Am I rewatching the new Doctor Who ep for the third time today? PERHAPS.
But one of the things that stands out to me so much about this episode is that it washes away a lot of the things that made me frustrated about the Moffat era.
- The plot MAKES SENSE. I feel like I could use this ep to introduce anyone to Doctor Who and it would make sense. It’s not concerned with being THE MOST “CLEVER” THING ON TV. It’s not concerned with twists and turns and surprises that aren’t earned just to prove how clever the writers are.
- It’s fun. It’s legitimately fun.
- The new companions? There doesn’t seem to be a big mystery about them (*cough*Clara*cough*River*cough*) They seem like normal people who were just in the right/wrong place at the right/wrong time. GIVE ME MORE OF ANYONE CAN BE HEROIC INSTEAD OF ONLY THE *SPECIAL* TRAVEL WITH THE DOCTOR. Let me see myself in them cause I’m not special, but I bet I could be if I got to travel with her.
- Showing that the Doctor is brilliant and clever and quick instead of just telling and telling and telling me.
- All the companions get to use their knowledge to help the Doctor. And it’s not magic knowledge, it’s things like bus drivers and police work and social media.
- The Doctor never pulls a ‘no I have to go alone’ bullshit – everyone’s like ‘how do we help?’ and she’s all ‘C’MON FAM WE’RE GOING TO FIX THIS TOGETHER’.
I just really like this season already, okay?
people who don’t wear glasses who are writing characters who wear glasses;
all-my-fandoms-are-killing-me:
they get fogged up when we drink hot beverages.
they get smudged for no reason.
we will push them up using anything in our area (i.e shoulder, whatever is in my hand, scrunching my nose up so they get pushed up, etc.).
they get knocked off our faces all. the. fucking. time.
when we change clothes we either take them off or they fall off when we pull our shirts off.
we have to clean them after being in the rain.
we own multiple pairs of them, not just one lone pair for our whole lives.
most people don’t wear them in the pool, but some have extra old pairs for the pool (like me).
some people take them off during sex, that’s fine! but some people keep them on.
they don’t get squished into your face when you kiss (most of the time. at least from what i’ve experienced and i’ve got some mf big glasses).
if we look down and look back up while you talk/to peek up at something, we will just peek blindly over the top of them.
we clean them on whatever item of clothing is closest.
some of us have prescription sunglasses and some of us wear contacts when we need to wear sunglasses.
please keep some of these in mind when you write characters with glasses cause y’all who have 20/20 vision keep telling me all characters sleep in their glasses and own the same singular pair from age 6-25 and they never clean them.( there’s this but you missed a few iconic glasses traits
– “where’d I put my glasses” (is wearing them)
– new glasses getting scratched on basically nothing. where’d the nick come from? we just don’t know.
– forgetting you’re wearing synthetic material and just smudge the junk on your glasses around
– after doing so, proceeding to hunt down any friend who is wearing a more cottony material
– getting eyelashes on your glasses
– stabbing yourself in the face with the arm of your glasses
– “woah are you blind?”
– “how many fingers am I holding up??”
– walking into a warm room from the cold and suddenly being unable to see because your glasses fogged up
– going outside and everything is Super Crisp 1080p
– having three pairs of glasses and putting all of them at once
– “aw dude you have transition lenses? lucky.”
– the non-glasses scrutinising squint
– taking off your glasses and suddenly you’re a different entity entirely
– if you’re too good for taking off your glasses when dressing/undressing, realising you didn’t pull the collar of a shirt out enough and subjecting to your fate )-For female characters wearing eye makeup is pretty much useless
– the reason why is because no matter what we do, the mascara will smear on our glasses
– thinking “Oh, there’s a little smudge. I’ll just clean it quickly”, then taking the glasses off and wondering how the hell you could see with what looks like three layers of dirt on them
– giving your loved one a little kiss but in the wrong angle so their nose touches your glasses
– the look™ when you’re in your bed lying on the side with your glasses on (aka the glasses are skewed)
-sleeping in glasses fucking hurts… well, not anymore, but it used too
-if you have long eyelashes, having to push your glasses down your nose so they dont constantly rub each other, then having to push them up cuz you cant see
-WHY WONT YOU STAY ON MY FACE?!?!?!
