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it’s been a wild ride these last few years, but I’m finally at my wit’s end with tumblr.

asoiaf is and will always be my favourite book series, but the fandom is a nightmare. there are some truly questionable takes under the guise of ‘canon’ or biased taken-out-of-context metas that claim to be nuanced and I just can’t do it anymore. I’m not surprised the best of fandom have quit - it’s impossible to exist in this space and not be a toxic mess when the only debates happening are about dragging other characters down instead of any proper analysis. or complaining that everyone else is mean and toxic while being hypocrites yourselves. truly maddening stuff.

so I’m out. it’s been fun and a rollercoaster of emotions and wish you all the very best of luck. leaving my blog up as a final memorial to something I’ve dedicated countless hours of my life to and I can’t bring myself to delete it, but feel free to unfollow as I won’t be posting anything more on here.

in true grrm fashion, ending my run as a stark supremacist. that’s what the story is, after all.

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My Favorite Thing About Bran

[Robb’s] fingers closed into a fist, crushing Sansa’s letter between them. “And she says nothing of Arya, nothing, not so much as a word. Damn her! What’s wrong with the girl?” Bran felt all cold inside. “She lost her wolf,” he said, weakly, remembering the day when four of his father’s guardsmen had returned from the south with Lady’s bones. Summer and Grey Wind and Shaggydog had begun to howl before they crossed the drawbridge, in voices drawn and desolate.

When I first read this scene, I took up the reading that most others seem to: Bran is mourning Lady’s loss; it is a small plea for sympathy.

This is a really subtle moment in Bran’s spiritual growth; it’s not a plea for sympathy. Though he yet can’t put it into words, he’s realized something that his other siblings don’t even as of ADWD: the direwolf is more than just a symbol of power, it is a source of power.

Bran knows that Sansa didn’t write that letter of her own free will, and why: She has no one to protect her, because she has no direwolf, and to not have a direwolf at your side is to be powerless. A Stark is their direwolf, and vise versa:

It sounded stupid, high and hollow and quavering, a little boy’s howl, not a wolf’s. Yet Summer gave answer, his deep voice drowning out Bran’s thin one, and Shaggydog made it a chorus. Bran haroooed again. They howled together, last of their pack.-Bran, ACOK

This is my favorite thing about Bran. For someone who is so young and naive, he is deeply in tune to his siblings and thinks about them all the time:

[the wolves] were his now. They were pack.
No, the boy whispered, we have another pack. Lady’s dead and maybe Grey Wind too, but somewhere there’s still Shaggydog and Nymeria and Ghost. Remember Ghost?

Bran is such the embodiment of the utterly sincere and caring monarch, like Arthur and other fairytale kings. It begins with his siblings, but it grows to include everyone around him, including Hodor and the Reeds:

He sent sweets to Hodor and Old Nan as well, for no reason but he loved them.-Bran, ACOK.
“His greendreams.” Meera’s voice was bitter. “Hodor,” said Hodor. Meera began to cry. Bran hated being crippled then. “Don’t cry,” he said. He wanted to put his arms around her, hold her tight the way his mother used to hold him back at Winterfell when he’d hurt himself.-Bran. ADWD

He is dutiful and proud to serve as a ruler:

“As you will, my prince,” said Ser Rodrik. “You did well.” Bran flushed with pleasure. Being a lord was not so tedious as he had feared.-Bran, ACOK
Why must he waste his time listening to old men speak of things he only half understood? Because you’re broken, a voice reminded him. A lord on his cushioned chair might be crippled, but not a knight on his destier. Besides, it was his duty. -Bran, ACOK
He was old enough to know that it was not truly him they shouted for. Still, it made him swell with pride.-Bran, ACOK
I won’t be afraid. He was the Prince of Winterfell, Eddard Stark’s son, almost a man grown and a warg too.-Bran, ASOS

And he’s good at it:

