the beach arc gave us many things but actually showing kyo try pancakes for the first time… was not one of them. tms if u can hear me…. pls 🥞 🧡😩🙏
★ Lan.C | Couples ☆ ✔ artist allows reposts
I cannot believe people let Snape get the high ground.
How do people casually overlook the fact that Snape spent six entire years of his life telling a kid—who never even got the chance to know his father—that said father was an arrogant douchebag? Like, how do people think that behavior is normal?
Snape, a grown man, spent years trying to convince a grieving, orphaned child that his dead father—who literally died protecting his family—was a terrible person. No compassion for a man who gave his life for his wife and son. No sympathy for a kid who grew up abused, unloved, and completely alone, only learning about his parents through stories told by others.
Instead, Snape chose to rehash his teenage rivalry with James Potter by bullying his son. Imagine being so petty that you can’t move past your high school grudges, even when the other person has been dead for over a decade.
Even the coldest, most detached person would muster some respect for a man who died fighting for good. But Snape? No. He chose to sit on his high horse—ignoring the fact that he was once a Death Eater who only changed sides when his own personal interests were threatened—and still had the audacity to act morally superior to James.
James Potter died a hero. Snape, on the other hand, spent his life tormenting the child of the woman he claimed to love—while refusing to let go of a teenage rivalry and weaponizing it against a traumatized, grieving boy.
I cannot get over how utterly selfish and cruel that is. Snape had no empathy for the dead and no sympathy for the living. And people still try to defend him? Seriously?
It all has finally been put into words. I was taught to think and act like this since I was a kid and now that I'm an adult, I'm a huge push over and so messed up.
I cannot believe people let Snape get the high ground.
How do people casually overlook the fact that Snape spent six entire years of his life telling a kid—who never even got the chance to know his father—that said father was an arrogant douchebag? Like, how do people think that behavior is normal?
Snape, a grown man, spent years trying to convince a grieving, orphaned child that his dead father—who literally died protecting his family—was a terrible person. No compassion for a man who gave his life for his wife and son. No sympathy for a kid who grew up abused, unloved, and completely alone, only learning about his parents through stories told by others.
Instead, Snape chose to rehash his teenage rivalry with James Potter by bullying his son. Imagine being so petty that you can’t move past your high school grudges, even when the other person has been dead for over a decade.
Even the coldest, most detached person would muster some respect for a man who died fighting for good. But Snape? No. He chose to sit on his high horse—ignoring the fact that he was once a Death Eater who only changed sides when his own personal interests were threatened—and still had the audacity to act morally superior to James.
James Potter died a hero. Snape, on the other hand, spent his life tormenting the child of the woman he claimed to love—while refusing to let go of a teenage rivalry and weaponizing it against a traumatized, grieving boy.
I cannot get over how utterly selfish and cruel that is. Snape had no empathy for the dead and no sympathy for the living. And people still try to defend him? Seriously?
“reblogs aren’t important you’re just whiny”
yeah because when you see this
tell me you don’t get annoyed.
hold you
I noticed my fics with fem y/n tend to meet more feedback than the more gender inclusive ones so I wonder if it's really the case or just a coincidence.
I appreciate reblogs for a bigger sample ❤
I started drawing last year and I don’t think anything I draw is very substantial, but people around me say it’s very good. I have however been cooking for as long as I can remember but even then I always get nervous before serving anything. No matter how long you practice something I feel you’re kind going to downplay yourself. I think that’s why we like to share our creations (most of the time anyways). To get feedback and to have people show us we’re just too in our heads. I bet your art is amazing it just doesn’t seem like that to you because you created it.
For those of you who are artists, how long did it take until you felt confident in your art? Is it something that was a natural skill for you or did you have to keep working to perfect it overtime? I’ve been practicing for a few months, but I feel like everything I do comes out meh. I just need some encouragement, and I’m really curious. 🤔