALLEL TO YOUR HEARTS CONTENT. MAKE 10 DIFFERENT GIF SETS FROM ONE SCENE. DO IT ALL. DO WHATEVER YOU WANT. POST IT THE SAME TIME SOMEONE ELSE POSTS IT. IT’S OKAY. WE ALL SEE THESE SCENES IN OUR OWN WAY. AND WANT TO SHARE IN OUR OWN WAY. DO ME PROUD!
Love, a fellow Chenford gif maker.
This!!!!
I always used to stress out about this, because by the time I watch the episode plus download it, because of my timezone, everyone has already made tons of gifs which is actually amazing, that this fandom has gained so many new talented people.
I just wanna say- we all work with the same episodes here. Most of us have seen the show multiple times. So yes, we’re probably gonna think abt the same parallels, we’re gonna work with the same scenes, etc. BUT we all have our style, every creation is valid, every creation matters so DO WHAT YOU WANT, and what makes you HAPPY 😊
Pacey + Noticing Joeys little quirks
attempt to move an image in a word document leaves 7 dead 20 injured
And if our broken hearts don't kill us The nostalgia surely will
Goody Grace, “Nostalgia Kills”
I don’t want to talk to anybody else, I don’t like anybody else.
These two. Ugh!
Mind Your Thoughts
I was a loyal follower of the law until I found an old book in my locker. The cover was too faded to make out the title, but the pale hands holding an apple were barely visible. I panicked at the sight of it and threw it in my bag. There were weekly locker checks, so I couldn’t just leave it there to be found. I took it home and had every intention of letting it rot beneath my floor. It turns out, I do not deal with temptation as well as I thought. After all, I was only one person. It wasn’t like I was going to create a cult following or anything.
I was cutting it close that night. I kept telling myself, just one more, but I continued turning pages, and soon, no longer had the option when I heard the front door open and close downstairs. I rolled out of bed, crouched down beside it, and placed the book under the loose floorboard.
I heard footsteps on the stairs. “Alyssa?” I replaced the floorboard, turned off the lamp on my nightstand and hopped back into bed. “Aly, are you awake?” I pretended to be asleep when he came in to check on me. Guilt rushed through me when Dad walked over and planted a kiss on my forehead. “Sweet dreams, honey.”
I waited until I could no longer hear his footsteps in the hall before I retrieved my book and continued reading. Eventually, my eyes grew heavy, but I was terrified of falling asleep with the contraband. I didn’t know what Dad would do if he caught me with it, but the options ranged from ostracization to prison. So, I put it away and fell asleep with the story unfinished.
“It’s another beautiful day,” the television declared as I descended the stairs the next morning. “The high will be a perfect 75 degrees and expect to see the sunshine all day with no cloud cover.” Perfect. Exactly like every other day. I glanced over at the screen as I walked past it to the kitchen. Dad’s co-worker, Kendra, smiled back at me. “Enjoy your day and remember,” She was still smiling, but there was a new edge to her tone, “mind your thoughts.” Her voice carried the subtle hint of a threat.
The World War of 3083 was a turning point in history. Technology had advanced to the point where the world was drowning in information. Each person was free to scavenge through data and come to their own understanding. People latched onto their truth so thoroughly that the mere suggestion of disagreement was eventually considered an act of violence. It didn’t take long for factions to emerge and for real violence to begin.
Technology continued advancing, as Silicon Valley wanted to be the world’s savior. For all their intelligence, they didn’t understand the simple fact that you cannot be healed by the same atmosphere that made you sick. An experiment that was intended to help everyone communicate and discuss their thoughts more diplomatically ended up bringing thoughts to life. Anything that was imagined by enough people became a part of everyone’s reality. The world became a never-ending nightmare.
As a result, books, movies, television shows, paintings, basically all art and entertainment were considered weapons of war. The government had no option but to outlaw anything and everything that influenced thoughts.
Or so the story goes.
“Morning,” I said, giving Dad a quick smile as I headed to the coffee maker.
“Morning, sweetheart.” He was already equipped for the cameras in a navy suit with his dark hair slicked back. “You knocked out pretty early last night.”