-*they tilt crooked slightly* oh wow, And… now Im falling over
-having transitions and right after walking into a building you can’t see because they’re still dark
-forgetting where you put them then having to either ask for help or judge your entire surroundings
-dont like contacts? like cosplaying? guess what! you’re blind now!
-trading glasses with other glasses wearers to see how blind your friends are
-when there’s a smudge that just. Won’t. Go. Away.
-“hey do you have lens cleaner?”
-your old glasses become your back up pair in case your current ones break
-metal and plastic frames are very different and most people have a preference
-for some, having to go get tested every year or so to see just how much worse your sight got, and then waiting weeks until the new lenses are ready
Y’all forget the best one
-people randomly removing your glasses from your face and putting them on only to say ‘why do you wear glasses?? You’re not even blind.’
…the problem is..i had that last one happen, but i actually do need glasses, the difference is only so small that most people don’t see it when they try my glasses XD
Characters over 40:
– they dont need glasses. Their arms are just TOO short. Stretch those arms AND put on a light. Use your phone’s flashlight if you need to. You are not old. The letters are just too small.
-some accept there fate. Glasses on, off, on, off.
– yes they are on the top of your head
– cords are for losers
– multifocale glasses come in crappy expensive ones and riduculously expensive slightly better ones
-when going down the stairs, chin on your chest, or you WILL fall (and break your hip)
Others
When you are fasting (ramadan) your eyesight can change, when adding or loosing weight also, when pregnant also, in growspurt also.
Titanium glasses break less but when they do they are hard to repair.
If you got a really flat nose, good luck with wearing glasses
If you got a large nose, good luck finding a pair that fits.
If your eyes are close to eachother. Every glasses you wear look dumb. Try the kids section
People with down syndrome usually have their ears closer to the face. This means the spectacle feet are way to long and have to be shortened
-Breaking the nose piece off and being stabbed by the remaining bit. It can HURT
-fallong asleep in your glasses and they fall off and go god knows wherr hut now you are late to work because you can’t seeto find them
-having old ass glasses because (in America) you can’t afford to replace them/grt a new prescription
– checking for glucoma if it runs in her family.you can go blind if you don’t. So you can have this done under medical insurance rather than vision insurance (again American things)
-if you are holding a baby they WILL take yout classes
-the never ending freaking comment /question “oh! You look so good without glasses. We don’t you get contacts?”
-always having a nose piece repair kit on you but somehow the tiny screwdriver always dissapears
– When you walk out of the shop with a new pair of glasses your depth perception is wonky as hell for the first little while and everything looks/feels weird
– we’ll turn our head rather than looking to the side. The glasses don’t cover the sides after all.
– are my glasses dirty or is there something on the screen?
– glasses are the first thing on in the morning and last thing at night. Minus the time you hold your phone two inches from your face to mindlessly scroll, check email, read ao3 etc
Am I rewatching the new Doctor Who ep for the third time today? PERHAPS.
But one of the things that stands out to me so much about this episode is that it washes away a lot of the things that made me frustrated about the Moffat era.
- The plot MAKES SENSE. I feel like I could use this ep to introduce anyone to Doctor Who and it would make sense. It’s not concerned with being THE MOST “CLEVER” THING ON TV. It’s not concerned with twists and turns and surprises that aren’t earned just to prove how clever the writers are.
- It’s fun. It’s legitimately fun.
- The new companions? There doesn’t seem to be a big mystery about them (*cough*Clara*cough*River*cough*) They seem like normal people who were just in the right/wrong place at the right/wrong time. GIVE ME MORE OF ANYONE CAN BE HEROIC INSTEAD OF ONLY THE *SPECIAL* TRAVEL WITH THE DOCTOR. Let me see myself in them cause I’m not special, but I bet I could be if I got to travel with her.
- Showing that the Doctor is brilliant and clever and quick instead of just telling and telling and telling me.
- All the companions get to use their knowledge to help the Doctor. And it’s not magic knowledge, it’s things like bus drivers and police work and social media.