She is looking at me, Bran realized. He had to make some answer. “My brother Robb is fighting in the south,” he said, “but you can say your words to me, if you like.”…. Bran groped for words. Was he supposed to swear something back to them? Their oath was not one he had been taught. “May your winters be short and your summers bountiful,” he said. That was usually a good thing to say. “Rise. I’m Brandon Stark.”
The old knight’s white mustache was pink with wine. “You have done well, Bran. Here, and at the audiences. You will be an especially fine lord one day, I think.”- Bran, ACOK

And as wise and spiritually aware as his training as lord and greenseer is making him, Bran is so fortunate that when he returns he will have sisters who have cunning and can lie because, this child has no guile:

“No.” He did not like to talk about the dreams. “A prince should lie better than that.” Osha laughed.
We should steal horses like Meera wants,” Bran said, “and ride to the Umbers up at Last Hearth.” He thought a moment. “Or we could steal a boat and sail down the White Knife to White Harbor town. That fat Lord Manderly rules there, he was friendly at the harvest feast. He wanted to build ships. Maybe he built some, and we could sail to Riverrun and bring Robb home with all his army. Then it wouldn’t matter who knew I was alive. Robb wouldn’t let anyone hurt us.” [Hodor] was the only one who liked Bran’s plan, though. Meera just smiled at him and Jojen frowned. They never listened to what he wanted, even though Bran was a Stark and a prince besides, and the Reeds of the Neck were Stark bannermen.

Other examples: Bran describing sex as two people “lying on top of each other”; Bran wanting to joust with Hodor and on and on.

Bran is fit to rule because he does literally everything except play “The Game”. He does exactly the sorts of the things that kings should be doing but that in the narrative they always sideline: Robert prefers to hunt and drink; Robb’s reign is almost entirely waging war (at his audiences “he spoke the words so awkwardly that even Bran took note; it was a speech he had learned, not words from the heart”) and Renly preferred to watch tourneys and feast rather than deal with the affairs of his subjects. Bran’s chapters give us the purest example of a truly beneficent and attentive king (as opposed to a queen, Dany) who deals with the essentials of castle repairs, storing food, taxes and the needs of the peasants. He’s the only ruler who does this on page with any sincerity other than Dany.

So when Bran, his character and his arc are described as being about magic and not ruling, and that he is an exploration of the shaman-trope rather than fairytale king, I shake my head and think, “They….they skimmed Bran’s chapters, didn’t they?” 

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Anonymous asked:

So do you believe that Bran will return to Winterfell and rule it as the King in the North? (given the political disintegration has overtaken Westeros and is simply too far gone to be repaired).

I believe that Bran will return to Winterfell, as for King in the North, that all depends on the political climate at the end of the series. Will it be the 7 kingdoms, with one monarch? Will it be 7 different kingdoms? Yes, IF they become seven separate kingdoms, then I do believe that Bran will be King in the North.

Technically, Bran *is* King in the North. He is the eldest trueborn Stark male and he is Robb’s heir. Moreover, he has been the lord of Winterfell since the end of AGoT, with more experience in ruling Winterfell than any of his siblings (aside from Robb). There is the issue of Robb’s will, in which we can assume he legitimized Jon with his expressed desire to name Jon his heir, but that will has not yet surfaced in the series. So as of now, Bran Stark is Robb’s true heir and with Robb’s death, he is the King in the North. 

Even if Bran isn’t king in the end, I am of the opinion that he will be the Lord of Winterfell; he will be -at least- one of the Starks in Winterfell. 

Bran and Winterfell

Bran has been intrinsically linked to Winterfell since his very first chapter.  He has an incredibly special and unique connection with it, more so than anyone else in the series. It is both a physical connection to its structure, a sentimental connection to the memories it holds for him, and an emotional connection to its people:

Most of all, he liked going places that no one else could go, and seeing the grey sprawl of Winterfell in a way that no one else ever saw it. It made the whole castle Bran’s secret place.

-Bran, AGoT

Bran could perch for hours among the shapeless, rain-worn gargoyles that brooded over the First Keep, watching it all: the men drilling with wood and steel in the yard, the cooks tending their vegetables in the glass garden, restless dogs running back and forth in the kennels, the silence of the godswood, the girls gossiping beside the washing well. It made him feel like he was lord of the castle, in a way even Robb would never know… It taught him Winterfell’s secrets too.

