duchesscloverly replied to your post: duchesscloverly asked:Top 5 membe…
TRICK QUESTION! THERE ARE ONLY 4 MEMBERS OF ONE DIRECTION!
And that just further proves my point. Lol. I didn’t even bother googling it.
Just another WordPress site
duchesscloverly replied to your post: duchesscloverly asked:Top 5 membe…
TRICK QUESTION! THERE ARE ONLY 4 MEMBERS OF ONE DIRECTION!
And that just further proves my point. Lol. I didn’t even bother googling it.
Top 5 numbers between 1 and 5
Top 5 places to buy a shovel
Who is your top 5 on myspace.
Top 5 members of One Direction
You just suddenly made me blank on people named David, lol
…I can’t even name 5 members of One Direction, to be perfectly honest (randomly shows age)
I just tried logging into myspace for the first time in probably 5 years and apparently I don’t have an account anymore. I know Tom was in my top 5 still though.
It occurs to me as I’m elbow-deep in editing this Mycroft/Lestrade story—and feeling that exquisite torment of loving this story, of being proud of it—that there are those who will never bother to read the thing simply because they can’t be bothered reading anything with the pairing. That gives me a sad. I wish I could convince them otherwise.
See, to me, there’s so much potential in these two. They’re visceral. They’re compelling. As someone who writes both, the problems, issues, and dynamics between Mycroft and Lestrade are just so different from those between John and Sherlock. There’s so much to explore between the two that isn’t often explored with John and Sherlock, or is explored in vastly different ways: Age. Experience. Interaction with work colleagues. The various manners in which they enact the business of caring for others. How the two must fight to fit a relationship between them into such busy, work-entrenched lives.
All pairings are different from one another, obviously. That’s the way of it. Well-written stories are the volatile combination of two or more characters, and that reaction is by definition going to be different with any other combination. However, I’ve talked to many people who have said, “oh, I read Johnlock, but I just don’t care about Mystrade.” And when I ask why, it turns out that they’ve built up this image of the pairing that may reflect the way Mycroft and Lestrade appear to be, but it doesn’t consider what happens beneath the surface when you put these two disparate elements in a room together, shake it up, and let it go.
It can be explosive. Illuminating. Rich. Satisfying. Real.
It can be a story of two men who have achieved within their own particular spheres negotiating how they interact with each other. Two men who have separate lives of their own who nevertheless decide to meet in the middle. Two men whose baggage doesn’t necessarily match, but they decide, regardless, to try.
The combination of Mycroft Holmes and Gregory Lestrade is so much more than the sum of its parts.
I admit, I didn’t get it at first. I read books, I wrote my own original pairings, I read and wrote Sherlock/John. My dance card was full up, I thought. I knew Mycroft/Lestrade existed, of course, but I just didn’t bother to get involved. Greg has silvering hair, and Mycroft carries an umbrella, and what else can there be between them? What more did I really need to know?
But then for some forgotten reason I read one of their stories, and all that changed. I read a story, and I finally understood that there was a there, there. I read a story, and all my barriers crumbled away into nothing the first time Greg made Mycroft smile. I fell in love.
If you’ve read good Mycroft/Lestrade and it’s not been your cup of tea, that’s one thing. I can understand that. But if you haven’t even tried any, if you’ve rejected them on spec, I just really wish I could convince you to give them a try.
I wonder if you wouldn’t fall just a bit in love, too.
A Fish Called Greg Trailer
Sherlock helps Mycroft find his goldfish.
My other videos can be found on my YouTube page or on my video tag.