- The Doctor never pulls a ‘no I have to go alone’ bullshit – everyone’s like ‘how do we help?’ and she’s all ‘C’MON FAM WE’RE GOING TO FIX THIS TOGETHER’.
I just really like this season already, okay?
i really resonate with your comment about the companions being normal, everyday people put into extraordinary situations that challenge them and test them as opposed to mystery boxes or Incredibly Special People
there was this interaction that twelve had with bill that really rubbed me up the wrong way which was this:
DOCTOR: Humanity’s doomed to never learn from its mistakes.
BILL: Well, I guess that’s part of our charm.
DOCTOR: No, it’s really quite annoying. […]
BILL: Why do you put up with us, then?
DOCTOR: In amongst seven billion, there’s someone like you. That’s why I put up with the rest of them.sure, some people are assholes, but even then, one in 7 billion? it just seems so antithetical to dw’s core message. everyone’s got something to offer, or some capacity for change. i’m glad The Chibs ™ is going back to basics in terms of how rtd would really focus in on how each person had something of value about them and sense of complexity, even if they were the smallest background character
It took me many, many years of having my life ruined by Shonda Rhimes to realize that the world won’t end if I stop watching a television show. Just because it once gave me sky high feelings doesn’t mean I have to pull out all the stops to try and prolong the emotional roller coaster ride. When you’ve fangirled for a few decades, you learn to cope with the reality that one day you will wake up, look at a photo of your favorite actress, and discover that the feeling is just…GONE. Or you’ll watch your ship sink and shrug your shoulders, knowing that two more random idiots will soon enter your life and reign supreme. For every ship there is a season. A time to weep, and a time to read every smut fan fic you can possibly find, and a time to move on. The 30-year-old fangirl gets this.
Why Fangirling Is Better In Your Thirties [x]
There wasn’t a word of this that I didn’t nod my head at. Leaving a show behind, quitting a ship, staying out of petty fights, shrugging off haters, picking the friends that matter… fandom is much sweeter the more perspective on life you possess. You realize that the fandom itself doesn’t really matter, but how it enhances your life does. So make your fandom life a happy place. Lord knows no one else will do it for you.
(via callistawolf)
“We begin to learn that our passions are not a virus, or parasites that
should have that hopped off the second we left adolescence. They’re the
weapons we carry into battle as we conquer in all arenas of life.
They’re the voices of our favorite characters who remind us what we’re
capable of.
“
THIS. YES.
(via luninosity)
The Ableist, Racist, Classist Underpinnings Of ‘Laziness’ – The Establishment
The Ableist, Racist, Classist Underpinnings Of ‘Laziness’ – The Establishment
Hello, I’m a lazy Millennial.
In other words, I’m from a generation
that has worked more hours for less money than any generation before
me, but occasionally I eat a granola bar for breakfast instead of pouring myself a bowl of cereal. According to some, including many writers of online thinkpieces, that’s enough to make me “lazy.”But the problem isn’t me, or young
people in general, or any group that’s historically been decried for its
idleness. Like Millennials, groups that are called “lazy” are often the
hardest-working people around. They’re just subject to ableism, racism,
classism, and other bigotry that codes exploitation or exhaustion as
“unwillingness to work.”I myself have had a very confusing
relationship with “laziness” from a young age, often being called “lazy”
for enjoying reading and video games by the same parents who praised me
for always getting my homework done on time.Needless to say, I became rather
confused about the quality of my work ethic. Was I lazy or not? In my
teens, I developed an anxiety disorder and a perfectionism that made
academic shirking impossible, but the constant state of worry disrupted
my sleep and left me so exhausted that I would often come home from
school and go straight to bed for a nap. Sometimes, all I could do was
lay in bed, awake, ruminating on everything I could possibly worry
about.But because I was in bed, this was called “laziness.”
I worked so little at that office
job, I couldn’t believe it. I could spend multiple hours each day
scrolling through Tumblr or playing on social media. My “work” time
involved reading articles vaguely related to my work — mostly because
there wasn’t much work for me to do. Compared to being on my feet all
day, being expected to work every moment on the clock, it was nothing.I worked three times as hard at my
food and customer service jobs as I did at any of my digital marketing
positions. And yet contemptuous thinkpiecers keep on describing people
who work in those industries as “lazy.” Why don’t you get a REAL job? Like reading Tumblr while sitting at a desk, instead of busting your ass at McDonald’s.According to Dr. Alison Munoff, a licensed clinical psychologist, “laziness” is nothing more than a value judgement.