-Bran, AGoT

he sent sweets to Old Nan and Hodor for no other reason but he loved them

-Bran, ACoK

He saw Old Nan, her toothless mouth opening and closing. Hayhead was carried in between two of the other guards, a bloodstained bandage wrapped about his bare chest. Poxy Tym wept inconsolably, and Beth Cassel cried with fear
[…] 
People were still being driven into the Great Hall, prodded along with shouts and the butts of the spears. Gage and Osha arrived from the kitchens, spotted with flour from making the morning bread. Mikken they dragged in cursing. Farlen entered limping, struggling to support Palla. Her dress had been ripped in two; she held it up with a clenched fist and walked as if every step were agony. Septon Chayle rushed to lend a hand, but one of the ironmen knocked him to the floor.

-Bran, ACoK

“Bran,” he said sullenly. Bran the Broken. “Brandon Stark.” The cripple boy. “The Prince of Winterfell.” Of Winterfell burned and tumbled, its people scattered and slain. The glass gardens were smashed, and hot water gushed from the cracked walls to steam beneath the sun. How can you be the prince of someplace you might never see again?”

-Bran, ASoS

“It had a bitter taste, though not so bitter as acorn paste. The first spoonful was the hardest to get down. He almost retched it right back up. The second tasted better. The third was almost sweet. The rest he spooned up eagerly. Why had he thought that it was bitter? It tasted of honey, of new-fallen snow, of pepper and cinnamon and the last kiss his mother ever gave him.“ 

-Bran, ADWD

There are many more quotes, this is just a teaser, that illustrate Bran’s connection to his home and his people. Of all the Starks, Bran has spent the most time in Winterfell. Literally 14 of the 21 chapters he has are in Winterfell, there is a reason that it’s been highlighted over and over again just how significant Winterfell is for Bran. Of course, it is significant for his siblings as well, it is their home, and they wish for it and miss it just as badly as Bran. But that’s all we get from them, their thoughts and desires of home, it’s different for Bran because there is a sense that his destiny is tied to Winterfell in much the same vein as it’s tied to Bloodraven/the old Gods/children of the forest. 

Bran the Heir

In every single book that Bran has a POV, we are reminded at least once that he is Winterfell’s heir. Bran is alive, he is a trueborn son of Ned and Catelyn, he is the eldest -legitimate- Stark male, and more than all of this, every northern lord knows that Bran is heir. He has spent time with them, he has talked to them, advised them, listened to the state of their lands, they addressed Bran as “my lord” when they met with him. When news reaches that the true heir of Winterfell is alive, they’ll swear him fealty without a second thought. This is especially significant as Bran has personally met and spent time with Wyman Manderly, a man currently in the midst of a plot to bring back Rickon Stark and install him as lord of Winterfell. If/when lord Manderly finds that Bran is alive, he will do all he can to see him safely returned home. 

"You are the lord in Winterfell now,” Robb told him […] "You must take my place, as I took Father’s, until we come home.“ 

-Robb to Bran, AGoT

you are your brother’s heir and the stark in winterfell

-Ser Rodrik to Bran, ACoK

He was the Stark in Winterfell, his father’s son and his brother’s heir, and almost a man grown 

-Bran, ACoK

you are our prince as well, or lord’s son, and our king’s true heir

-Meera Reed to Bran, ASoS

What was he now? Only Bran the broken boy, Brandon of House Stark, prince of a lost kingdom, lord of a burned castle, heir to ruins. 

-Bran, ADWD

Bran the lord of Winterfell

I’ve already written a post about Bran’s training and subsequent position as lord of Winterfell, here.  Bran has been learning the ways of lordship since his first chapter, where he must witness his father execute the NW’s deserter. This first chapter is when he learns his very first lesson in ruling from his father:

"One day, Bran, you will be Robb’s bannerman, holding a keep of your own for your brother and your king, and justice will fall to you. When that day comes, you must take no pleasure in the task, but neither must you look away. A ruler who hides behind paid executioners soon forgets what death is.”

