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Fearless Asymmetry

@suspendnodisbelief / suspendnodisbelief.tumblr.com

Deconstructing my worldview, one topic a time. Expect music.

something im noticing is the redditors are just commenting on everything via reblogs with reckless abandon. and its so funny bc thats how youre MEANT to use this fucking website but we've trained ourselves out of it somehow.

Chaotic version of when you gotta train the new person at work and you accidentally relearn all the shit you've been doing wrong

Wait, so am I supposed to do this or not?

Fret not, new neighbour! You are enriching everyone's enclosure by doing it this way, because you are introducing novelty through a non-aggressive but uncommon occurrence! That's very eusocial and agreeable of you, so by all means please continue doing it! The more recent custom is for conversational or commentative interactions to take place in the tags or/and the replies, with reblogs accounting for what might be thought of as "extensions of, or elaborations upon, the topic, to be broadcast to the entire following audience," rather than direct communication intended for the previous poster personally. It has just become mildly countercultural and novel to use reblogs as the site developers clearly intended them (conversation and commentary, rather than topic extensions only). Tumblr tends to delight in waves of social behaviour variation that result from current events, so this variation in how things are done is of anthropological interest to tumblr, ergo "enriching the enclosure." It also makes you more visible as new to the site, and that is a good thing, not a bad thing, because communities here tend to thrill at the opportunity to welcome new people and help them get settled in. TL;DR - You are performing a public service by not rigidly adhering to tumblr's norms for reblogging. Thank you!

If you post about haunted houses, haunting houses, sentient houses, hungry houses, give-to-me houses, houses as people/ghosts/animals, houses, spaces that live and breathe and hate and love, if you think it is difficult to overstate the importance of the house, if the words "Control, Anatomy, and the Legacy of the Haunted House" mean anything to you, if your kind of haunting is architectural, leave a reply, reblog, pass this post around.

Leave recommendations of blogs that post about this kind of thing at all in the replies or reblogs and check the notes and see if you'd like to follow anyone! There is also a list of blogs (and more) under the Keep Reading break. Don't forget to check the original upload, where I might've added even more stuf!

🏚️The houseposting¹ niche must unite...🏠

Growing list of blogs² and their tags for this topic:

It is almost five centuries ago, and the girl who will one day be a swordswoman is lying in the red-tinged mud. She can't get up—broken bone? severed tendon? She can't tell. She's yet to cultivate her palate for pain. Her enemy towers over her, a cataphract mailed in screaming steel and poisoned light. His warhammer falls, and it is death, forever death, death unconquered and unconquerable.

"No," says a part of her. She is not even seventeen years old. Her body is mangled and broken, wound piled upon wound piled upon wound. A dull kitchen knife is her only weapon, though she lost that in the mud the second her grip faltered. Her enemy is no thing of this earth. And yet—

"No. It is not death, forever death, death unconquered and unconquerable. It is only a hammer, falling. It is only 'an attack.'"

And the girl understood.

~~~

It is the better part of three centuries ago, as best the swordswoman can reckon, and she is beset on all sides by foes. They are not monsters—just mountain bandits, or highland rebels, as one cares to see it. But they outnumber her by dozens, and even an exceptional swordswoman might struggle against but two opponents of lesser skill.

From in front of her, beside her, behind her they advance, striking from every angle with spears and blades and axes. Others fill the air with arrows, sling stones, firepots. It would be effortless, to parry any single blow. It would be impossible, physically impossible, to defend against them all.

"No," says a part of her.

"You are not outnumbered. You do not face 'multiple' foes. It would be impossible to defend against every attack — but there is no 'every' attack. Only one."

"Oh," the swordswoman said. And it was, in fact, effortless.

~~~

It is eighty years ago, or thereabouts. A coiling spire of stony flesh and verdigrised copper throbs like a tumor on the horizon, coaxed from the earth by spell and sacrifice. It is the tower of a sorcerer-prince, and a birthing place of abominations.

