inubz101:

xtaticpearl:

knightinironarmor:

tony at the end of every avengers mission talking to thor and steve all heart-eyes like “thor??? you’re staying right???? captain??? you’re also staying???? i’ll throw us a party. you’re staying right??? you’re staying. are you staying??? you should stay. right??? that seems like a good idea so you’re staying aren’t you???”

tony @ bruce like “literally come live with me i have ten floors of pure science to share and”

tony @ clint like “i already took care of your entire medical treatment and i called in a doctor straight from korea and also drink this green smoothie. my bots made it but i picked this lidded cup and straw personally”

tony @ natasha like “[blasting AC/DC] hello base this is Shellhead ™ did you miss me. over. no nat i do NOT sound like i’ve been crying i’m actually always Fine”

help me tony loves them

Tony @ Nick Fury “I don’t want to join you boy band but I have an entire tower ready for them and I’m building you better tech to see monitors without turning or hurting your eye and I am not emotional Nick, stop it, I just (clenched fist) am happy that you’re not dead and I did NOT call my teammates my friends or hate myself because I saw all of them dead and myself alive.”

Tony @ Sam “You don’t have to trust me or like me but here you go, have a pet drone that matches your skill and will act as your AI”

Tony @ Maria Hill “Oh okay you don’t like me but please work with me, and come to my party, Maria stay back for the afterparty and relax but don’t call me boss, that’s Steve, please call him boss, I’m not your boss.”

Tony @ Peter Parker “I’m not your dad and you’re definitely not my kid, but I’m building you all this suit with over 300 web combinations and your own ai. I’m not checking up on you ever five minutes that’s what Happy’s for, No Rhodey I’m not listening to all of his voice messages fuck off!”

of course i wanted you.
you forest made flesh,
your heart one dark bruise
and kinder than anything
that’s been done to you.
you god. you promised land.
heart the size of paradise
and golden honey.
of course i’m afraid.
there is nothing i have held
without it coming away in blood.
i have a mind like a mousetrap,
savage like whole cities burning.
you tender bird, violet sprig.
your mouth is so soft
my kiss will hurt.
of course i dreamt you.
you impossible boy, you miracle,
look at how the sun is jealous.
it knows: when you want
something badly enough,
you must create it.

the second secret // n. w. (via skulls-and-tea)

nerdtasticsarcasm:

lokiwholockfactory:

stonyinspiration:

itsallavengers:

pantyhouse:

“True story: His Name is Robert Downey Jr.” by Dana Reinhardt

I’m willing to go out on a limb here and guess that most stories of kindness do not begin with drug addicted celebrity bad boys.

    Mine does.

    His name is Robert Downey Jr.

    You’ve probably heard of him. You may or may not be a fan, but I am, and I was in the early 90’s when this story takes place.

    It was at a garden party for the ACLU of Southern California. My stepmother was the executive director, which is why I was in attendance without having to pay the $150 fee. It’s not that I don’t support the ACLU, it’s that I was barely twenty and had no money to speak of.

    I was escorting my grandmother. There isn’t enough room in this essay to explain to you everything she was, I would need volumes, so for the sake of brevity I will tell you that she was beautiful even in her eighties, vain as the day is long, and whip smart, though her particular sort of intelligence did not encompass recognizing young celebrities.

    I pointed out Robert Downey Jr. to her when he arrived, in a gorgeous cream-colored linen suit, with Sarah Jessica Parker on his arm. My grandmother shrugged, far more interested in piling her paper plate with various unidentifiable cheeses cut into cubes. He wasn’t Carey Grant or Gregory Peck. What did she care?

    The afternoon’s main honoree was Ron Kovic, whose story of his time in the Vietnam War that had left him confined to a wheelchair had recently been immortalized in the Oliver Stone film Born on the Fourth of July.

    I mention the wheelchair because it played an unwitting role in what happened next.

    We made our way to our folding chairs in the garden with our paper plates and cubed cheeses and we watched my stepmother give one of her eloquent speeches and a plea for donations, and there must have been a few other people who spoke but I can’t remember who, and then Ron Kovic took the podium, and he was mesmerizing, and when it was all over we stood up to leave, and my grandmother tripped.

    We’d been sitting in the front row (nepotism has its privileges) and when she tripped she fell smack into the wheelchair ramp that provided Ron Kovic with access to the stage. I didn’t know that wheelchair ramps have sharp edges, but they do, at least this one did, and it sliced her shin right open.

    The volume of blood was staggering.

    I’d like to be able to tell you that I raced into action; that I quickly took control of the situation, tending to my grandmother and calling for the ambulance that was so obviously needed, but I didn’t. I sat down and put my head between my knees because I thought I was going to faint. Did I mention the blood?

    Luckily, somebody did take control of the situation, and that person was Robert Downey Jr.

    He ordered someone to call an ambulance. Another to bring a glass of water. Another to fetch a blanket. He took off his gorgeous linen jacket and he rolled up his sleeves and he grabbed hold of my grandmother’s leg, and then he took that jacket that I’d assumed he’d taken off only to it keep out of the way, and he tied it around her wound. I watched the cream colored linen turn scarlet with her blood.

    He told her not to worry. He told her it would be alright. He knew, instinctively, how to speak to her, how to distract her, how to play to her vanity. He held onto her calf and he whistled. He told her how stunning her legs were.

    She said to him, to my humiliation: “My granddaughter tells me you’re a famous actor but I’ve never heard of you.”

    He stayed with her until the ambulance came and then he walked alongside the stretcher holding her hand and telling her she was breaking his heart by leaving the party so early, just as they were getting to know each other. He waved to her as they closed the doors. “Don’t forget to call me, Silvia,” he said. “We’ll do lunch.”