“Yeah. Long day.” I stared into my coffee to avoid his eyes. “I have a math midterm today, so I studied all day yesterday.”
“Good for you.” He sounded proud, which made me feel worse. Since Mom died, Dad and I only had each other, and I was lying to him. I walked over and sat down beside him. “I am certain your hard work will pay off.”
I raised my eyebrow at him. “Mind your thoughts,” I joked.
He gave a wry laugh. “I really don’t think the world will mind if my daughter aces her midterm.” He grabbed his dishes from the table and walked them to the sink. “I’ll come home earlier this afternoon. We can play chess or put together a puzzle.
There are rumors that, before the war, people from all over the world could play games together through some sort of wireless communication system. Our options are much more limited these days.
I showed him my practiced smile. “Sounds fun.” It wasn’t easy to keep the sarcasm off that reply.
“Everyone put your notes and textbooks away,” Mrs. Johns said, looking around the room to ensure her instructions were being followed. “You will have the entire class period to finish the exam.” She began handing small stacks of papers to the first person of each row. “If you finish early, you may leave. Good luck.”
As soon as the blonde in front of me passed the papers over her shoulder, I began figuring out the first question. I had four chapters in my book left and I wanted to finish it before Dad arrived home.
I hadn’t completely lied to him. I spent half the day yesterday studying for the midterm. This allowed me to move through the test at a moderate speed without too many issues. That is, until I felt someone’s eyes on me. I ignored the burn of the gaze until I couldn’t stand it any longer and whipped my head to the right. A pair of light green eyes met mine. I didn’t recognize him, so I couldn’t put a name with the eyes. Where had he come from?
Unlike most decent people, he didn’t look away when I caught him staring. He smirked at me instead and I scrunched my face up at him. If staring a hole into the side of my face was his idea of foreplay, I wasn’t the one for him. I turned away and focused my attention back on my test. I thought I heard him snicker, but I couldn’t be sure.
I rushed through the rest of the test to get out of the classroom that suddenly felt much too small for the both of us. I flipped back to the first page, signed my name at the top, and walked to the front of the room. I tried to seem nonchalant, but I probably didn’t pull it off well.
Mrs. Johns accepted the paper from me and smiled. “Enjoy the rest of your day.”
“You, too.” The staring boy quickly became of very little concern to me as I reached my car and prepared to spend some time with my story.
I had anticipated feeling satisfied, accomplished even, but reaching the last page of the book left me depressed. Even the somewhat happily ever after ending wasn’t fulfilling for me. There were so many questions that the author hadn’t answered. The worst thing was the knowledge that the odds of ever reading another book were slim to none. I would never again fall
in love with a story, with characters. I would never lose myself in another book. I found myself wishing I had never opened the damn thing in the first place.
After a mostly silent dinner, I knew Dad was suspicious. He kept eyeing me as we took turns placing pieces into the half-finished puzzle on our hardwood floor. “How did the exam go?”
I shrugged. “Fine.” I could see he wasn’t satisfied by my answer. “It didn’t go quite as well as I would have liked, but it could have been worse.”
He placed a corner piece and looked up at me. “Is that what has you down? Because there is plenty of time left in the semester to make up for one grade.”
“You’re right.” I faked a smile and pretended to struggle to find the correct place for the piece I was holding. “I just...I think I would have been more satisfied if I had more time with it.”
“Didn’t you have the entire class period?” he asked, totally missing the subtext.
I sighed, knowing there was no way to talk to him about what was really bothering me. “I will pace myself better next time,” I said, hoping I would get such an opportunity.
“You won’t really need math in your career. If you still plan to follow in my footsteps, anyway.”
I nodded and he smiled widely. It was a decision he made for me a long time ago. “So, just get through this semester and I’ll set you up with a job at the station.” He reached over and placed a hand on my cheek. “Everything will be fine.”
I tried to remind myself that he was only doing what he thought was best. He was trying to set me up with a comfortable, law abiding life. He was only trying to be a responsible father. He couldn’t know that I had stories in my head now.