Seven locks of rune-etched metal are opened with her single key. Wretched shapelings beasts, grown by sorcery in vitreous nodules, flee wailing from her, absconding before she even draws her blade. Demons sworn to thousand-year pacts of guardianship find the binding provisions of such agreements unexpectedly severed.

These things dissatisfy the sorcerer-prince. Waxing wroth, he makes signs and chants incantations. With a flask of godling's blood, he draws the binding sigil inscribed upon the moon's dark face. With cold fire burning in his eyes, he speaks the secret name of Death. It is a king among curses, all-corrupting, all-consuming, and it falls from his lips upon the swordswoman.

"No," she says, and she turns it aside with her blade.

The sorcerer-prince's brow furrows. How did she even do that?

"Parried it."

But—

"With my sword."

No—

"See, like this."

Stop—

"Well," the swordswoman finally says, "I figured that if I just...looked at it right, and thought about it, and construed your curse as a kind of attack...then I could block it."

That's not how it works at all!

"If you insist," says the swordswoman, shrugging, and decapitates him.

~~~

It is now. It is the end. Death couldn't take the swordswoman, not when she'd spent all her life cutting it up. At times, Death might sidle up to one of her friends, or peer down into a grandchild's crib, and she'd just give it a look. That's all it took, by then.

Heartache couldn't take her, either. Bad things happened to her, and they hurt, and she lived in that hurt, but if it was ever more than she could take...she'd just, move her sword in a way that's difficult to describe. And she'd keep going.

Kingdoms fell, and she kept going. Continents crumbled and sank into the sea. Her planet's star faded and froze. She started carrying a lantern. Universes were torn apart and scattered, until all that had been matter was redistributed in thermodynamic equilibrium. With one exception.

But now it is the end. There is no time left; time is already dead. The swordswoman has outlived reality, but there is simply no further she can go. This is not a thing that can be blocked. This is the absence of anything further to block.

"No," says the girl who will one day be a swordswoman. "This isn't the ending. And even if it was, it's not the ending that matters."

The swordswoman looks back at who she was, at the countless selves she's been between them. She looks forward, at the rapidly contracting point that remains of the future. She grasps the all of linear time in her mind, and sees that it is shaped like a spear.

When I say I am not waiting for revolution, I mean Im planting things secretly at bus stops, and shoveling snow out of the way of crosswalks. I mean it in a way where neighbors are stocking community fridges and harvesting in community gardens. Little libraries and strangers giving you shoes bc they couldnt return them. I mean ppl swapping stuff or loaning it out to neighbors theyve just met. I mean it in a way where a friend who can sew asks me to mend something and a week late brings me cookies as thanks. I mean it in the way a friend makes a playlist for you and it truly brighten your day. These tiny acts of defiance against cruelty and profit are their own  revolutions. And they catch like kindling, small going at first you might not even know that flames there. Than suddenly all at once catching, burning in the darkness of the night.

“The stone corrupts all those who wield it, it is fueled by their ambitions and dreams. So we need someone with no ambitions, no dreams, someone who doesn’t care about what the future holds for themselves. That’s why we found you.”

The first thought, in a moment like this, probably should not have been what came to your mind. Well, fuck you too, you thought, half incredulous and half apathetic. You leaned against the doorframe with one shoulder and eyed the group of three wizened people before you. Why was it always the elderly who came with big quests or brought important items that had to be hidden away?

Also, if you didn’t care about the future, didn’t that mean you didn’t care about the stone either? You might as well give it to someone else. Maybe someone better suited than you. There was this little girl across the street who had an acorn necklace and played in puddles and always sat very still until the every last stray cat felt safe enough to eat what she brought them. Maybe the stone should go to her, she at least gave a shit.

You debated arguing or refusing, but your disinterest won out in the end. “Sure,” you answered, holding out a hand for them to plop the stone into. You weren’t scared of it, especially since it looked utterly unremarkable. If you tossed it into a river, no one would be able to tell it apart from the other rocks.

The three wizened elders, apparently the smartest of their magic circle, exchanged grave looks and you waited until they were done with their silent communication and their leader stepped forward.

