futurecatladies:

kylo-wouldnt-like-those-chips:

thejgatsbykid:

kylo-wouldnt-like-those-chips:

My desire to not deal with people I think are unnecessarily negative and inflammatory is not a desire to only deal with people I agree with. My mutuals and I disagree all the fucking time holy hell this place is so annoying.

Also like… who cares if you (general you) only wanna deal w/ people you agree with on fuckin tumblr of all places? Like it’s your life! This is the web! Block whoever you want! Nobody is entitled to your time or consideration goddamn if you don’t wanna deal with someone don’t deal with them you don’t need a reason you’re not committing some moral sin by surrounding yourself w/ people you know you’re not going to be regularly in conflict with. it doesn’t mean you’re incapable of handling conflict or anything it just means maybe you don’t fucking want to in a space where it’s SO easy to avoid

This is a good point. I’m just so tired of people acting like you have to talk with everyone on here to understand their point before you block them. It’s not weak. It’s an act of self care because conflict on here ends up being such a huge waste of time and energy for me.

Some people use this site to debate and that’s fine.  That’s not how I use it at all.  It’s a hobby for me.  it’s a place I go to have fun.  It is entirely my prerogative to block anyone who is getting in the way of that for any reason.

futurecatladies:

feynites:

Winning the villain over to your side is a power fantasy.

Like, a really big one, too.

Social emphasis has it that men should value strength,
aggression, and violence, and women should value kindness, empathy, and
community. But really, anyone who has
learned to prefer social success to might/aggression is going to favour a
strategy where you can make your enemies into allies of some kind, over one
where you just kill them. As a display of dominance, killing is overly
simplistic. And it’s also hard to ignore the reality that luck usually has more
to do with most fights than actual strength.

So, many people vastly prefer stories where the villains don’t
die, but instead, get won over by the hero. It’s also a much more prevalent
power fantasy among women than it is among men, because women are often taught
that violence on our parts is inherently distasteful and ignoble. If you can’t defeat your enemies by putting a
bullet in their heads, then what could
be more satisfying than convincing that enemy to come and fight other people on
your behalf instead?

This is a major component to why villains end up as popular
shipping material. I honestly don’t think it’s the ‘bad boy’ impulse, or some
branch of misogyny, or at least, not in a majority of cases. It’s a total and
sincere power fantasy. Someone going ‘all I care about is myself and all I want
to do is DESTROY THE WORLD MWAHAHAHA’ meeting you and then being like ‘oh no
wait I also want to please you and spend time with you and I want that so much
that I will now give up those other things’ implies an intoxicating level of
charisma.

Of course, like most power fantasies, it pays to tread
carefully with it. Because real life rarely accommodates such things, and as
with some muscle-bound hero easily lifting a house over his head, being able to
take a wholly selfish being and convert them into a devoted companion is… unlikely to happen outside of fiction.
For a lot of reasons.

However, I bring it up because I am C O N S T A N T L Y
seeing the compulsion to ship characters with villains misattributed to A)
agreeing with the villains, B) some form of self-hatred, C) a noble impulse
towards compassion and understanding, or D) sheer stupidity, and really… it’s
just another power fantasy. Wonder Woman punches a tank. Tony Stark buys an
entire island. Storm calls down a lightning strike. Batman outwits all his clever foes. And some seemingly random,
ordinary human woman convinces Lex Luthor to chill out and stop trying to kill
Superman. It’s all power, displayed
in fantastical proportions.

(Which isn’t to say that you have to like it or think that
every such relationship is good and healthy, gods no, but once you realize that
everyone’s just pretending to be the Superman of relationships, it’s easier to just go ‘oh that’s what you’re after’ and… y’know… fret less.)

It’s no huge secret why I’m into ships where the guy has to confront the fact that he’s super duper wrong and the girl (in various ways) helps make him see that.

With a lot of men generally, but specifically with some in my life, that’s never ever going to happen.  That’s why, for me, a fulfilling narrative where a guy realizes and confronts his mistakes is better than the best PWP, tbh.