đ give us the essay
Okay. So this first picture is when Crepus is in the carriage. Notice how he has his black coat on.
And now for the second picture, in which he steps out of his carriage. Notice how the coat and the cravat are both gone (and how the shirt is also unbuttoned), revealing the vest, tasteful black shirt, and the line of his throat.
And now for the third picture, in which he uses his Delusion. Notice how the shirt sleeves are rolled up, revealing those big, muscular arms.
In conclusion: Crepus stripped and rolled up his shirt sleeves before he went to save his son.
Anyway I will never get over the fact that Crepus Ragnvindr was a canon DILF and the only content we got of him was a 2 page backstory about his death in the manga
I AM THE MAN (Meme)
Simon AbadeerÂ
The House in the Cerulean Sea by T.J. Klune.
Can never have enough 40+ year old LGBT+ characters finding love. :)
yâall wanna guess what i just finished reading?
the fact anger is a secondary emotion, that is source is grief; how tragic and p o e t i c (insp.)
i cannot believe i predicted a scene in monkie kid 4 days before it happened
He has infected them with his evil laugh and IâM LOVING THIS FOR THEMÂ
ITâS WHAT THEY DESERVE ASKDFMAOWEFÂ
iâm finally done w/ this
how yaâll doin :33
[Monkie Kid season 2 special spoilers]Â
Dad DBK moments, THE MANâS MAKING PROGRESS SKDFMAOWEIFMÂ
MONKIE KID SEASON 2 SPECIAL OUT OF CONTEXT
(obviously there are spoilers ksdmfoawe <3 )
The Four (gay) Horsemen of the Apocalypse
Including their newest member:
feel free to add more.
This guy seriously⌠He hardly did any work this time!
Iâve talked before about why I think Shouto will save Touya, and now I want to talk about how. No doubt saving the eldest Todoroki child will be a combined family effort, but I want to specifically talk about Shoutoâs role in this because it will be the culmination of his character arc. I also want to tie in how Dabi can make himself seen and understood by crying tears of blood in front of his family. Finally receiving validation after desperately needing it his entire life will be the key to his salvation.
As of chapter 298, Shouto already empathizes with Touya; he feels Touyaâs hate and even recognizes Dabi is the person Shouto himself was before the Sports Festival. Shouto is extending his empathy and understanding to his brother the same way he reacted to Iida during the Stain arc in chapter 53, âTodoroki to Iida.â
Having empathy for Dabiâs resentment is only the first step in reaching him, though. That shared rage doesnât completely validate Dabiâs pain as an abuse victim, which is something Shouto has yet to recognize about himself. Shoutoâs anger has always been about how Endeavor abused Rei to the point she had to be institutionalized and not how Endeavor isolated him, physically abused him, and robbed him of his childhood. Shouto probably hadnât stopped to think about how the other Todorokis perceived their family situation because, like most families in this situation, no one talked about the abuse - Shouto even expresses surprise and agreement in 192 when Natsuo confronts Endeavor with the entire familyâs pain. Shouto thinks back to the memory of wanting to play with his siblings and realizes that specific day didn't only stay with him but that his siblings remember it and were impacted by it, too.
Like Natsuo, Dabi knows the root cause of their familyâs dysfunction was Endeavor, and while he had a problem with what he perceived as each individual memberâs blindness to their abuse, he ultimately doesnât blame the victims and instead assigns all the blame onto Endeavor. Even 10 years later, he still calls Rei âokaasanâ, Fuyumi âFuyumi-chanâ, and Natsuo âNatsu-kunâ because he still cares about them and recognizes all of them as victims of a corrupt hero who never set out to be a husband and a father and only used them.
However, Touya's own victimhood has never been validated - in 301 and 302, it was seen that he was the scapegoat for his family, and no matter how much he tried to earn back his fatherâs approval or call his father out on his unfair treatment, no one was ever on Touyaâs side. His mother told him to look away from his father as an example instead of standing up to Endeavor for herself and her children, and Fuyumi and Natsuo were too young to understand and couldn't relate to what Touya went through as Endeavor's prized heir. Touya needs validation that he was abused and neglected. He always has. He still does.
The person in the perfect position to understand what itâs like to be on the receiving end of Endeavorâs impossibly high standards, obsession with surpassing All Might, and quirk training is Shouto. But in order to fully empathize with Dabi and show his brother that he can relate, Shouto needs to acknowledge that he too was a victim. In 292, Dabi basically asks Shouto to validate the pain and suffering Dabi had just exposed in the battlefield, but his question still stands unanswered.
To reach Touya, Shouto also has to show Dabi what kind of person he is - as in, Shouto has to separate himself from Endeavorâs shadow and establish that he too has been holding Endeavor accountable for his actions. We as readers know that Shoutoâs entire character arc has been about asking himself, âWho am I?â Often, children who grow up in abusive households struggle with their identity and Shouto is a perfect example of this. This is why he chose his hero name to be his name: Shouto. Heâs learning who he is after years of trying so hard to not be his father and becoming exactly like him - cold, distant, tunnel visioned, hateful. It wasn't until he met Inasa that he realized this and wanted to right his wrongs.