“We entrust you with the Stone of Possibility, never use it and always hide it,” they said, voice solemn and carrying the sort of undertone that spoke of great importance. You blinked slowly. “Give it to no one, no matter how noble their hearts, how pitiful their tale or how silver their tongue.” You couldn’t help but imagine a genderless person sticking out their tongue dripping with mercury.

Love how tumblr has its own folk stories. Yeah the God of Arepo we’ve all heard the story and we all still cry about it. Yeah that one about the woman locked up for centuries finally getting free. That one about the witch who would marry anyone who could get her house key from her cat and it’s revealed she IS the cat after the narrator befriends the cat.

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Might I add:

The defeat of the wizard who made people choose how they’d be to be executed

The woman who raised the changeling alongside her biological child

The human who died of radiation poisoning after repairing the spaceship

The adventures of a space roomba

Cinderella finding Araura (and falling in love)

I don’t know a snappy description but the my nemesis cynthia story certainly lives in my head

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Poem: I lik the form

My naym is pome / and lo my form is fix’d Tho peepel say / that structure is a jail I am my best / when formats are not mix’d Wen poits play / subversions often fail

Stik out their toung / to rebel with no cause At ruls and norms / In ignorance they call: My words are free / Defying lit'rate laws To lik the forms / brings ruin on us all

A sonnet I / the noblest lit'rate verse And ruls me bind / to paths that Shakespeare paved Iambic fot / allusions well dispersed On my behind / I stately sit and wave

You think me tame /   Fenced-in and penned / bespelled I bide my time /   I twist the end / like hell

* “lik” should be read as “lick”, not “like”. In general, the initial section on each line should be read sort of phonetically.

Written for World Poetry Day, March 21, 2018. When I had this idea earlier today, I thought it was the worst, most faux hip pretentious idea for a shallow demonstration of empty wordsmithing skill in poetry ever. So I had to try to write it. I mean, how often do you get to fuse the iambic dimeter of bredlik - one of the newest and most exciting verse forms - with the stately iambic pentameter of the classic sonnet?

BREDLIK SONNET

wait is this one poem or three?

Holy shit this slaps. Hell no, this isn’t pretentious, this is awesome. I love what language can do, and this is showing it off in a cape with glitter and makeup.

Anonymous asked:

What do you think Sauron’s opinion of Elrond was?

There’s a line in Two Towers (I think) I was going to look up to answer this, except I got lazy, where Gollum says Sauron hates something and Frodo responds like “What doesn’t he hate?”

So I’m going to go out on a limb and say Sauron hates Elrond.

But to actually contribute something not obvious to the conversation, I think of all his biggest adversaries, he is most likely to underestimate Elrond.

Elrond’s influence is huge but we only see him give his advice to those who came to him voluntarily, he hides away but not so well he can’t be found in need. He’s a healer, not a warrior or a king, and he doesn’t have the ambition Galadriel has.

Heir of Luthien? Hate that. Uses his power to influence events mainly by being a well of knowledge and a safe place to weather storms? Sauron doesn’t understand that.

Elrond ultimately defeats Sauron by raising children with love, helping those in need, not seeking power and giving solid advice. He puts together the fellowship, but doesn’t even put his name on it, he helps everyone there see what has to be done by letting them suggest options and showing them how those ideas are infeasible, and making sure everyone has the whole story. He takes advice as well, he sends Pippin instead of Glorfindel at Gandalf’s suggestion. He gently refuses to let the fellowship swear an oath.

One of my favorite moments from the council of Elrond is when they’re like “Who will do this task” and Elrond goes quiet. It is NOT because he doesn’t know who would be best for it. But he knows Frodo has to choose on his own, he cannot force him, or what little hope they have will be gone. The MOMENT Frodo says he’ll do it, Elrond says he is the only person who can, but he doesn’t lay that on him until he is committed.

If everyone had rolled up to Rivendell and Elrond had just said “you nine go drop the ring in Mt doom” and sent the same exact people? The fellowship would have failed, because the understanding wouldn’t have been there. Elrond handled that council to perfection, and that is the kind of passive power based in understanding that is sooooo vital to the downfall of Sauron, but which Sauron does not value or comprehend.

