disregard
The Lestat figment of Louis’ imagination took the form of the night he was killed in the Season 1 finale in this episode, bloody slice in his throat and all. What’s noteworthy is that while Louis imagines “Dream-stat,” as the cast calls him, threatening him, the look he gives Claudia in the truck is heartbreakingly tender. It’s as if this really is the ghost of Lestat and he’s missing his vampire daughter from the other side. (x)
"You killed the author of life, but God raised him from the dead." Acts 3:15
Anyway Interview season 2 has me inspired again
I had taken 7,000 souls by then. But Lestat was the only one that felt like murder. Semantics, surely, but it's how I felt. He came by invitation. My distraction from the monochromatic landscape.
"You killed the author of life, but God raised him from the dead." Acts 3:15
Anyway Interview season 2 has me inspired again
The little girl’s sense of secrecy that developed at prepuberty only grows in importance. She closes herself up in fierce solitude: she refuses to reveal to those around her the hidden self that she considers to be her real self and that is in fact an imaginary character: she plays at being a dancer like Tolstoy’s Natasha, or a saint like Marie Leneru, or simply the singular wonder that is herself. There is still an enormous difference between this heroine and the objective face that her parents and friends recognize in her. She is also convinced that she is misunderstood: her relationship with herself becomes even more passionate: she becomes intoxicated with her isolation, feels different, superior, exceptional: she promises that the future will take revenge on the mediocrity of her present life. From this narrow and petty existence she escapes by dreams.
Simone de Beauvoir, The Second Sex
girlhood is yearning to be a nefarious supernatural creature and the tragedy of knowing it will never happen
The sad girl hours are real. My friends are desperate for me to stop moping but imagine how I feel. Would kill to stop moping.
me @ theo & liam in that elevator
Why does harry always have the most insane existentially traumatizing things happen to him? Dying and being replaced by an alternate universe version of himself, being gaslit into believing he's actually an alien changeling, receiving a message from his future self that he made a mistake that killed everyone on Voyager, the dude can't catch a break.
(Not counting naturally occurring things like people and rocks and plants)
Consider things like coins, books, or family heirlooms! Tell me about it in the tags!
Quick question, I keep seeing tiktoks about college students doing this so I gotta ask
Personally I never pulled an all nighter when I was a student, I honestly thought it was a movie thing and not something students do.
bro I pulled an all-nighter at LEAST once a semester. I perfected the art of taking 20 minute power naps to recharge whenever I got too slap-happy from exhaustion.
If it's not done by midnight it's simply not happening.