    He was a movie star, after all.

    Believe it or not, I hurried into the ambulance without saying a word. I was too embarrassed and too shy to thank him.

    We all have things we wish we’d said. Moments we’d like to return to and do differently. Rarely do we get that chance to make up for those times that words failed us. But I did. Many years later.

    I should mention here that when Robert Downey Jr. was in prison for being a drug addict (which strikes me as absurd and cruel, but that’s the topic for a different essay), I thought of writing to him. Of reminding him of that day when he was humanity personified. When he was the best of what we each can be. When he was the kindest of strangers.

    But I didn’t.

    Some fifteen years after that garden party, ten years after my grandmother had died and five since he’d been released from prison, I saw him in a restaurant.

    I grew up in Los Angeles where celebrity sightings are commonplace and where I was raised to respect people’s privacy and never bother someone while they’re out having a meal, but on this day I decided to abandon the code of the native Angeleno, and my own shyness, and I approached his table.

    I said to him, “I don’t have any idea if you remember this…” and I told him the story.

    He remembered.

    “I just wanted to thank you,” I said. “And I wanted to tell you that it was simply the kindest act I’ve ever witnessed.”

    He stood up and he took both of my hands in his and he looked into my eyes and he said, “You have absolutely no idea how much I needed to hear that today.”

Did I fucking ask to start crying tonight. No. No I did not.

Reblog for those who are unaware of this story ♡

@izhunny

one of my faves 💕

‘all dubcon is just rape’

sainatsukino:

meeedeee:

freedom-of-fanfic:

In the real world:

  • Yes

In fanfiction:

  • No

‘dubcon’ is a fic genre where a victim’s consent to a sexual situation is questionable.  Tropes that fall into this category include: sex pollen, ‘aliens made them do it’, drunk sex, fics that start out noncon but the victim enthusiastically consents partway through, and many others.

In a real world situation, if a person is incapable of consenting or doesn’t agree to a sex act the whole way through it, it’s rape.

While ‘dubious consent’ cannot possibly describe a real life situation of any kind, the word ‘dubcon’ has very specific connotations within the realm of fanfiction. Like its close sister ‘noncon’, it is a safe word used to describe a variety of rape fantasies without using the word ‘rape’, which both protects the creators of these works and protects survivors who are looking for these kinds of fics from having to look at a word with such strong connotations.

‘why not just call it all noncon then?’ because dubcon communicates one or two very specific mindsets of the victims:

  • their mind is altered by some outside force to cause them to desire participating in sexual acts
  • during the sexual situation they are in a state of consent

The situation may not be real-world levels of consenting, but the victim is not perceiving themselves as a victim; they desire the sex act. In noncon, the implication is the opposite: the victim is not desiring the sex act.  Being able to tell the two genres of fictional rape apart is extremely important for anyone looking for a fic in that genre to read, particularly for survivors.  Knowing the mindset of the victim(s) can be the difference between a safe fantasy and a triggering (or perhaps just squicky) experience.

‘Dubcon contributes to the mindset that victims can be ‘made to like it!’’ No: it’s a safe way to interact with a concept that real world rape culture forces on all of us. It arises from the same narrative, but as the situation is entirely fictional, it actually returns the power to the reader to choose whether or not they are enjoying it.  And by openly acknowledging that the situation is not truly consensual, the label ‘dubcon’ actually increases awareness of this gray area’s moral and real life implications.

If you don’t like it, that’s okay: nobody has to like anything.  Many people are squicked by non- and dub-con works.  But words are important, and very specific warnings and tags protect people from harm.  And isn’t that all we all want?

tl;dr: dubcon doesn’t exist in the real world, but it’s an important label for fanficcers and their readers everywhere.

After reading dubcon fanfic, I went looking for it in mainstream erotica and found there was no dubcon tag or label. It was not until I started reading paranormal romance (which is traditional romance with vampires and were-people) that I  found a closer parallel.

Lbr a lot of mainstream romance books and movies feature dubcon without making this distinction – they act like dubcon is normal and romantic and nbd, and that is way more morally dubious than a lot of things read in fanfic

Tagging makes all the difference in the world. If you’ve tagged something “dubcon” or “rape/non-con,” that means you know the actions portrayed are morally bad, and you’re making the reader aware of it, and aware of the fact that you know. Horror movies are called horror movies because we all know the depicted events are horrible; no one assumes that horror movie fans endorse torture and murder. Tagging conventions make explicit the mutual understanding that we – a community mostly of women and/or afab folk – are often turned on by fictional scenarios that are morally bad, and that would be completely horrific in real life. And maybe it’s because of conditioning by rape culture, and sometimes it’s a coping mechanism for survivors, or maybe it’s just because human sexuality is really fucking weird (pun sort of intended). 

The assumption of anti-kink culture is (as I understand it) that dubcon/non-con and power-exchange kinks are symptoms, expressions, and perpetuations of rape culture. Even if that’s true, and all kinks would disappear once rape culture was abolished, it would do a lot more good and less harm to address the problem at its source – by promoting widespread education about consent; by fighting mainstream depictions of dubcon and the predator/prey model of sex and romance as normal and desirable – than to attack a small, vulnerable population whose (supposedly) twisted predilections reflect the way they have been indoctrinated into a system of which they are the intended victims. Kinky fanfic and fanart are not the problem; they are, if anything, symptoms of the problem, and according to their own ideology, anti-kink people are blaming and attacking people for being sick rather than fighting the actual disease. Which is, as you know, the standard right-wing approach to homelessness, poverty, and racial oppression.