The people that scare Sauron are people who want the ring. He is 100% confident that without the power of the ring, he cannot be beaten, and the fact that middle earth would fall to darkness even if Galadriel or Gandalf took it is pretty weak recompense for him if he is defeated.

Elrond never even entertains the idea that he would take the ring (at least in our view). Every bearer of an Elven Ring (and Aragorn) is offered it. Gandalf first when Frodo first learns what it is, and he tells us what he would do with it and why it would be a bad idea. Galadriel most famously, and she had literally dreaded the idea of the ring coming through Lothlorien because she knew she wanted it, and famously refusing it was a trial for her.

There is no moment when Elrond is DIRECTLY offered the Ring by Frodo. But the entire first half of the book the goal is “get the Ring to Rivendell” where Elrond will know what to do with it, and it will be safe. In the beginning the hobbits have no concept of going further than that- so basically the idea is “put the Ring in Elrond’s power” for the first half of the book.

And Frodo arrives half dead to Rivendell, completely alone and vulnerable, and Elrond heals him, and never is there even discussion of whether Elrond could have taken it from him then, or if he was tempted to. The only thing Elrond says on the topic of the Ring being given to him is that Rivendell cannot keep it safe from the Enemy.

Taking the Ring to Minas Tirith clearly the equivalent of giving the Ring to Denethor. Galadriel clearly fears that the Ring coming to Lothlorien will be her downfall because it will be in her power and she knows she wants it.

Elrond is never shown even considering taking it. The Ring staying in Rivendell would be bad according to him because they could not withstand Sauron’s full force bent towards extracting it. Even in this scenario where the Ring remains in Rivendell, Elrond discounts a possibility that he would be tempted to use it to keep Sauron out.

Sauron is physically incapable of thinking of someone like that as a threat, it is his biggest weakness, and that’s why the plan Elrond facilitates is the one that ultimately takes him out.

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man lord of the rings just fills me with such profound sadness its a world that just…… makes me feel whole and hollow at the same time

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14 yr old me saw this and knew I would spend the rest of my life trying to explain what the feeling this frame invokes in me is

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the tacking-a-story-onto-the-end-of-my-elaborate-linguistics-exercise to emotionally-devastating-an-entire-generation pipeline

“[Eucatastrophe] is a sudden and miraculous grace […] It does not deny the existence of dyscatastrophe, of sorrow and failure: the possibility of these is necessary to the joy of deliverance; it denies… universal final defeat and in so far is evangelium, giving a fleeting glimpse of Joy, Joy beyond the walls of the world, poignant as grief.” — J.R.R. Tolkien, On Fairy Stories

“And when the glad shout had swelled up and died away again, to Sam’s final and complete satisfaction and pure joy, a minstrel of Gondor stood forth, and knelt, and begged leave to sing. And behold! he said:

‘Lo! lords and knights and men of valour unashamed, kings and princes, and fair people of Gondor, and Riders of Rohan, and ye sons of Elrond, and Dúnedain of the North, and Elf and Dwarf, and greathearts of the Shire, and all free folk of the West, now listen to my lay. For I will sing to you of Frodo of the Nine Fingers and the Ring of Doom’

And when Sam heard that he laughed aloud for sheer delight, and he stood up and cried: ‘O great glory and splendor! And all my wishes have come true!’ And then he wept.

And all the host laughed and wept, and in the midst of their merriment and tears the clear voice of the minstrel rose like silver and gold, and all men were hushed. And he sang to them, now in the elven-tongue, now in the speech of the West, until their hearts, wounded with sweet words, overflowed, and their joy was like swords, and they passed in thought out to regions where pain and delight flow together and tears are the very wine of blessedness.”

I call this being "laylorn." "Loss-of-the-story-across-the-sea-I-need-to-lay-myself-down-now-while-it-subsides." The obscure sorrow felt upon the completion of reading or viewing a series with an immersive world which feels like a home one has never visited or is exiled from and homesick about, and which ends with powerfully final closure, emotional overflow to the point of bursting with hopeful humanistic fulfillment, and the distressingly acute sense that there is no way to re-enter the story's universe - that even fanfiction will likely never bring back the sense of homecoming and belonging.

