Brave New World of Toil and Trouble

I am posting this as a wholehearted rec because I ADORE this story and I have no one in my life I can talk about it with because no one I talk to regularly about fannish things is into Austen/has read this fic. It’s a what if? AU which those who know me KNOW is my one true love of fan fiction. It’s detailed, it’s long, it’s plotty, it’s complete, and it has gorgeous character development for all involved, both canon and original players. It’s talking about rape culture and feminism and fighting for the people you love, but also about taking a terrible thing and making something amazing from it.

Heed the warnings. If non-con of any kind is a problem for you, this is not the story for you. But if, like me, you gain a great catharsis from reading characters you love endure, and more, evolve from something devastating and triumph, you will love this fic.

Beth AM crafted something amazing that I wish I could have a physical copy of on my shelf right next to Austen’s originals. I don’t say that about many fan fictions, though I’ve read a lot. Katie Forsythe/wordstrings’s Sherlock Holmes fic. copperbadge’s Cartographer’s Craft. shuofthewind’s The Making of Monsters. domarzione’s Freezer Burn. Not Easily Conquered by WhatAreFears and dropdeaddream. I’m sure there are a few more I’m forgetting, but all told, it’s not a long list out of the thousands of fics I’ve read over decades in fandoms. This is one of them.

Read it. Love it. Thank the imagination and the dedication of the author that it exists. And then sigh that because it’s on a web page archive, not Ao3, you can’t leave kudos to let the author know how wonderful it is, and resort to telling Tumblr instead. That’s what I did, anyway.

Brave New World of Toil and Trouble

mercy-misrule:

just a reminder from your local tired Australian that we did not legalise marriage equality today

we just got the results in of a non binding, voluntary country wide opinion poll

that has been preceded by months of open bigotry, as the vote no side ran feral except with a lot of money and conservative clout behind them

the bill to allow for same sex marriage had been put foward in parliament

we are still not there yet

so please

don’t spread posts saying gay marriage is legal in australia now

its super not! there’s still so much more foot dragging and awfulness to look forward to around this topic here

^^^^

kvitoya:

Even if you don’t like Halloween you have to appreciate its position as the sole thing keeping Christmas from advancing even earlier into the year like a cancerous growth

In Australia, Halloween isn’t really much of a thing? It’s kind of this American holiday that you get party stuff for in the shops, but doorknocking just isn’t really done. And we get Christmas stuff in the shops from the first of September. So the fear in this post is real, let me tell you.

idyllspace:

whitmerule:

laughsalot3412:

exactingleverage:

The Snow Job

I love how Hardison takes this information in stride. Fortune cookie breakfast? Okay cool, how does that work exactly? He wants to know everything about her. What she does and why she does it.

Meanwhile Eliot’s face is the face of a man who is slowly realizing that the people he cares about are going to die of poor life choices without him to mom them into submission.

aka angrily cook for them. ALL THE TIME.

Eliot: HOW DO THE TWO OF YOU NOT HAVE SCURVY. EAT THIS FANCY MEAL WITH CITRUS

Hardison: Actually, man, my orange drinks–

Eliot: *HISSES LIKE AN ANGRY CAT*

Hardison: Nevermind.

Eliot: *TURNS TO PARKER* CHOCOLATE AND DRY GOODS ARE NOT A MEAL PLAN, PARKER. I MADE THIS SUPPLEMENT SHAKE–DRINK IT WHILE I WATCH.

Parker: …can I dunk my fortune cookies in there?

Eliot: *TWITCHES IN FURIOUS RESIGNATION* I ALREADY CRUMBLED SOME UP IN THERE. DRINK.

liliturra:

bendamocles:

karacat:

idiopathicsmile:

thebibliosphere:

a-guys-random-blog:

spaceskater-tony:

whencartoonsruletheworld:

chainerstorment:

kingloptr:

chazzaroo47:

novellaqueen:

do older generations not get fatalistic humor?? like the other day my friend’s parents were hanging around and we were joking and i was like “well no matter what i can always fling myself off the nearest cliff” and they didn’t laugh then later the mom pulled me aside and was like “maybe you should get some help, sweetie” like stfu?? help? in this economy? i don’t think so, debra

I honestly don’t think they get it as a coping mechanism, they think it’s a cry for help rather than actually helping.

i’d even say it’s past just coping and is also now a category of Stuff Kids Got Used To When No One Was Looking; not everyone using that humor is even covering up something bigger, we just stopped thinking fatalistic = taboo/unspeakable somewhere along the line, and most parents don’t seem to know why or how ~

My boss opened a door and missed me by inches, he said “whoops, almost killed you there!” My result of “Oh, if only.” Led to an awkward end of shift debrief.

This generation shares the same humor as the goddamn Addams Family and the previous generation is the White Sixties Family™ that lives next door and runs away screaming at the end of the episode

I will say that it’s interesting because this kind of humor is very, very prevalent somewhere else…

the military.

