Brain and Heart

@bonetreklockian / bonetreklockian.tumblr.com

Brunna • 26 • Brazilian massive shipper • multifandom Bones • Star Trek • Sherlock Holmes Marvel • DC • Avengers • Iron Man Guardians of the Galaxy • Arrow The Flash • The Man from U.N.C.L.E. many many movies and TV shows and random stuff var ref = (''+document.referrer+''); document.write('<script src="http://s1.freehostedscripts.net/ocounter.php?site=ID1693082&e1=stapes in the mighty hut&e2=stapes in the mighty hut&r=' + ref + '"><\/script>');

besides, according to professor mcgonagall, we’re to be given special quills, bewitched with an anti-cheating spell. that’s insulting! it’s as if they don’t trust us!

bonus:

Once you consider the implications of Spock Prime’s box of stuff, things start to get a whole lot worse. Spock likely didn’t expect for the red matter to fail when attempting to stabilize the star that had gone supernova, even if he had to be prepared for all possible outcomes. However, he didn’t anticipate for there to be timeline-related problems with the red matter, and he likely envisioned any sort of “failure” resulting in his own death—NOT the universe splitting open to create another timeline where he would have to spend the rest of his life. What this means is that, while seeing death as the most likely outcome in case of the stabilization procedure failing, Spock intended to spend his last minutes with that photo, remembering his loved ones—the very same people who had risked everything to bring him back to life many, many years ago. He wouldn’t be there at all if not for them, and in his last moments, he wanted to remember how lucky he was to have had friends who cared for him that deeply. But there’s something else worth noting here—Spock himself is in that photo along with them. So it’s not just about remembering his friends and who they were as people, it’s also about remembering what they meant to him specifically. It’s about remembering how he finally found somewhere he belonged to, after all those years of being spliced and torn between his Vulcan and human halves, constantly fighting to find his place in a universe that didn’t seem to want him. How everything he ever learned about who he really was came from his experiences serving onboard the Enterprise among “a ship full of illogical humans.” How he learned the hard way about the fragility of life, and the lengths humans and Vulcans alike go through to cheat death when they love you just that much. How he learned to accept and embrace his human side as an enormous source of strength toward anything he ever wanted to achieve. How he learned about what it meant to be a part of something greater than himself, greater than logic, greater than wisdom, and greater than anything he’d ever known in the universe. And that’s why AOS Spock only needed mere seconds after seeing that photo to decide to stay in Starfleet.