
My name's Ari, any pronouns are fine (I have no idea wtaf I am doing btw)
666 posts
A Mark On Your Forehead Identifies The God You Must Worship To Stay Alive, Usually By Joining Its Local
A mark on your forehead identifies the god you must worship to stay alive, usually by joining its local church or temple. Your mark is unknown, meaning an old, forgotten god sponsored you. To survive, you must either find an old temple to worship at, or do the arduous task of building a new one
-
clevrnamehere reblogged this · 9 months ago
-
weirdothefangirl reblogged this · 9 months ago
-
weirdothefangirl liked this · 9 months ago
-
wyllowe-eastwynd liked this · 9 months ago
-
mayor-of-losertown liked this · 9 months ago
-
pookiesnukoms liked this · 9 months ago
-
polaritheblackluma reblogged this · 9 months ago
-
polaritheblackluma liked this · 9 months ago
-
gholateg reblogged this · 9 months ago
-
gholateg liked this · 9 months ago
-
thesadumbreon reblogged this · 9 months ago
-
hidden-phenomena liked this · 9 months ago
-
vidicus3 reblogged this · 9 months ago
-
toadsbitch reblogged this · 9 months ago
-
toadsbitch liked this · 9 months ago
-
sashathedoge reblogged this · 9 months ago
-
darkstone13 reblogged this · 9 months ago
-
averageambivert reblogged this · 9 months ago
-
averageambivert liked this · 9 months ago
-
tactical-peasant liked this · 9 months ago
-
gettothestabbing reblogged this · 9 months ago
-
khaosandkatastrophe liked this · 9 months ago
-
itsamebutnotmario liked this · 9 months ago
-
adaughterofathena liked this · 9 months ago
-
likepie-reads-things reblogged this · 9 months ago
-
animegrlsteph liked this · 9 months ago
-
the-bizzare-catnon reblogged this · 9 months ago
-
the-bizzare-catnon liked this · 9 months ago
-
wtfiswiththisplace reblogged this · 9 months ago
-
campfire-octopus reblogged this · 9 months ago
-
villanell-e liked this · 9 months ago
-
bugbenes liked this · 9 months ago
-
spacebear700 reblogged this · 9 months ago
-
spacebear700 liked this · 9 months ago
-
closingstraw97 reblogged this · 10 months ago
-
littlecozycreature liked this · 10 months ago
-
furiouskittydragon liked this · 10 months ago
-
nacl-and-burn reblogged this · 10 months ago
-
chekovs-fuckup liked this · 10 months ago
-
wanderingbasilisk reblogged this · 10 months ago
-
freddytheseventh reblogged this · 10 months ago
-
freddytheseventh reblogged this · 10 months ago
-
freddytheseventh liked this · 10 months ago
-
a-person-that-can-read liked this · 10 months ago
-
snoozy-anon liked this · 10 months ago
-
suspicious-enough reblogged this · 10 months ago
-
strawbuddy liked this · 10 months ago
-
diceydruid reblogged this · 10 months ago
-
diceydruid liked this · 10 months ago
-
love-nakamura reblogged this · 10 months ago
More Posts from Averageambivert
sirius quiet consideration for those he loves breaks my heart into a million pieces. sirius being really sentimental at his core. sirius keeping letters and being unable to clear out his brothers room when he moved back into grimmauld place. sirius who remembers every detail his friends ever told him. sirius’ friends being surprised when he knows things about them they dont remember telling him or only told him in passing but he never forgot it. sirius being incredibly considerate when he cares but always in a quiet way. making tea for remus after full moons when hes too tired to do it himself. marking peters practice tests and leaving notes and advice in the margins. always returning the muggle books lily lends him and never dog earring them. tucking james feet back under the covers in the winter. sirius who is cold and uncaring to most people, who can be callous and cruel. sirius who loves deeply and unconditionally, loves like fire. sirius’ love can burn it all down, rage and ruin and unrelenting. sirius’ love will sit at your feet and keep your toes warm.
Sometimes Aziraphale feels old. Or, he feels weary and achy and tired. He is old, that’s for certain, but angels don’t really get old. He’d been wearing this face since the dawn of time, and sometimes his cheeks were plumper or thinner, and sometimes there were bags under his eyes, but it hadn’t aged a day. Sometimes he remembers the inquisitions, the revolutions, the crusades, the war and the horror of it all, and he laments how much his years have let him see.
And then Crowley will do something like start humming. He’s wandering around the bookshop, idly rearranging things. Aziraphale doesn’t have his books arranged by the alphabet or Dewey Decimal–no silly human classification. He’s not an animal, he has a system, it’s just that only he knows what it is. And Crowley, maybe. He seems to have figured it out, or otherwise is using his demonic instincts, because he’s putting the books he plucks from the shelves in exactly the worst place he could put them. Aziraphale would be mad, but it gives him something to look busy doing when customers come in asking questions.
He can’t place the tune. It’s familiar, so familiar, but he can’t place it. He doesn’t realize at first that he’s been following Crowley around the shop, brows furrowed, following the sound like a bee tracking pollen.
Crowley finally notices him, but doesn’t stop, making contact through his glasses as he reshelves a book. The humming gets a little louder, a little more pointed and teasing.
“What is that tune?” Aziraphale finally asks. “It’s driving me mad.”
Crowley quirks a grin, taking a moment before he stops to respond. “Willard Bourke. Pianist. We saw him play in the 70s, in that little tavern, you remember. You thought he was handsome.”