-Bran, AGoT

Bran learns an incredible amount about ruling, from Ned Stark, from Robb Stark, from Ser Rodrik, and Maester Luwin.  It is important to note that Bran didn’t rule Winterfell alone, he had a great amount of guidance and teaching from Maester Luwin and Ser Rodrik, his regents. This will hold true for when he returns, whether it is Lord Manderly or another loyal Northern lord (maybe Howland Reed) Bran will need an experienced -adult- regent to help him in much the same manner as Maester Luwin and Ser Rodrik. That is the purpose of a regent, after all. Someone who is old enough, seasoned enough, experienced enough to train the young leader. 

A brief summary of Bran’s training:

The technical aspects of ruling:

  • harvests
  • defenses
  • land rights and negotiations 
  • marriage contracts 

Social expectations:

  • speaking with the northern lords  
  • how to properly present himself
  • addressing his bannermen with proper courtesies
  • how to conduct himself as lord during the harvest feast 

The wise and intangible lessons:

A lord must protect his smallfolk. Cruel places breed cruel peoples, Bran, remember that…

-Maester Luwin to Bran

the man who passes the sentence should swing the sword. If you would take a man’s life, you owe it to him to look into his eyes and hear his final words.

-Ned to Bran, AGoT

Bran spent 11 chapters of his 21 chapters learning to rule Winterfell and then actually becoming the lord of Winterfell, bearing all the responsibilities that role has. That’s literally half of his story spent in such a capacity. It is not some insignificant interlude that should be overlooked, if you ignore the important implications of his role and training as lord, then you’re completely ignoring half of his arc. 

Bran and Kings

It’s really interesting, Bran has quite a few connections to both mythical kings in our world, and the kings in the north of his world.

Bran and the fisher king:

The fisher king is a king of celtic and arthurian legend who suffered a wound to his legs and became paralyzed. He must bear the consequences of his kingdom’s destruction as he suffers from his wound. I’m actually planning to write a meta on this, so I won’t go into much detail. The similarity, aside from the loss of their legs, is that the kingdom suffers as the king suffers, and that’s definitely a theme seen with Bran.

  • Bran’s fall coincides with Winterfell and the north losing their lord to the South.
  • His rise to lord of Winterfell coincides with the war of the 5 kings, and Winterfell losing it’s lord yet again.
  • Theon overtaking Winterfell, many of its people dying, the north fighting ironborn invasion, lady Hornwood’s gruesome death and the subsequent conflicts over her land, and finally Ramsay taking Winterfell for himself and destroying it, all coincide with Bran’s forced escape from his rightful seat, his long and dangerous journey to the true north, his current unwitting role as Bloodraven’s protege; the kingdom suffers as the king suffers. 

Bran’s training with Bloodraven is just as important as his training for lord of Winterfell. I absolutely believe that his ever growing powers of sight, skinchanging, and warging will be utilized in the fight against the others. However, it is not ludicrous to think that Bran will eventually return home, rebuild his home, and become its lord. There is a reason that half of his story was spent in Winterfell, there is a reason that Bloodraven lived a long life, first as Brynden Rivers, then as lord commander of the Night’s watch, and then became the entity we know him as in ADWD. Bran isn’t going to stay in that cave forever, and I’m not saying that everything will end up perfect and happy for him; that he’ll be this all powerful magical being all the while ruling winterfell. Sacrifices, pain, death of loved ones, they will come, and he will suffer. But ultimately, Bran’s connection to Winterfell is too deep, too important, too powerful to say that he’ll never go home again. 

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Bran Stark: Born to Lead, Born to Rule

Bran Stark’s story is centered around the magical, but there is a significant aspect of his story that is often overlooked, ignored, or forgotten. From a very young age, eight to be exact, Bran has been in training as the Lord of Winterfell and the warden of the North. Bran’s training is one that has provided him with the experience needed to command, operate, and rule Winterfell, and it has cemented him as the Stark in Winterfell all the while solidifying his relationships with the Northern lords and houses. This crucial part of his story cannot be ignored, as he is the only Stark child, after Robb, to have the experience and background needed to rule over Winterfell and the North. As Ser Rodrik reminds him:

“you are your brother’s heir and the Stark in Winterfell." 