“‘Laziness’ is not a personality
trait, it is simply a matter of a lack of proper motivation and
reinforcement, as it is a behavioral pattern rather than a part of who
we are,” says Dr. Munoff. “The ability to actively approach a task in a
time-effective manner changes depending on the task and its value in
our lives. For example, in a situation of obtaining limited resources,
people find themselves quite motivated and resourceful, meaning that
this task is simply a priority based on its value and necessity, and has
little to do with someone’s personality. Unfortunately I find that when
asked about the first time people were told they were being ‘lazy,’ it
was from a parent or caregiver who was unsuccessfully attempting to
motivate the child without a good understanding of the way this idea
would be carried forward.”In nature, animals spend a lot of their time being idle.
Most of the footage shot of big cats like lions are of them lazing
around. Part of this is because many of them are nocturnal, but it’s
also because animals will hunt, forage, and eat until they’re full, and
then most of the rest of their time is spent conserving energy. Laying
around doing pretty much nothing is completely natural. It’s adaptive.
Yet laziness has this negative connotation in many human societies. And
that negative connotation is often deployed in ableist, racist, and
classist ways.Today, we can all enjoy reasonably
priced produce thanks to the many exploited Latin undocumented immigrant
workers picking our fruit and vegetables — labor that is so intensive
that we “non-lazy” white people simply can’t handle it. And let’s not
forget that all of this land was stolen from the Indigenous tribes that
were here before we floated over and laid claim to it all. Isn’t
stealing other people’s hard work supposed to be lazy?Or is it just that it’s easier to call people lazy than admit that you exploited them?
Even if you’re not racist, you’ve
probably used the idea of laziness in a way that hurts a lot of people. I
still struggle with an anxiety disorder and go through bouts of
depression, and a lot of what’s involved in these mental illnesses looks
like what people call “laziness.” Depression saps your energy and makes
everything seem pointless. Anxiety is paralyzing, making even some of
the simplest tasks (like calling people on the phone) seem daunting, so I
avoid them.Combine the two and you’ve got me
huddled into a ball on the bed, unable to do anything but listen to
Netflix playing in the background. It looks like laziness, but I’m
actually engaged in an exhausting war in my own head. Anxiety is like
pushing a giant boulder in front of you wherever you go, and depression
is like dragging a giant boulder attached to your legs by chains.People with physical illness and
disability are also prone to being accused of laziness, especially if
that illness or disability is not visible to others. There are people
who are nearly constantly in pain or constantly fatigued, but you would
never know by looking at them. These individuals work much harder than
able-bodied and “healthy” people. Not only do they often have to work to
survive because disability payments (if they can get them) are not
nearly enough, they have to navigate a world that caters to able-bodied
people, and they have to navigate that world while their bodies work
against them. But article after article decries the “laziness” of people
who use motorized carts or take elevators up one floor instead of using
the stairs, not for a second thinking that there are people who
wouldn’t be able to shop or go up floors at all without these
“conveniences.”It’s easier to think of someone as
“lazy” than to face the fact that school costs too much, that better
jobs are inaccessible, that childcare is unaffordable, that people are
forced to work so hard for so little that there’s no way they could have
enough energy to attempt schooling or finding better work, and that
what we give to people who can’t work is insufficient to the point of
being shameful. I could say that calling people lazy is, in itself,
lazy, but it’s not just an intellectual shortcut. It’s a defense
mechanism.Everyone has a finite amount of
energy. Some of us have greater drains on our pool of energy than
others, whether it comes from the stress of racial microaggressions, the
stress of poverty, or mental or physical illness. Needing more time to
recover isn’t laziness. Having less time or energy to make breakfast
than the previous generation isn’t laziness. When you take a second to
look into the reasons behind the behavior, you’ll never end up finding
laziness. Because laziness isn’t real.^^^ THIS