
[she/her] | "if you're not telling the truth, I will find out, 'cause I'm smart and you aren't.' | full time jackie stan
430 posts
Do You Guys Think Brooke Regretted Letting Kelso Choose Jackie And Hyde As Betsy's Godparents After Season
do you guys think brooke regretted letting kelso choose jackie and hyde as betsy's godparents after season 8?
-
lucyscarlet864 liked this · 1 year ago
-
sedat3dmaiden liked this · 2 years ago
-
ufotemple liked this · 3 years ago
-
queenbookbuff liked this · 3 years ago
-
that70sbitchsstuff reblogged this · 3 years ago
-
that70sbitchsstuff liked this · 3 years ago
-
whyismyfloweryellow liked this · 3 years ago
-
sapphirekilljoy liked this · 3 years ago
-
jdoe10667 liked this · 3 years ago
-
monkey-fishy liked this · 3 years ago
-
just-an-average-fuckup liked this · 3 years ago
-
mydearburkhart liked this · 3 years ago
-
damnit-cas-we-can-fix-this liked this · 3 years ago
-
moonswanotaku liked this · 3 years ago
-
scaponigifs liked this · 3 years ago
-
einsteinsugly reblogged this · 3 years ago
-
insertsomethingpoetichere liked this · 3 years ago
-
katie-cutie-pie liked this · 3 years ago
-
magical-goon liked this · 3 years ago
More Posts from Mydearburkhart
i absolutely love this 💖
Inspired by the latest post from @mydearburkhart, which happens to perfectly align with my pre-canonish headcanons;
Donna is so the "I'm not like other girls" type, from about the ages of 5-6/16. She's one of the guys, as she states in season 1.
And even as an adult, she tends to find pleasure in disliking things girly girls stereotypically like. Like Sex and the City, really high heels, heart shaped jewelry, or screaming like a maniac at some celebrity she admires. She's definitely giddy and over the moon, but she's not about to launch herself at whatever famous heartthrob she encounters.
But she's fine with liking girlier stuff that other girls like, unlike before. She loves power suits (yes, even with a skirt), writing romantic poetry, blasting Carole King (she was embarrassed as a kid), and gossiping with some wine with Jackie.
*****
Meanwhile, Jackie has had the opposite experience. She wanted to fit in, even if that meant losing her soul at cheerleading camp.
But in time, Hyde and Donna have opened her eyes. She doesn't need or want to hang around that superficial crowd of cheerleaders anymore (or, as an adult, bitchy PTA moms). She loves and embraces being a girly girl, but she's a star in her own right. Not merely a star glittering amongst the others, who would turn their backs on her as soon as things went south.
Jackie: So... what are you doing after this?
Hyde: You hopefully.
Donna, throwing her make-up bag across the room: Argh!
Jackie: Hey, what happened?
Donna: Well, 13-year-old me decided she was not gonna be like other girls and now I don't know how to use an eyeliner!
Jackie: Don't worry, Donna. Thankfully 12-year-old me decided she was gonna be the it-girl, I can help you.
"You can't. That's what you said." She couldn't care less if the whole town could hear her yelling at him. "Not 'I don't want to, because I love my girlfriend', more like 'I want to and I would if I didn't have a girlfriend'. There's a difference. And it's a huge one, and if you can't see it then... whatever it was that we were doing, I'm glad we're not doing anymore." By the time she finished the sentence, her voice was barely louder than a whisper. [...]
Jackie: Is that seat taken?
Steven: Uh... that's my lap.
Jackie: I know what I said.
Hyde:
Hyde: It's empty.