Like Inasa, Dabi doesnât know Shouto at all. Both Inasa and Dabi knew Endeavor and assumed Shouto would be just like him. Inasa had a valid reason to think this of Shouto of course, because Shouto was standoffish and dismissive during the UA entrance exams, but at the time of the provisional license exam Inasa hadnât learned that Shouto had recognized this toxic side of himself and had begun working towards the kind of person he wants to be. Shouto had to show Inasa the real him, and in a similar way, he will have to prove this to Dabi. Dabi hasnât seen Shouto struggle with his identity like we the readers have; Dabi only sees his usurper making headlines and willingly interning with Endeavor. He probably assumes Shouto is proudly training to carry their fatherâs legacy. Dabi isnât privy to the nuanced relationship Shouto or their siblings have with their father. All Dabi knows is that Endeavor is seeing and paying attention to Shouto and Shouto seemingly submitting. Dabi has no idea THIS is how it really is:
Showing others who he is is a way for Shouto to process his own trauma and establish his identity. As the son of the #2 hero, Shouto has always had to prove himself to others - that heâs not his father. Heâs even had to prove this to himself by accepting his fire side and making it his own in spite of his father repeatedly calling him a creation or a masterpiece. Not being like his father is such a defining trait for Shouto that he feels compelled to tell kindergarteners during the re-licensing exam his life story and his trauma. He literally bore his heart out to these kids because he knew he wouldnât get through to them unless he was genuine. I think heâll apply this concept to Touya, too.
The thing about Shouto is that, while he hasnât reconciled with his own status as an abuse victim, he sees himself as a survivor. He sees himself as someone who managed through a difficult situation and wants to help others get through their struggles too. That's why getting through to these kids was so important to him, why he took it so seriously. These were problematic kids, and instead of calling them brats or trying to intimidate or manipulate them, he tries to get down to their level and relate. Notice he emphasizes how much he struggled in school at first, how his relationship with his father is strained - in his mind, it's something these kids may be able to relate to.
Shouto is someone who sets out to understand and make others feel seen and understood. It's what makes him kind. Shouto probably understands why his father abused the entire family - Endeavor's reasons don't excuse him or earn his children's forgiveness, but it's a reason that humanizes him to Shouto. He himself was a cold, bitter person who now believes people can change if given the right opportunity and self-awareness because this is a lesson he's learned from Midoriya and Inasa. This is also something Shouto can grant Touya: understanding, a listening ear, space to be wrong, and a chance to be seen.
Touya wanted and still craves to be seen, and he has to see in return. He has to realize Shouto isn't his father's puppet. He has to relate to Shouto much like Shouto is relating to him. Shouto will have to pull the same move he pulled on those kindergarteners and tell Dabi his struggles, and then show him heâs making his own path different from their fatherâs and that the family isnât blindly following Endeavor anymore or letting him do what he wants. Natsuo has stood up to him, Rei has stood up to him, Fuyumi has admitted to herself she had been trying to play a happy family instead of fixing the internal mess - they as a family will have to show Dabi all of this, and heâll have to wrap his head around it. He has to realize that his family is different from how they were 10 years ago. This is what I mean by allowing Touya space to be wrong - itâs okay for him to be wrong in assuming all these things about Shouto. Shouto wonât judge him for it.
I've talked before about how the narrative framing as of chapter 309 has set up that a person must express their feelings in a socially acceptable manner before they can be a candidate for saving, and that means crying. As soon as Midoriya saw a glimpse of little Tenko crying, he switched his mentality from "I'll never forgive you" to "I want to save that crying boy." When Toga ran away from Ochako crying, Ochako became concerned and curious. Following this pattern, it makes sense that Dabi also has to show his emotions, but itâs complicated because he canât cry due to his burnt tear ducts. Every time weâve seen him cry tears of blood, heâs been alone - heâll have to cry in front of Shouto and the family for it to sink in that all of Dabiâs destruction and hate stems from deep-seated sorrow and feelings of abandonment. The family does not yet know how the fire that killed Touya started, and they have no idea that Touyaâs emotions are linked to his fire and that he died because he was feeling overwhelmingly forsaken and sad. Once they find out, however, theyâll fully understand Touya (hopefully) and recognize they havenât been understanding him at all. Saving Touya will be difficult because he has to be vulnerable and that's not something he's done as Dabi, but that's where the Todoroki family arc is headed: healing as a family.
As a side note: Iâm not saying that the message the manga is giving is the correct one (how you express yourself shouldnât be a determinant of the help you receive) but itâs what we have to work with. I also think saving Touya will be more complicated than this and will also involve Natsuo, but thatâs a meta for another day! ;]
halloween also means itâs my favorite boyâs birthday and this year instead of a single illustration i decided to do something REALLY sappy (and ooc but whatever shh) and make a comic for a headcanon i have instead
basically i donât think danâs big on birthdays due to Negative Childhood Memories associated with his bdayâŚ. and/or he just never really had anyone to celebrate it with so eventually he stopped seeing a point. he still doesnât like or see a point to making a big deal out of it, but he doesnât mind chris coming over and having cake and drinks etc. in fact, even tho he doesnât usually show it, he actually appreciates it quite a bit.
itâs not perfect but iâm really trying to work on my comic skills which at the moment Arenât Very Good so i hope u guys enjoy it anyway!
I heard that Serbo-Croatians (including Montenegro) couldn't understand Bulgarians all that well