Later, in bed, I was holding the book and contemplating reading it again. This time, I was searching for anything new concerning the book. I took the glossy jacket off the book and noticed a handwritten number written in very small print where the jacket had been. I didn’t want to get my hopes up, sure it was a number from before the war, but I snuck downstairs and called it anyway.
Despite the reassurances I gave myself of how ridiculous the idea of someone answering the phone was, my heart still beat a little faster as the line began to ring. I curled the telephone cord around my index finger. After seven or eight rings, I laughed at myself and hung up the phone. I began walking back upstairs, but when my foot hit the third step, I heard a click and the dim room was lit up by the television.
“Hello, Dissident,” a robotic male voice announced. I froze in place, looking around the room, wondering if my house was about to be raided. “We have been watching you and we hope you enjoyed your introduction to the forbidden.”
The book.
They put it in my locker?
I walked slowly to stand in front of the television. I’m not sure what I thought I was
going to see or, even better, what I hoped to see, but there was only black and white noise there. The voice continued.
“We enjoy freedoms you cannot imagine. We do what we want. We say what we want. And most importantly, we think what we want. We are Dissenters.”
I stood there, unable to move, wondering if I was imagining the voice. They were risking their freedom, their life, as they were saying these things. And they were flaunting their disregard for the law on a stranger’s television in the middle of the night. I had finally cracked.
The black and white noise faded into a person’s face. He had brown hair and light green eyes. He was the staring boy from math class. He smirked that same smirk from before. “You are already one of us,” he stated with his normal voice and a shrug, “so join us.”
The television turned off on its own and I was left to make the biggest decision of my life alone.
I had barely slept at all when my alarm went off the next morning. I kept hearing it repeatedly in my head, you are already one of us. I couldn’t help but think it was true, I had broken the rules, but I was far from a world changing revolutionary. I felt my rebellion was more of a weakness than a political stance. I was ashamed of it.
This shame followed me all the way to school. I felt like everyone knew my dirty little secret. I kept my head and hand down, careful not to draw any extra attention to myself. That is, until I saw him walking in the halls. He walked with his head held high. He acted as if nothing had happened, as if nothing had changed. I walked up to him and shoved him into an open classroom. There were plenty of those these days since they had banned a lot of subjects that used to be taught.
“Whoa!” He was taller and bigger, so it wasn’t lost on me that he was allowing himself to be moved. I shoved him away from me and shut the door behind us.
“What the hell is going on?” His calm demeanor didn’t make sense and made my voice carry a anxious tone. “I could have you arrested for at least three felonies and you are acting like nothing happened.”
“You could.” He leaned against the teacher’s desk and crossed his arms. “But you won’t.”
“You don’t know me! You don’t know what I’ll do!” I had a horrible thought and gasped. “That’s why you put the book in my locker. You made me an accomplice! "
He chuckled and shook his head. “Calm down, Nancy Drew.” He ignored my confused expression. “No one is trying to incriminate you here.” He bounced off the desk and took a few steps towards me. “If I wanted to do that, I could have told someone to search your locker after I put the book there.”
“So, it was you!”
He shrugged as if to say of course. “As for your threat” He leaned down to put his face closer to mine. “I think, if you were planning on selling me out, you would have done it already.” He stood back up and began to walk past me.
“Why me?”
He stopped and turn around to face me again. “I mean, you could have put that book in anybody’s locker. So, why me?”
“We did,” he replied quickly. You were the only one that actually called the number.” “Oh.” I must have sounded disappointed. “Look, this isn’t about you being special.” His previous teasing and casual tone suddenly
became very serious. “This is about changing things and either you are in or you are out.” “And I have to decide right now?” I asked. “Betraying my government, not to mention
my dad, isn’t a choice that I can make on a whim.” He narrowed his eyes. “Betraying your government,” he repeated in a condescending
manner. “You know what, I think this was a mistake. You clearly aren’t on the same wavelength as the rest of us if you are worried about your government’s feelings.”
He tried to leave again, but I stepped in front of him. “The rest? How many of you are there?”
“That information is reserved for people who are in. And it is a limited time offer.” This time, he did leave the room.