Just a few examples of the training Bran received as the acting Lord of Winterfell in listening, learning, speaking on matters important to Winterfell itself as well as the North as a whole:

“‘Listen, and it may be that you will learn something of what lordship is all about,’ Maester Luwin had said.” Bran, ACok
"most of the morning was given over to talk of grains and greens and salting meat” Bran, ACoK
 ”… and went from that to speak of how he had strengthened the port’s defenses, detailing the cost of every improvement.” Bran, ACoK
“… He spoke of weather portents and the slack wits of smallfolk…” Bran, ACoK
“Bran knew what to say. ‘Thank you for the notion, my lord,’ he blurted out before Ser Rodrik could speak.” Bran, ACoK
“In such cases, her liege lord must find her a suitable match” Ser Rodrik on the widowed Lady Hornwood in Bran, ACoK
“A good lord comforts and protects the weak and helpless…” Bran, ACoK
“‘Your notion about the bastard may have merit, Bran,’ Maester Luwin said after. ‘One day you will be a good lord for Winterfell, I think.’” Bran, ACoK

Not to mention the many Northern lords Bran had to meet and have a dialogue with- Lord Wyman Manderly, Mors Umber, Tallharts, Glovers, etc. Just from the above quotes we can see that Bran had to deal with northern economy, defenses, climate changes, land rights, marriages, and more than that, he learned wise lessons from Maester Luwin on how a lord must treat his people, specifically those who cannot help themselves, the outcasts of society, people like Hodor.  

In a series wrought with deeper meanings and interpretations of even the most simplest of things, it is imperative that Bran’s name is discussed in connection with his role as a leader and ruler. There have been many Brandon Starks in the Stark ancestry, many of whom have been Kings in the North. To have a  Bran Stark, rather, Prince Bran Stark, who is the brother of the King in the North and his rightful heir is no mere coincidence nor insignificant fact. Unbeknownst to Robb, as well as all of the Northern lords, Bran is still alive, making him Robb’s true heir and for all intents and purposes: the King in the North.

Even more interesting is the fact that Brandon Stark is the name of the very man who built Winterfell and the Wall- Bran the builder. Curious that Winterfell has been burned and destroyed in recent times, and is in desperate need of reformation and reconstruction. Very curious that the rightful heir of Winterfell, Bran Stark, is named after the very man who built Winterfell in the first place. Just from his name and position alone, it is clear that Bran’s destiny is tied with Winterfell, whether it is rebuilding, ruling, or both, it is a destiny that he has not yet fulfilled. So long as Bran is alive he will always be Robb Stark’s rightful heir, and the true Lord of Winterfell. 

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theelliedoll

Is this post real life? Or is it just fantasy?

Are there other people in the world who truly see Bran as the King in the North? 

Not to mentioned that the character is named and characterized after Bran the Blessed, and his mystical connection with the ‘true’ north basically epitomizes every ideological foundation of every kingship myth ever. Bran is in fact the only true king in a mystical sense in a world that insists on showcasing the demystification of kingship, with a (always fake) king in every corner.

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Bran Stark and the Mythological Figure Brân the Blessed: Bran's Role as King, and Leader of the Fight Against the Others

In Welsh mythology, Brân the Blessed was a giant and King of Britain who appears in the Mabinogion- a collection of stories from medieval Welsh manuscripts. His welsh name, Bendigeidfran, literally translates to “Blessed Raven,” and the name Brân literally translates to crow. 

In the most significant tale of Brân the Blessed, rising tensions between King Brân and the Irish king Matholwch escalate to a full out battle when the Irish king attempts to attack Brân the Blessed and his party, which includes his half-brother Efnisien. The catalyst for the attacks is King Brân’s machinations of rescuing his sister, Branwen, from her abusive husband- the Irish king. Efnisien realizes that the Irish intend to revive the dead in a magic cauldron for the purpose of utilizing an undead army against Brân and his host. Efnisien sacrifices himself by hiding amongst the corpses the Irish intend to bring back from the dead, and destroys the source of the revival, the cauldron, from within.

