
457 posts
Lots Of Times If I Tell My Boyfriend That I Am Proud Of Him For Dealing With A Situation, Or That I'm
lots of times if I tell my boyfriend that I am proud of him for dealing with a situation, or that I'm sorry he's having to deal with a situation, he will say "no it's my own fault." meaning that he feels like he doesn't deserve praise or comfort for dealing with a situation that is his fault. (for example a financial problem caused or exacerbated by him having been too anxious or absentminded to deal with the situation sooner.) and I tell him this and I will tell y'all this, that I don't believe that. I think you are even braver and stronger for taking steps to deal with a mess that is of or partly of your own creation, because you have to cope with guilt and shame on top of the thing itself, and because you're fighting against the same ingrained dysfunction in yourself that caused the mess. that's like the bravest and most constructive thing you can do and you should be proud and I am proud of you.
-
queued-reblog-showroom reblogged this · 4 months ago
-
starswhisperwritershear liked this · 4 months ago
-
monticroa-of-the-memes reblogged this · 4 months ago
-
monticroa-of-the-memes liked this · 4 months ago
-
subject27 reblogged this · 4 months ago
-
dontknowwhenispawned reblogged this · 4 months ago
-
dontknowwhenispawned liked this · 4 months ago
-
velociheroviridi reblogged this · 4 months ago
-
melonbride reblogged this · 4 months ago
-
glittzysunflowermaze reblogged this · 4 months ago
-
astraeag liked this · 4 months ago
-
whynotreinventmyselfeveryday reblogged this · 4 months ago
-
legwelfexiste liked this · 4 months ago
-
jinglebellrockstars liked this · 4 months ago
-
aurorabeaurealis reblogged this · 4 months ago
-
kushamisaru reblogged this · 4 months ago
-
greenfiredragonfly reblogged this · 4 months ago
-
sizzlingpaperlover liked this · 4 months ago
-
not-quite-eds reblogged this · 4 months ago
-
bubble--cheeks reblogged this · 4 months ago
-
queerlien reblogged this · 4 months ago
-
queerlien liked this · 4 months ago
-
mermaider013 liked this · 4 months ago
-
i-can-see-queerly-now reblogged this · 4 months ago
-
chaoticcyprus liked this · 4 months ago
-
oopsies-i-did-a-thing liked this · 4 months ago
-
healinghumans2 reblogged this · 4 months ago
-
bloody-wonder liked this · 4 months ago
-
obiusperson reblogged this · 4 months ago
-
gay-ratcore liked this · 4 months ago
-
cuurrlin reblogged this · 4 months ago
-
cuurrlin liked this · 4 months ago
-
acevoid28 liked this · 4 months ago
-
asexual-levia-tan reblogged this · 4 months ago
-
mage-mahariel liked this · 4 months ago
-
digitaldiseas3 reblogged this · 4 months ago
-
digitaldiseas3 liked this · 4 months ago
-
thatoneluckybee reblogged this · 4 months ago
-
i-love-love liked this · 4 months ago
-
maxmortgages-blog liked this · 4 months ago
-
purpleweredragon liked this · 4 months ago
-
dambiex reblogged this · 4 months ago
-
97spookies reblogged this · 4 months ago
-
crow-with-crown liked this · 4 months ago
-
jeegoo reblogged this · 4 months ago
-
nonametis liked this · 4 months ago
-
what-the-fuck-is-this-1 liked this · 4 months ago
-
bookworm-789 reblogged this · 4 months ago
-
sollasitrona reblogged this · 4 months ago
-
bumblingest-bee liked this · 4 months ago
More Posts from Cherryqueenoftarts
the thing that gave you anxiety attacks for 2 years straight will be resolved on a random Wednesday morning btw
Mystery Inc. but it’s the 1890s




Who had late Victorian Scooby Doo on their 2024 bingo card? Hmm?
The idea came to me when I was thinking about Sherlock Holmes and then remembered the iconic mystery solving gang hehe
i cant get over the king charles portrait. they made that thing to age in his place. that painting hangs in the house of a too-friendly family you find in the post apocalyptic wasteland who inexplicably has a ready supply of fresh meat. if mario jumped into that painting he wouldn't find a charming platformer he would be flayed and hanged like a medieval criminal by an unseeable force in a droning red void. that painting is a color blindness test for people who work in IT but believe in the divine right of kings. that painting is going to weep the sequel to blood. after he dies charles is gonna crawl outta that thing like sadako.
for whom good omens is being written
Hey maggots and the rest of the fandom, it's the Good Omens Mascot here. Today I read a post about this tweet:

The accompanying video genuinely made me cry. And I've been thinking about this for a long while, as far back as February, when I saw a lot of conflicting opinions on what people wanted from the third season. It really is true that no matter what you do, some people will be dissatisfied. But what matters is that Neil is writing this for Terry.