Aziraphale blushes, but, yes, he does remember now. They’d been there for a drink, and Aziraphale had been mesmerized by the man’s deft fingers. “Ah.” Aziraphale clears his throat. Crowley says the 70s, like there’d been only one of them, but it had in fact been the 1770s when they’d heard him play. “I do remember, yes. I thought he’d be famous. Pity no one remembers.”
“We do,” Crowley says, and goes back to humming.
Or that time he stops by Crowley’s flat, just for some tea, just for a chat. He finds Crowley in the middle of cooking, cursing quietly to himself. The demon looks frustrated. He’s positively glowering when Aziraphale enters.
Aziraphale surveys his ingredients, face screwing in confusion. “Whatever are you cooking?”
“Stew,” Crowley responds glumly. “Or, at least, I’m trying to. I can’t get it right.”
“Part of the joy of stew is that you don’t have to get it right.” He waves his hands. “The pot does most of the work.”
Crowley hisses, raising his fingers to rub against his eyes. “No, it’s … It’s a specific stew. I’ve been craving it for ages, but no one makes it anymore. It came with these little roasted dill seed bread balls and …” He cuts himself off.
“Crowley–” Aziraphale squints suspiciously. “How old is this recipe, exactly?”
Crowley sighs, already defeated. “Mesopotamia?” he ekes out, abashed.
Aziraphale laughs. “Oh, good! It’ll be a challenge, then.” He pulls the spoon from Crowley’s hand, taking a sip. “Juniper berries,” he decides. “You need juniper berries.”
Or when Warlock is young, maybe 6, not more than 7, though Aziraphale finds it so hard to keep track. He and Nanny Ashtoreth are sitting in the garden, drawing. It’s one of the rare moments when they’re both calm, worn out from a long day of chasing and yelling and plotting.
Aziraphale pretends to mind his rosebushes, but he’s been watching them for some time. Finally, he breaks and walks over.
“Ah, young master Warlock,” he says, peering over their shoulders. “What a wonderful drawing you’ve done. You like dinosaurs, hmm?”
Warlock looks up, colored pencil held tight in his fist. “Nanny is teaching me about extinct animals. Like dinosaurs and thylacines and unicorns.”
Aziraphale shoots Nanny Ashtoreth a look. She doesn’t look back.
Warlock pipes up again. “Nanny invented dinosaurs, did you know?”
“Did she now?” Aziraphale asks. It’s hard to keep his voice straight, because he knows this to be a fact. Crowley had been quite drunk at the time, but he thought it would be hilarious. “Big ‘ol lizards,” he’d said, “just huge, you know. Like a dragon, but they’ll think they’re real, see. Biggest things ever. ‘ould barely fit in the garden, them. Big buggers.”
Warlock nods. “My favorite is the T-Rex. Nanny says it would eat you in one bite.”
Aziraphale hums, discontented, as Nanny Ashtoreth quirks a grin. He spares a glance at what she’s drawing, and stops. It’s the most beautiful drawing of a passenger pigeon he’s ever seen. The reds and blues of it, every detail in its feathers. They’d seen them together, before, before they’d all gotten hunted out.
“It’s a lovely drawing, Nanny,” he says, voice a little more earnest than he means it to be.
The pencil stops, then keeps going.
Warlock looks up at him again. “Nanny says she ate the last one.”
“I did,” Nanny Ashtoreth responds. “And don’t you forget it.”
It’s the little things, the things that, by himself, Aziraphale might not remember. It’s the feel of the earliest silk, the thrill of his first moving picture, the clamor of a Roman marketplace on a hot day. Aziraphale is good at the experiencing, but Crowley has always been one for the remembering. Things stick with him. Things that, otherwise, would have been lost to time.
They’re curled up in bed, two commas together, and it’s been one of those days. Every shine is the glint of a sword, every wayward noise a battle cry, and Aziraphale can’t seem to stop remembering. He remembers the mess and the horror of it, he remembers the loss. All six-thousand years of loss.
Aziraphale swallows, and he hates how thick his throat feels. “Tell me good things,” he asks, meek, tired, and Crowley hums and presses a kiss into his shoulder.
Do you remember? Crowley asks, and keeps going. Do you remember, do you remember?
Yes, Aziraphale responds. Yes, yes, I do now.
They lay there, and remember together, six-thousand years of good and light, and fun and joy, and it’s easier. It doesn’t take away all the bad that he’s seen, but it’s easier. He remembers the food and the smells and the heavy cotton, and the music and the laughter and his first taste of wine. The bad isn’t gone, but there’s good, too, pushing it’s way in to make room.
Do you remember when we met? Crowley whispers, their hands linking.
Aziraphale pulls them up to place a kiss against his knuckles. It was so long ago, a lifetime, but yes, he does.
I remember, he says.
grover: everyone always says that drinking numbs the pain, so why isn’t it working?
percy: it would help if you weren't drinking chocolate milk
if you use music to cope with anxiety, depression or to help with your ADHD (like me) reblog, I'm trying to prove a point to my teacher
I need to have multiple things going on at once or I get unfocused. If I don’t have enough then my brain wanders. I listen to music to help my unconscious brain have something to do while my conscious brain study’s.
Well, tbf the romance, more often than not, is shoved in there just for the sake of it's existence and it IS very annoying-
Does anyone know that feeling when you're reading a book or something and the male and the female character look at each other and you're like "please don't. Please don't fall in love for fucks sake can you please do literally anything other than fall in love" or am I in fact becoming heterophobic