Brân the Blessed is mortally wounded in the fight, and he instructs the seven remaining survivors of his party to cut off his head and return it to the Gwynfryn, the “White Hill”. It is thought that the White Hill is the location upon which the Tower of London stands, and as long as Brân remains there, Britain will be safe from invasion.

Now, GRRM places a great significance on certain names:

“Actually, the names in Song of Ice and Fire were something I devoted a fair amount of thought to…” [source]

For example, the name Arya means noble, great, and truthful in sanskrit, which fits perfectly with what we know of Arya Stark. 

The tale of Brân the Blessed seems to fit soundly with the tale of Bran Stark. Bran is, without a doubt, the most connected character to the true, magical North. From the start, he has prophetic dreams of a three-eyed crow, and he is so greatly influenced by his dreams that he eventually sets out to find the source of them. In ADWD, Bran finally meets the source in the form of Lord Brynden Rivers, also known as Bloodraven. It seems there is a recurrent theme of Bran’s significant connections to ravens. Connections that stem from the meaning of his name, from Lord Bloodraven, and from Bran’s powerful skinchanging abilities- abilities that allow him to fly in the body of a raven.

As I’ve explained here, Prince Brandon Stark is the true heir of King Robb Stark, and as the King in the North has died, the Kingship of the North has passed to Prince Bran, making him a King in much the same vein as Brân the Blessed. While Bran is no giant, interestingly enough, he sits atop the shoulders of a man who is characterized as a literal giant amongst men- Hodor. He also skinchanges into Hodor; in utilizing Hodor’s body and controlling his mind, Bran makes himself a giant in the process. 

As we learn early on in the series, Westeros is under a foreign threat of invasion from an undead army. In a striking similarity to Brân the blessed’s half-brother, Efnisien, it is Bran Stark’s own half-brother, Jon Snow, who realizes this threat. Jon is actively fighting the undead that have arisen, whilst Bran is actively training to learn how to fight them through higher, magical means. Just the same as King Brân and his half-brother Efnisien, both Bran Stark and Jon Snow have paramount roles in protecting Westeros from the only true threat facing it- an invasion of the others. 

In yet another similarity between the two tales: King Brân and Efnisien attempt to rescue their sister from the cruel Irish king, just as Jon Snow declares war on the heinous Ramsay Bolton in an attempt to find and rescue his most beloved sister, Arya.

It is believed that King Brân’s head is the reason that Britain is safe from foreign invasion, and this seems to be indicative of the larger purpose of Bran’s storyline: a King who ensures the safety and protection of his country, his people, his home. We know that Bran is undergoing a very specific, highly complex, magical training and I believe that all signs point to Bran not only playing a central role in the fight against the others, but taking on the role of King for the security of his true home- Winterfell and the North. 

Source for the story of Brân the Blessed here.

Idea for this meta came from tumblr user theelliedoll and their excellent commentary on my other Bran meta. The commentary can be found here.

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Anonymous asked:

brienne and arya are underage too, doesn’t stop half the fandom from shipping them with men years older than them (and jaime is like 15 years older btw)

hypocrisy? fandom be thy name

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facinaoris

Let me ask you. You still having those nightmares? All the time. It means I remember. It means a part of me is still there. Which means a part of the Winter Soldier is still in me.

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Blue and purple stood the White Mountains, rising into peaks of jet, tipped with glimmering snows, flushed with the rose of morning.

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Anonymous asked:

You can link all the meta you want but it doesn’t change the fact that sansa is still underage

what a weird way of saying, “I don’t want to read anything that challenges my opinion, even if it’s canonical and true to the fictional character I claim to love and is in line with the established themes of the series in which she belongs to because it’s wRoNg and also I can’t understand complexity.”

sansa isn’t real, my dude. the asoiaf world isn’t real. you have twelve years olds conquering the world. just clutch your pearls and read puritanical fanfiction somewhere away from my blog please, I love this series and I’m not getting into it with someone who can’t deal with it.

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