| Rose 🌹 | She/Her |
I draw and write sometimes
Happy 5th Anniversary Octopath Traveler!!!
I’ve made a lot of great and amazing memories because of these 16 folks XD!! 🥂!!
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Happy 5th Anniversary Octopath Traveler!!!
I’ve made a lot of great and amazing memories because of these 16 folks XD!! 🥂!!
I think that more fanfiction should be written with the aim to tackle the original meaning of hanahaki. Because when the concept of hanahaki disease was originally created, it was intended to be a metaphor for suppressing one’s feelings.
Your feelings are this beautiful garden of flora inside of your chest. When you express how you feel honestly, you allow for it to grow freely. But when you hide how you feel out of fear of rejection, and try to make it smaller and smaller, the flowers become cramped inside of you, until you choke on your own feelings. Every flower you cough up is something you’ve felt, but refused to say.
The whole “dying” thing is intended to be more symbolic especially. You’re killing off bits and pieces of yourself and how you feel, because you’re afraid to express yourself.
It’s not really supposed to be, “The one I love doesn’t love me back, and I’m dying from it.” Rather, it’s more along the lines of, “Repressing your emotions is bad for you, and it’s better and healthier to express them freely, even when it’s scary.”
Which is to say that, one, the cure for the disease should be telling the person that you are in love with how you feel. How the other person feels about the person afflicted should have nothing to do with it, as the trope is meant to be about feeling your emotions unapologetically.
And that, two, it’s not an inherently romantic trope. Obviously, it has romantic applications, but it can be written for any situation where a character is hiding how they truly feel. This can include a refusal to address a specific trauma, a desire to indulge in something that they’re ashamed of, and even really practical things, like wanting to ask one’s boss for a higher position.
Although (as an aromantic person myself) I don’t agree with this conclusion about the trope, this application would also avoid people calling it arophobic. When the thing killing the character is a refusal to be honest with themselves, rather than an unrequited love, it’s on nobody’s hands but their own to save their life.
There are a ton of ways that this interpretation of the hanahaki disease could be applied in new and interesting ways in fanfiction, and I’d love to read what things people could come up with!
(via certifiedlilguy)
the silliest girl in unova
thinking about the dynamic between the self-made cynic and the bleeding heart
the self made cynic; created with bared teeth and bloodied knuckles. clawed their way out of hell and didn’t come out quite human. every thing about them is a carefully constructed persona - you can’t hurt someone who doesn’t exist, and they will never be hurt again. faithless through and through. the only savior they believe in is themselves.
the bleeding heart, on the other hand is fundamentally incapable of being anything other than themself. they love the way an open wound does. it’s hemorrhagic and contagious. faithful to a fault. they will jump without hesistation, though they’ll hit the ground consumed with guilt.
THE CLOSED WOUND AND THE BLEEDING HEART
(via 2headlightshine)
tip: you can associate fictional characters with favorite songs. but watch out
(via liimonpriince)
Id dance with you forever if you let me