And I was reminded of some paragraphs from the Good Omens TV Companion, which I'd read in Amazon's sample excerpt of the book. I know this is a long post, but I really truly do think you all need to read these, I've done my best to select only the most important parts. Here you go:
'His Alzheimer's started progressing harder and faster than either of us had expected,' says Neil, referring to a period in which Terry recognized that despite everything he could no longer write. 'We had been friends for over thirty years, and during that time he had never asked me for anything. Then, out of the blue, I received an email from him with a special request. It read: “Listen, I know how busy you are. I know you don't have time to do this, but I want you to write the script for Good Omens. You are the only human being on this planet who has the passion, love and understanding for the old girl that I do. You have to do this for me so that I can see it." And I thought, “OK, if you put it like that then I'll do it."
'I had adapted my own work in the past, writing scripts for Death: The High Cost of Living and Sandman, but not a lot else was seen. I'd also written two episodes of Doctor Who, and so I felt like I knew what I was doing. Usually, having written something once I'd rather start something new, but having a very sick co-author saying I had to do this?' Neil spreads his hands as if the answer is clear to see. 'I had to step up to the plate.' A pause, then: 'All this took place in autumn 2014, around the time that the BBC radio adaptation of Good Omens was happening,' he continues, referring to the production scripted and co-directed by Dirk Maggs and starring Peter Serafinowicz and Mark Heap. ‘Terry had talked me into writing the TV adaptation, and I thought OK, I have a few years. Only I didn't have a few years,' he says. 'Terry was unconscious by December and dead by March.'
He pauses again. 'His passing took all of us by surprise,' Neil remembers. 'About a week later, I started writing, and it was very sad. The moments Terry felt closest to me were the moments I would get stuck during the writing process. In the old days, when we wrote the novel, I would send him what I'd done or phone him up. And he would say, "Aahh, the problem, Grasshopper, is in the way you phrase the question," and I would reply, "Just tell me what to do!" which somehow always started a conversation. 'In writing the script, there were times I'd really want to talk to Terry, and also places where I'd figure something out and do something really clever, and I would want to share it with him. So, instead, I would text Terry's former personal assistant, Rob Wilkins, now his representative on Earth. It was the nearest thing I had.'
(...) As Neil himself recognizes, this is an adaptation built upon the confidence that comes from three decades of writing for page and screen. But for all the wisdom of experience, he found that above all one factor guided him throughout the process. 'Terry isn't here, which leaves me as the guardian of the soul of the story,' he explains. 'It's funny because sometimes I found myself defending Terry's bits harder or more passionately than I would defend my own bits. Take Agnes Nutter,' he says, referring to what has become a key scene in the adaptation in which the seventeenth-century author of the book of prophecies foretelling the coming of the Antichrist is burned at the stake. ‘It was a huge, complicated and incredibly expensive shoot, with bonfires built and primed to explode as well as huge crowds in costume. It had to feel just like an English village in the 1640s, and of course everyone asked if there was a cheap way of doing it. 'One suggestion was that we could tell the story using old-fashioned woodcuts and have the narrator take us through what happened, but I just thought, “No”. Because I had brought aspects of the story like Crowley and the baby swap along to the mix, and Terry created Agnes Nutter. So, if I had cut out Agnes then I wouldn't be doing right by the person who gave me this job. Terry would've rolled over in his grave.'
And, finally, this paragraph:
"Once again, Neil cites the absence of his co-writer as his drive to ensure that Good Omens translated to the screen and remained true to the original vision. 'Terry's last request to me was to make this something he would be proud of. And so that has been my job.'"
I think that's so heartwrenchingly beautiful, and so I wanted you all to read this, too, just in case you (like me) don't have the Good Omens TV Companion. It adds another layer of depth and emotion to this already complex and amazing story that we all know and love.
Share this post, if you can, please, so that more people can read these excerpts :")
Tagging @neil-gaiman, @fuckyeahgoodomens and @orpiknight, even if you've definitely read these before :)