It was an impossible situation. I had to make the biggest, ugliest decision of my life in a split second. I couldn’t help but think he had made a horrible mistake. Was I really the kind of person that could change the world? Or maybe that was the wrong question. Maybe he was right, and this wasn’t about me. Maybe it was about something bigger. Maybe the question was, did the world need changing?
I hurried out into the hallway and jogged to catch up with him. “Okay,” I whispered, “I’m in.” My voice shook slightly as I said it.
“You sure?” I nodded and hoped I sounded more confident than I felt. “Okay, but if you utter phrases like ‘betray your government’ around others, they will eat you alive.”
“Good to know.” I took a deep breath to steady my nerves. “I’m Alyssa, by the way.” “Jay.” “That short for something?” “Nope. Just Jay.” He stopped by our math classroom door and looked down at me.
“Look, no offense, but this doesn’t mean we are friends.”
I rolled my eyes. “Of course not. I didn’t think that.”
“Good. It is probably best if we aren’t seen together too much in public. It might draw too much attention.”
“Right. Got it.” He stood there looking at me without replying. “Oh, right.” I walked into class and sat at my usual seat in the back. He took his a few rows away and we both pretended the other didn’t exist. Well, I may have faltered a time or two.
After class, he covertly dropped a note on my desk as he walked by. I walked to the bathroom before opening it. 308 River Road at 11 o’clock was scrawled in the same handwriting that I found on my book.
I spent the rest of the day cleaning my room. It was my favorite way to procrastinate difficult decisions and I had a very big one to make. It was one thing to say I was in, but it is another thing entirely to actually be in. And, Jay wasn’t exactly the warmest person to put on any kind of welcoming committee, so maybe the other members were even worse. But, one thing kept pulling me back. Living in constant fear of other people and their beliefs was suffocating. There had to be a better way to live.
I washed and dried all my laundry that had been piling up in the corner and then organized it by color in my closet. I even swept and mopped the hardwood floor. Dad came in and caught me crouched in one of the corners cleaning the dust from the baseboards. “Uh oh.” He chuckled as he leaned against the doorway. He was still wearing his work
suit. “What’s on your mind?” I stopped cleaning and stood up, imagining how ridiculous I looked. “Nothing,” I lied. He walked into my room and sat on my bed. “Come on, Aly.” He patted the empty spot
beside him. “Talk to me.” “I’m fine, Dad.” I protested by staying put. “It’s nothing worth discussing, really. It’s
just, final exams are coming up and then graduation–”
“I told you that you didn’t need to worry about the future. I’ve got it all worked out for you already at the station.”
“What if I don’t want everything worked out for me?” My mouth dropped op at my own words.
His eyes widened as his eyebrows lifted before he composed himself. “It took me years of networking and crappy jobs to get where I am.” His tone became disciplinary now. “You could do a lot worse than a nationally respected, government supported news station.”
“I respect your job, Dad,” I said with all the emotion I could muster. I didn’t know whether that was really the truth anymore. “And I know you are just trying to do what you think is best for me.”
“So, come to the station next week.” He stood up and walked over to me, placing his hands on my shoulders. “Look around. Meet everyone. Watch how we put it all together.” He shrugged. “And maybe you will agree that it is the best thing for your future.”
I stood there for a moment, wishing I could tell him about the book. I wished I could find the words to explain the world that it opened up for me. I wanted to be able to dig it up from the floor and hand it to him, so that he could experience all the emotions and imaginings that we weren’t supposed to.
Instead, I only nodded. “Okay. You’re right. I’ll give it a chance.” He smiled as he stood up straight. “Great. I’ll talk to Kara and see what day works best.” I forced a smile. “Great.”
The alley was almost pitch black except for one small yellow light beside a dark green door. Every window in the two-story brick building was grimy and dark. I wondered if this was the right place.
I grabbed the silver knob and attempted to turn it, but it didn’t move. I laughed a little at myself for thinking it was going to be that simple. The longer I stood there, waiting in the dark, the more I became convinced this was all some sort of cruel joke.
“You actually showed.” I jumped at the sound of the voice and turned to see a shadow at the end of the alley. “I’m surprised.” I relaxed a little as I realized it was Jay.