Sometimes a series or book can accomplish this without an immersive world, by instead offering up such a marrow-deep feeling of philosophical authenticity and rightness that the story hollowed you out and built a home for itself inside of you, instead of you seeking one inside of it, e.g. Le Petit Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, where the melancholy sense of loss is accomplished both by the events of the plot and by the bridging of emotions between an adult reader and a childlike unjudgmental perception of the world, which the adult reader has outgrown. Similarly, this emotion encapsulates the feeling of despair or melancholy at realising you can never again experience a story for the first time, and never again go into it without knowing what happens in it; the painful acknowledgment that your first breathtaking encounter with a body of media has ended and cannot be regained. Nostalgia and homesickness for the experience of the story's end still being a mystery to you. That the story world has been changed, and you as well, over the course of your reading of it, and it can never be returned to the state it was in before you began reading. Neither can you return to the version of yourself who has not read the book yet, and been rocked by it down to your foundation. The story has departed across the sea, into the west, without you, and you've been left here to tend your garden and remember it sadly and fondly. Etymology: Lay - 1. a song or tale or poem (e.g. Lay of Leithian) 2. a lake, ocean, or sea 3. the act of reclining horizontally 4. to abate or subside Lorn - from "loss," the state of lacking something you formerly had, or being forsaken or abandoned, e.g. forlorn, lovelorn

Stories with effective eucatastrophe are especially likely to incite the feeling of being laylorn, and this applies even more intensely when the story has sprawling worldbuilding and spans several books. Tolkien and LeGuin are prime examples of laylornness-inflicting authors.

What if one day you woke up

What if the day after that you woke up also

What if I told you that you you would wake up every day for the rest of your life and that despite these many injustices it is still your responsibility to make bread and slather butter and honey on the slices to give to the people around you? Every day will be too bright, so much that it hurts your eyes when you stop sleeping, but you have a destiny and it is to make every day a little less painful for those that you can. That is what you are meant to do. That is what you were given a purpose for, because I’m giving it to you right now. You have to make the world less painful. What else even is there for any of us

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Don’t. You don’t have to make me proud. This isn’t about me. Feeling happy, or even just at peace, being connected with others who are just as invested in your joy as you are in theirs, this isn’t about me. Your life and love and destiny and duty has absolutely nothing to do with me, I’m just the person informing you about it. You can’t make your life contingent on those who cannot know your favorite fruit. Your world is not made of cities you will never go to, it is made of the people you are surrounded by that you can remember the birthdays of. Fate is what you weave with the people you surround yourself; we are all the world to each other because that’s all we can afford to be.

Do not live a fulfilling life filled with warmth and adoration and understanding for those around you because I told you to, even though I did, and am, and must. Live that life because it is the only way any of us will ever truly be able to live, and when all is said and done, the only way worth living at all.

I have no idea what book this was from. Bruce Coville had collections of short stories for kids I would take out of the library constantly — Bruce Coville’s Book of Monsters, Bruce Coville’s Book of Aliens, Bruce Coville’s Book of Ghosts — and I feel like it was from one of those, but I have no way of knowing for sure.

But I do remember reading a short story when I was very, very little about a world where kids got into wearing “shells,” artificial skins which made you look like someone else. And this was treated in-universe like getting a tattoo — adults could get permanent shells, and kids would wear temporary shells that turn into dust by the next day.

And right at the end of the story - when the protagonist and her friend held hands and decided that no matter what shells they wore, no matter what they looked like, they would always, always recognize each other by the way they held hands - there’s a throwaway line that the company that made shells were developing shells that would let you be whatever gender you wanted.

And when I say that shit stuck with me for the rest of my life—

"Egg Shells" by Nina Kiriki Hoffman, in Strange Worlds, ed. Bruce Coville, 2000.