Which is honestly a place you would expect fatalistic humor to be common and used as a coping method. You’re one “oops” away from death on the flight deck, one inch to the left and you don’t have a head anymore because the jet that just landed now owns it as a wing-tip decoration. So you joke about it because lowkey you’re fucking terrified it’ll happen, but you’re also desensitized to the danger itself because you face it every single day for 12 hours at a time.

Anyway so we all know the mindset you adopt in the military because of the danger, so to realise that an identical sense of humor has been adopted by normal people should probably tell you something very important about the amount of stress modern young folks experience in daily life.

That last one… it’s true

It was also common in previous generations that had to deal with say, war and economic depression on a massive scale.

One of my favorite movies is Singing In The Rain which came in out 1952, right on the tailcoat of two world wars and a looming cold one, and for all it’s a cheery happy musical, it’s got this really bleak witty humor too, things like “call me a cab!” “okay, you’re a cab!” or the scene where Don says he’ll be homeless by the next day and Cosmo cheerfully tells him not to be ridiculous…the bank bailiffs don’t open till Monday.

And then quite probably one of my favorite opening lines, where two young girls are watching Lina on screen and one says 
“She’s so refined. I think I’ll kill myself.”

Which really resonates with a lot of the things we say now when talking about people we find personally attractive, meaning not only is fatalism not a new trend, but those two girls at the starting sequence of Singing In The Rain are totally there for Lina, not Don. 

You’re welcome.

oh my god this is blowing my mind. singin’ in the rain is millennial humor

Don Lockwood (despairing of his career as an actor): I’m through, fellas.
Kathy: Don, you’re not through!
Cosmo: Why of course not. Why, with your looks and figure, you could drive an ice wagon, or shine shoes!
Kathy: Block hats!
Cosmo: Sell pencils!
Kathy: Dig ditches!

This is so why I’m more a millennial than an xer.

@tacticalnymphomania they’re playing your song.

@bendamocles we were just talking about this in the car! Ha!

skeletalroses:

So this is a totally useless rant, but as a skinny girl, I’m getting extra, extra tired of fat-shaming.

I work for a corsetier at a Renaissance Faire. We sell corsets. Not flimsy bullshit costume corsets; like real, durable, waist-training corsets. Today a woman came in with her boyfriend, so I helped her pick out a corset and try it on. While her boyfriend—who was decidedly enthused about the whole corset thing—sat watching me lace her in, he told me, grinning, “Of all the good jobs at the Renaissance Faire, I think you have the best.”

I shrugged in agreement. “I touch butts and reach down cleavage all day; I mean…” Because we like to be a bit rakish at the Faire, and, y’know, it’s true. Tying people into corsets pretty much invariably requires getting handsy.

The couple laughed at that, and the boyfriend said, “That’s the job I would want!” But then he chuckled again and said, offhand, “Or maybe not; while we were looking at the racks, there were some pretty big sizes on there!”

Our sizes are all done in inches, and the biggest we make is a 46. And you’d better believe our large sizes sell. For a second I wasn’t sure what to say to the guy’s comment, but I answered him casually. “We get a lot of beautiful big ladies in here.” Because we do. “We make corsets for real women, not Barbie dolls,” I added. Wasn’t trying to be smart, just kind of tossed it out there because that’s the line we like to use when people ask about larger sizes, and because, again, we do.

The boyfriend went quiet at that; I didn’t think anything of it, I just kept on lacing. A moment later, he said, a little awkwardly (but sincerely enough), “Didn’t mean to be offensive.”

I quickly smiled and brushed it off, said he wasn’t, said I was just saying. (Don’t want to make the customers uncomfortable, you know?) And that was the end of it. His comment had rubbed me the wrong way, but it wasn’t a big deal. Now, I wear a 20-inch corset. I’m a few cup sizes short of being one of the Barbie dolls. Like his girlfriend, I’m one of the “hot chicks”; he doesn’t have to worry about offending me by implying that I wouldn’t be fun to poke and pull at.

Honestly though, of all the people I fit sexy technically-undergarments to in a day, fat girls are maybe my favorite people to lace up. Because they are just so damn happy that we have stuff that fits them. They are so damn happy that the corsets we make in their sizes are all the same pretty, shiny colors and cool flower/dragon/skull/etc. prints that the smaller corsets are, not ugly beige and boring “granny” colors. They are so goddamn happy that at least one (of several on the grounds) corset shop carries things that they can wear, that they actually want to wear, and that they look fucking awesome in. This is only my second season working, and we’ve fit 60+ inch waists and double-K busts. The only people we’ve ever had to tell sorry, we don’t have anything that fits them, are twelve-year-old kids.

It’s half-wonderful, half-heartbreaking how excited those women get. Women who say with sad smiles, when we ask if they want to get fitted, “Oh, no, you don’t have anything that fits me,” and then are stunned when we’re 300% confident that yes we do, and we have options. Women who can’t stop smiling and looking at themselves in the mirror after we’ve got them laced in.