“Yeah, well, I’m here.” I crossed my arms as a chill ran down my spine. “Now what?”
He began walking towards me, pulling a key from his pocket. He opened the door without answering me and I followed him inside. He took a small red flashlight from his back pocket and I could make out one wall of the room as the light moved across it. We had come through the side entrance of an old party shop. There were noisemakers, balloons, cups, plates, basically everything you can think of that would be at a birthday party. They were all covered in long settled dust.
I followed him to the back of the store, and he slid a rack of party hats away from the wall. He knocked in an unusual rhythm, three beats, then five, then two, and the wall opened. It appeared to be another room of the shop, but it was completely bare. I followed him in.
“Close your eyes and don’t open them until I tell you.”
I rolled my eyes at him, “Seriously?” He raised his eyebrow at me, and I did as he asked with a sigh. “If you are playing with me—” I almost fell but he moved his hand to my shoulder and steadied me. It felt like the floor was falling away beneath my feet. I began to hear music
with so much bass that I felt it in my chest. It became louder and louder. At its loudest, I felt the floor come to a stop beneath my feet.
“Open your eyes!” Jay had to yell it.
I opened my eyes and found myself staring at another world. It was a huge, open, underground space of concrete and brick. It looked like a shopping mall that was abandoned many decades ago. People were everywhere, dancing to the illegal music. There was glowing spray paint on every inch of the walls and floors. It was mostly used to decorate the walls with quotes about freedom and revolution. Some guy named George Orwell painted, “In a time of deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act” on the wall in neon orange. Up and to the left of that quote, someone named Huey Newton added, “You can’t jail the revolution” in pearl white.
The bass continued to pound. Jay grabbed my hand and led me through the dancing people to the back-left corner of the
room. I followed him down more stairs. The music began to fade again as we continued to descend.
He opened the door at the bottom of the stairs. I walked into the room to find row after row of books. There were old armchairs and sofas pushed up against walls. There were a few posters in different sections of the room, which said things like, “Open a book and grown your mind” and “reading is a superpower.” There wasn’t any paint on these walls. The space almost seemed sacred.
“Maybe this is more your speed?”
I grinned and walked to the first row, running my fingers across the spines of the books. “I can read one?”
“You can do whatever you want here,” he said, looking me in the eye. “All that bullshit about thoughts being dangerous...It’s a lie, Alyssa. It’s just to keep us all from being free.”
“How do you know that?”
“You saw all the people up there and there are plenty more rooms here. All kinds of thoughts are going on here and we have yet to cause any catastrophe.” He shrugged. “You could always hang out for a while and make up your own mind. It can take a while to learn to think for yourself because we aren’t really taught to do it anymore.”
“And if I decide I don’t agree with you. If I decide all this is dangerous?”
“You can leave anytime you like. And, even if you told someone, you don’t know how to get down here by yourself.” He smirked at me and began walking back towards the door. “I’ll be around if you want to talk.”
I stayed down there for hours reading stories of mythical creatures. I allowed myself to really think about them and purposely try to bring them into being. No matter how many times I tried it never worked.
I told myself that it was okay to stay there because I had proof now that it was all a lie. Intellectually, I knew one person never had the ability to bring anything into reality by themselves, but I chose to be willfully ignorant.
I wanted to stay with the music, the books, and the dancing people. I felt free there. I even went back up and danced among the glowing paint.
© No part of this work may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of the author.
My OTP!
GET TO KNOW ME: FAVOURITE MOVIES [2/10]
↳ SAY ANYTHING… (1989) dir. Cameron Crowe
“I gave her my heart, and she gave me a pen.”
Welcome to the Void
White, blank walls and white marble floors that are too clean, too perfect, to have ever been used. These are my first memories of existence. A white world of nothingness. I don't know who I am or where I am. I don't know where I come from or where I might end up. All I know for certain, is that the room I stand in is unfinished...empty.
