Lovely and Unsettled

1.5M ratings
277k ratings

See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna
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spockgirl

good omens is Like That bc terry pratchett wrote everything w incredible warmth and belief in humanity but had never heard of gay people whereas neil gaiman had but never wrote anything else that didn’t feature like, sexually explicit vore. bad combination

absolutebearings

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[Image ID: Tumblr reply from eerie-was-i reading: I cannot for the life of me tell if this is from someone who liked or disliked good omens /End ID]

halwayne
starjasmines

if you have a boyfriend and you start liking another guy you dont actually have to break up. basically you can put the first boyfriend in the bathroom and close the door, and then bring the second guy into the house and let them get used to each other's smells through the door. if you supervise them for the first couple weeks, they should eventually get along or at least not kill each other while youre away.

elora x airk x graydon
queerdisagreeable
charlottan

its so fucking embarrassing joining a discord server like hii im a random asshole and heres my stupid attempt at assimilating into possibly years of injokes and personalities that i have to blind read and hope i mesh well with but for now ill just fucking talk to myself publicly in front of everyone i guess because nobody cares about what i have to say

anonymousedward

Meanwhile, established members in the discord:

Oh shit a new person! Everyone PLEASE be cool, please don't scare off the new person! They just got here and already cracking jokes and sharing headcanons, they're so cool. We need them to like us Right Now or they'll leave and never come back. Do NOT blow this for us! I swear to god, [name], if you bring up that stupid pinapple dick joke and make them uncomfortable, i will END YOU.

In other words, we want to make you feel comfortable and maybe impress you if at all possible.

heathyr
shesnake

Christopher Cote, an Osage language consultant on the project and one of many Osage members who attended its Los Angeles premiere Monday, told THR he was “nervous about the release of the film; now that I’ve seen it, I have some strong opinions.

“As an Osage, I really wanted this to be from the perspective of Mollie and what her family experienced, but I think it would take an Osage to do that,” Cote said, referencing Lily Gladstone’s character in the movie. (Historical spoilers from the film ahead.) “Martin Scorsese, not being Osage, I think he did a great job representing our people, but this history is being told almost from the perspective of Ernest Burkhart [played by Leonardo DiCaprio] and they kind of give him this conscience and kind of depict that there’s love. But when somebody conspires to murder your entire family, that’s not love. That’s not love, that’s just beyond abuse.”

He continued, “I think in the end, the question that you can be left with is: How long will you be complacent with racism? How long will you go along with something and not say something, not speak up, how long will you be complacent? I think that’s because this film isn’t made for an Osage audience, it was made for everybody, not Osage. For those that have been disenfranchised, they can relate, but for other countries that have their acts and their history of repression, this is an opportunity for them to ask themselves this question of morality, and that’s how I feel about this film.”

tastyrepulsorboots
ashleyrguillory

And I didn’t talk to him ever again

closet-keys

lines from an Andrea Gibson poem reading,  "When I came out to my parents  they took me to a psychiatrist to get my head fixed.  The psychiatrist said, You are not responsible for your family's happiness."
bisexualshakespeare

[ID: A seven panel black and white comic by Ashley R. Guillory, depicting their interactions with past therapists.
Ashley, with long hair and a beanie, sits on the floor in an office space, organizing piles of different papers. “I found the piece of paper that officially cemented the exact date I stopped speaking to my father.”
Closeup on Ashley’s face as she examines the paper closer.
“It was a letter from the family therapist he wanted us to see together. I told her in no uncertain terms that I never wished to see or speak to him ever again.”
Ashley puts this paper through the shredder. Caption: “She diagnosed this desire as a symptom of some text book manifestations of long suffered anxiety and depression, without examining what might be the source of either. Giving me a list of specialists who might help me undergo a behavioral therapy to help change my troubled mind.”
A closeup shows the top of the letter as it’s about to go through the machine, captioned, “I went to one of the specialists on the list, an actively sought out therapist 45 minutes away”
Ashley sits across from the new therapist, both in chairs, captioned, “Our first session she asked what was going on. I explained what happened with the last therapist. Including all the reasons I gave for reaching my diagnosed quote naive unquote and quote short-sighted unquote solution to my problem with him.”
The next shot shows a paralleled closeup of Ashley and the new therapist’s face, captioned, “She asked me -” then the therapist says, “Do you have to talk to him?” Ashley replies, “…No.”
The therapist, smiling a little, says, “Then don’t. If he’s actively detrimental and refuses to honor your boundaries, don’t speak to him.” Ashley asks, “I don’t have to ever again?” Therapist answers, “Never again. You’re an adult. You make your decisions.”

Reply image is an excerpt from an Andrea Gibson poem reading, “When I came out to my parents they took me to a psychiatrist to get my head fixed. The psychiatrist said, You are not responsible for your family’s happiness.” /end]

if someone said that last sentence to my face i might cry comic accessible comics