I had a lady last week whose waist I measured (cinching the tape tight, as per procedure) at 41 inches—honestly not all that big. So she picked out a 41-inch corset to try on. I could tell halfway through getting her laced that it was going to be a bit big for her, so I mentioned it and said she might do better to try a smaller size. She started crying on the spot. She was so overwhelmed; she couldn’t believe someone had just told her that a 41 was too big. She told me about how hard clothes shopping was for her, how her mother would tell her she needed an XXXL instead of an XXL, how she had recently lost weight but still couldn’t wear certain colors because they didn’t fit or she wasn’t confident enough.

She did end up getting her corset, and after I checked her out she asked if she could give me a hug, so we ended up standing there hugging each other for a minute. While we did, I told her, “Do not ever let anyone tell you any bullshit. You are gorgeous.” She said, “I have a new boyfriend and he keeps telling me that.” I told her he was right, and to just keep telling herself she’s gorgeous; it was okay if she didn’t always believe it, but to keep telling herself anyway. (That’s how I talked myself through shit when I had bad anxiety.)

We all know fat-shaming is bad. The stupidity, fatphobia, and misogyny of it has pissed me off since I first became aware of it. But working with clothing, especially as figure-hugging and precise as corsets, has given me a new perspective on it—how much it affects people and just how shitty it is. Like, what does it say that I had a grown, only average-big woman crying into my shoulder because she was so overjoyed not to be the uppermost extremity of what a manufacturer can clothe?

My job rocks and it’s really rewarding, but sometimes it highlights some of the ugliest shit about society. I’m so glad I work at a shop that’s not bullshit about body types and operates with more people in mind than just scrawny white chicks like me. The fat women I work with are a ton of fun to lace up, and they’re so much more than their size—they’re cool, they’re smart, they’re funny, they’re sweet, they’re great to talk to, and yes, they’re hot. I’m so damn done with them getting short-changed and shamed by petty fucks who refuse to make them nice clothes, who refuse to even try to work for them, who refuse to consider them pretty. This whole rant was useless and won’t get read, but I had to vent because it’s been driving me nuts.

So actually, screw you, random dude. Fat girls are the highlight of my job.

My partner and I went to Sexpo Sydney about eighteen months back, and both got fitted for corsets. My partner was in her chair at the time, and the woman was so excited to fit us, especially to fit her so that she’d be comfortable sitting AND standing. We’re both plus sized (at the time, I was borderline, but I have a big ribcage so I’m ALWAYS an Australian 16 regardless of my weight) and we could try on most of what she had on the racks. That’s at a convention, not at her store, which was all the way down in Melbourne. We both walked away with corsets, having not even known that she could fit us at all when we walked into her booth, because she was passionate about her job and really excited to fit us, personally. She made us feel like a million bucks. TL; DR, corset fitters who go out of their way to accomodate people of all sizes and shapes are awesome.

So, check out Corset Wonderland. They have a comprehensive online store, but if you get a chance to get fitted by them, do. They have the details for contacting them on the website. 🙂

dizzytarot:

I may be balancing a lot but my fears of failure won’t be realized. I️ just need to remember that I️ can’t always have the perfect life.

Your deck is so beautiful – what is it? I can’t identify it, and every spread you do with it makes me want it more.

It’s yes. It’s not legally binding, but it’s yes. I’m so fucking overwhelmed right now, I keep bursting into tears. I can’t help thinking that this result is cruel – it’s teasing at the idea of equality without actually giving it to us. That’s still down to our parliament, which for decades has been putting off and putting off and putting off what they laid the groundwork for EIGHT YEARS AGO when they started taxing same sex couples the same as straights. They’ll take our money, but won’t give us the rights a straight de facto couple has by default. Inheritance. Medical and hospital decision making. Funerals. Adoption and custody. Fostering. And that’s just a handful of things. The inequality in the law permeates every aspect of my relationship. It’s a sword of Damocles that I can never escape.

Catch the fuck up, Australia.

kalmaegi:

sitaraspeaks:

dykeswithbikes:

 #fuck off dick you are so unhelpful oh my god use the batarang to get this fucking shark off my LEG or something or i swear to god i will leave you at home next time you think i’m joking but i’m not. my parents are DEAD dick they’re DEAD my parents didn’t die just so that i could have my fucking leg eaten by a fucking shark while some asshat fanboy hilariously misnames sea creatures fuck you

#fuck you batman I’m looking for the damn shark repellent okay you will have it in literally three seconds for fucks sake stop being an asshole for one second and remember MY PARENTS ARE DEAD TOO, YOU’RE NOT SPECIAL, BRUCE and my parents didn’t pass on their amazingly badass acrobat skills just so some spoilt crazy billionaire could be a dillhole obviously it was a shark it’s called artistic license, so shut the fuck up, Bruce, AT LEAST I TRY TO FIND SOMETHING TO SMILE ABOUT, mister still-cries-himself-to-sleep, okay?  AT LEAST I FUCKING TRY

You’re missing the best bit of this scene, where Batman takes a can of SHARK REPELLANT off his belt an sprays the obviously foam rubber shark in the face to escape.

I don’t remember much about ‘60s Batman, but I remember that scene. (And how hot Eartha Kitt was as Catwoman. Meow.)