I look down to find that I am completely nude. I move my arms up from my side and see lightly tanned skin that then becomes unnaturally pale. My arms are full goosebumps caused by the overwhelming coldness in the room. My gaze travels to my hands. The long fingers and thickness of the palms strongly indicate male. I still reach down between my legs hesitantly, still unsure of what's incomplete about me. I sigh in relief when I feel that, at least, my sex has been decided upon. I am definitely male. For the moment, anyway.
I guide my hands back up to my face. I notice a slight trembling as it comes into view. I have a cleft chin and a wide jaw. My face widens softly just before I reach my cheekbones, before a slightly dipping again where my eyes are. I look around at the vacant, almost blinding, white room, wishing there was a mirror. I feel my shoulders slump when I realize I will probably never know the color of my own eyes.
I continue to move my hands up, feeling the slightly wavy hair on top of my head. It stops just above my ears. I grab one of the hairs in between my index finger and thumb, plucking it from the root. I quickly move my hand back in front of my face, examining the single hair. It rapidly shifts colors in my hand. It appears Iridescent, like a bubble or an opal. Briefly, it lingers on a dark brown, but quickly shifts to a jet black, ultimately returning to its confused state of indecision. I hear myself curse, flicking the hair out of my fingers in frustration. Just another thing I will never know.
I clear my throat and part my lips, "H-Hello?" My voice is deep, but inviting. It shakes slightly, due to the confusion and anxiety I'm feeling.
"Do you know your name?" I hear the voice of a woman, seemingly coming from nowhere. It's amplified, as if it is coming from a speaker.
"No." I sigh in relief with the knowledge that I am not alone. "Where am I? What's going on?" I look around, hoping to see another person, hoping someone can tell me what color my eyes are.
"I don't know. She hasn't decided, yet." The voice continues, but I do not see the person it belongs to.
"What do you mean?" I continue to look around, moving around the room, trying to figure out where the sound is coming from. "Who hasn't decided?"
"Your creator." She says, I can hear a tinge of sympathy, "You are, as of yet," She pauses, "an unfinished creation."
I feel my chest tighten as my breathing accelerates. "What are you talking about? I'm not a creation!" Putting my hand on my chest, I angrily tell her, "I'm a person!" I look up at the ceiling, but it reveals nothing. It's white, completely naked.
"I'm sorry." I hear the empathy in her voice for the first time, "I'm so sorry, but you're not...not yet. She has to finish you."
"Who the hell is she?" I demand, continuing to look around, but nothing is all I find.
"The author." I hear her sigh and papers shuffling. "According to this, you are loosely based on her brother and her best friend. She still hasn't decided which combination of the two you will be like or even what your story will be."
"What are you telling me?" I notice my blink rate increases as my heart begins to pound with fright. I take a deep breath, feeling my heartbeat in my neck, and hearing the hammering in my ears. "I am a figment of someone's imagination?"
"Yes, I am afraid so." I look down at my hands, feeling my face again. I try to convince myself that this is impossible. This is just a nightmare. This cannot be real. "The worst kind." She adds in sorrow. "An undeveloped one."
My bottom lip trembles, "So, what is going to happen to me?" I hear the pitiful tone in my voice as my vision blurs with tears.
"That is up to her. We just keep you here until she's finished with you. That's our job." There is a new harshness to her voice, as if she is trying to remind herself this isn't personal.
I nod, biting the inside of my cheek, wiping the tears from my cheeks with my fingers, "And if she never finishes me?" I ask apprehensively. "What happens, then? Will you help me?"
"The unfinished stay unfinished. I already told you. We just keep you here." I hear her exhale slowly, "Look, I'm sorry." The hardened edge to her voice has faded into a controlled, calm tone. "We are but a blank slate." She says it like a motto, a tag-line. "Nothing more."
There is another pause as I feel my knees give, causing me to fall to the floor. I bring my knees to my chest, wrapping my arms around them. "Welcome to the Void." The voice says softly. I hear a slight buzzing noise and then complete silence.
"Hello? Hello?" I sound like a child, crying out for his parents in the darkness after a nightmare. "Hello? Come back!"
As I continue to shout for the voice's return, I wonder if it's possible for an unfinished person to break.
© No part of this work may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of the author.