20s :3you can call me frog. please don't refer to me 🙏star trek most of the time depending on how active the brain worms are@frogothy is my other blog [icon by @crystal-mouse]
like i know the majority of people in the uk are supportive or at the very least not. actively trying to harm trans people and destroy trans lives.
but it fucking sucks so bad to get reminded you live amongst people who genuinely want to see trans people killed.
anyway i was walking my dog today and i walked past some new graffiti saying 'kill the transgenders' 🙂
it was probably written by some stupid kid trying to act all big in front of their friends. but like. some day that stupid kid is going to grow up into an adult in society yknow
i know i shouldn't let it affect me n stuff but idk just when u start making some progress and thinking maybe u can actually exist in the world it's like,, lol no die
Babe Spock is so autistic coded in this episode it hurts. And I LOVE that they show him both sure of himself, but also on the edge, unsure, he doesn't understand why it's not working, he's frustrated.
I think this episode shows well the complexity of Vulcan's relationship with feelings. Because so many emotions in this man! Oh boï.
I wanted to share this essay from Star Trek Lives! because holy shit, I couldn’t believe what I was reading. Not only is this insanely romantic, but it’s significant because Gene Roddenberry and Leonard Nimoy were very involved in the creation of this book. The authors worked closely with them (and other members of the orginal cast!) on multiple other projects as well, and Roddenberry even wrote the foreword of the book and endorsed it. That’s... wow.
Spock, the unlikely, unknown and lonely alien, is seen and known, understood and loved, in a way that few men ever have been, and he is learning to see and love as few men ever have.