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remembering the time i bought a jumbo blahaj on a normal trip to ikea without knowing anything about blahaj. the influence of blahaj is immense. attractor of transgenders. angel of my room. 100% worthwhile investment. i sleep better knowing there is a blahaj beside me to watch over my dreams.
A smile usually means something good đ praying a smile equals good race week đ
BAHRAIN GP'25 â april 10, 2025 (đ¸ Sam Bagnall)
Her expressions when she realizes that Jinx could have survived. Her smile. Girl, you care about her so much, don't even try to deny it.
I swear, if and when Jinx comes back into their lives, she and Vi are never letting her go again.
soo excited about the ashton lore we're getting đď¸đď¸ !!!! Titans!!! Sexy Tree??
Also love a good pondering about fate and destiny!!? Is this a thing one is able to escape? A thing that traps you? Sure being a hero is cool and all but being trapped in that role? Your path decided before you even existed?? Where does it lead? Are you able to break free? whaaa. yess feed meeee!!
- Alfred Lord Tennyson
Beloved, no amount of water in the universe can quench the thirst of my soul, except you-)RB
Beloved ,you dwell in two places;the place where you live and in my heart -)RB
#635 gifs of natalie dormer in the tudors season one are available for purchase ( 10$) through the link below. please do not repost the gifs or claim as your own.
RACHEL ZEGLERÂ at the âSnow Whiteâ press event held at AlcĂĄzar de Segovia in Segovia, Spain (12th March 2025)
HERE you can find 95 high-quality gifs of Dichen Lachman in Severance (season one) as Ms. Casey. All of the gifs were made by me; please respect my rules and do not repost them and/or edit them. Do not use my gifs for taboo themes and Hollywood roleplays. Please, like or reblog if you find them helpful or use them. Thank you and enjoy! Trigger Warnings: None.
quickly: a self-emancipated woman is tormented by her past long after sheâs made it to freedom (an ex-slave who has slavery living inside of her / children born in the shadow of trauma / a grandmother who can smell the future on the wind / jealous daughters who speak their minds / a house haunted by the dead / stolen milk and blessed berries / blood magic / the deep dark evil of slavery)
what a wild, lush, furious nightmare of a story. this is the story of Sethe, how she escaped slavery, and how she ended up in a house haunted by the ghost of a dead child. this is truly a southern gothic horror tale in every sense. there are psychological and physical traumas, some obtained from slavery and its perpetrators, some obtained from attempts at resisting slavery. there is magic, not the stereotypical âvoodoo/hoodooâ, but something older, darker, and less defined. thereâs injustice, southern lands, hard times, etc. at first, toniâs writing is like a dense forest, but once you find your footpath, the journey will carry you forward.Â
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more thoughts: SPOILERS!
Some personal context⌠Iâve been on the hunt for truly thrilling stories that take my breath away and Toni Morrisonâs work did more than that. This read was preceded by âThe Haunting of Hill Houseâ by Shirley Jackson. I chose it based on it being a classic of gothic horror, a sub-genre I love. I was disappointed by its lack of thrill, passion, or anything, other than Eleanorâs unraveling.Â
Enter Toni Morrison. This is my first read by the late and great author, and it couldnât have been any more perfect of an introduction for me. Iâll never hear âsouthern gothicâ without thinking of BELOVED, which should be the staple of the genre (sorry, not sorry, Shirley J.). Rarely have I heard this work referred to as such. (If I had, I probably wouldâve read it earlier.) I almost feel âhonoredâ to have read this book, though Iâm not sure why. Maybe something to do with this incredible black writer penning a story so beautifully terrifying that people forget to call it âhorrorâ. Maybe because she met and exceeded what I expected, exceeded what popular culture has had me to expect, and embodied that uniqueness that comes with being called Great.
We begin in a mess of spite and timelines. A blurred view of the world, and everyone in it. From 124, the home at the center of the story, we meet Sethe and the rest of her family who are, and are not there. We are given a brief survey of all that has occurred or been endured, from people running away to a haunting being born from the death of a child. Then, Paul D, a man she hasnât seen in years, has found his way to her.
Time is layered in this story⌠at times in the present, at times in the past, sometimes glimpsing the future. Morrison moves through lives and their perspectives in a God-like fashion, without warning, but with the knowledge of all things that have occurred or will come. The way she gives details and expounds on storylines can be unsettling, at first, like coming into a dense and thick forest. Without some studying of what lies before you, it can be easy to get lost. She is a writer who gives glimpses of things before unveiling a fuller truth that towers and shadows and swallows. Sometimes these glimpses of the plot can seem like you missed something, but, artfully, the revelations in future pages have a way of connecting past pages, to form a continuous story.
From behind the eyes of Sethe, her daughter Denver, and Paul D (Sethes old friend and new lover), we come to know the history of Sweet Home (the plantation the family is from) and the history of the people who left it. Through their memories and inner reflections, they relay all we need to know about who they are and why.Â
In short, they belonged to âgoodâ white people, but things changed when their owner died and others came in to rule over them. Going from being treated like dogs, to being treated like less than that, prompted them to head to freedom. Most of the core trauma of this story is sourced in that transitional period between their old master passing away and them becoming their own masters out of desperation and survival.
Throughout this story, poetically, are piercing observations, questions, and philosophical dilemmas about slavery and the white supremacy and capitalism supporting it. Toni illustrates quite sharply how monstrous this process of dehumanization is, and how profoundly evil these acts of violence were. So evil in fact, it seemed to spread throughout the entire white race, able to make itself disappear and become known at any time, even in the most âgoodâ of whites. It is an evil so big it seems impossible to have existed (and still exist). Like its appearance should have ended the world, like some demonic apocalyptic revelation from The Bible. (A Bible that has not served the slaves well, and Toni captures this black theological resentment perfectly.)
One of the most disheartening moments is when Grandma Suggs, renowned backwoods high priestess, forgoes her âgiftâ of preaching. After living a tormented life and finally making it to a place where she is hers, she was collapsed by the intrusion of white men into her seemingly sanctified space. Their privileged appearance and sudden disruption cause Grandma Suggs to question all of existence, finally realizing, that there is no promised land. There are no sacred spaces for them. Maybe no God for them either. She forgoes preaching and spends the rest of what little time she has, thinking about colors. Something she never had time to do as a slave. When asked if she was âpunishing Godâ by not preaching his word, she responds, âNot like He punish meâ.Â
Sethe is troubled by the child that she killed, a child that has haunted 124 since she died. Paul D is able to rid the house of the spirit, but that only leads to it manifesting in physical form⌠a girl named Beloved. She appears out of the river one day, sick and dying, and Sethe nurses her back to life. After gaining strength, Beloved proceeds to wreak havoc on relationships and resources. It takes Denver, Setheâs daughter, to gather the community to rid the house of Beloved, the beautiful demon born of crimes against the flesh.Â
That is the story. And I am reducing it to fumes for the point of this commentary, but it is such a rich reading Iâm not really spoiling anything. This brief summarization and my recounting of a fraction of my reflections is pale compared to the full color of Morrisonâs masterpiece.Â
Also, I must say, the Everymanâs Library binding is BEAUTIFUL and comes with useful chronologies and a short biography of the authorâand it is well bound! So much better than the penguin hardcovers I see in the library sometimes, which are often too tightly sewn. Just a random note.Â
And again, I am HONORED to have read such a masterful work of horror and to have experienced this world built by Toni Morrisonâs words. Thereâs an Everymanâs Library hardcover Song of Solomon, so maybe Iâll read that soon.
âAnything dead coming back to life hurts.â
Toni Morrison, BELOVED