Not to get involved in ~discourse~, but I really feel like this idea i keep seeing that Flint “just needed to be stopped”, and that Silver did The Right Thing by stopping him just kind of reduces the complexity of the ending, reduces the complexity of both of their characters, and ignores Madi’s role and agency. Like, Silver’s whole reason for wanting to stop Flint was that “his” war would put Madi at risk, ignoring the fact that Madi has as much at stake in this revolution as anyone. She wasn’t hypnotized or tricked by Flint into joining his revolution, she knew damn well what she was getting into and what dangers it posed, so to say that she needed to be saved from herself or saved from Flint’s dangerous influence just irks me.
But also, I think saying Flint and his revolution (and by extension Madi because, like I said, it was as much her fight as it was his, if not more her fight) were misguided and doomed to failure ignores the fascinating “what if” that black sails presents. What if, leaving aside for a moment what we as an audience know of history, a revolution like this did happen and did succeed? What world the world look like if that happened? Are abusive power structures really inevitable? Is the certainty of security in the moment worth the certainty that that security won’t last? As Madi’s mother points out, building a wall and protecting who you can isn’t a lasting solution, eventually the outside world will find a way in. Is the uncertain possibility of a better future worth chaos and instability in the moment? If you drown the cat that just wants to eat and put an end to the immediate conflict, the abusive father is still there. It’s only a matter of time before something else comes along to provoke him. To me Black Sails does have a tragic ending, but it’s a subtle kind of tragedy rather than a doom/disaster/everybody dies kind of tragedy. It’s tragic because of that lingering “what if” that will probably continue to haunt all of the characters for the rest of their lives.
Category: Uncategorized
Do not punish the behaviour you want to see
I mean, it seems pretty obvious when you put it like that, right?
But how many families, when an introvert sibling or child makes an effort to socialize, snarkily say, “So, you’ve decided to join us”?
Or when someone does something they’ve had trouble doing, say, “Why can’t you do that all the time?” (Happened to me, too often.)
Or any sentence containing the word “finally”.
If someone makes a step, a small step, in a direction you want to encourage, encourage it. Don’t complain about how it’s not enough. Don’t bring up previous stuff. Encourage it.
Because I swear to fucking god there is nothing more soul-killing, more motivation-crushing, than struggling to succeed and finding out that success and failure are both punished.
this is the main thing that stops me from progressing in life. anything i do in the house, or even going outside, is a snark remark. it makes all my hard work leading to that moment all for nothing. it’s so defeating.
This is actually a well-researched phenomenon. Among, for instance, people struggling with substance abuse, those who start to do BETTER often get hit with the rebound anger from their family.
(I saw this very often at the therapeutic school I attended for three years).
Dog Days – DreamingPagan – Black Sails [Archive of Our Own]
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: Black Sails
Rating: Not Rated
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: Hal Gates/Admiral Hennessey
Characters: Hal Gates, Admiral Hennessey (Black Sails), Thomas Hamilton, Captain Flint (Black Sails), Charles Vane, “Calico” Jack Rackham, Miranda Barlow
Additional Tags: Fluff, Tooth-Rotting Fluff, In which Gates acquires a dog, and Charles is going to need new trousers, Gates POV
Series: Part 4 of Graced
Summary:
“Hey – go chew someone else. Go on. Get off. Hey!”
The puppy growling and chewing on the leg of Charles Vane’s trousers gives a yipe as Thomas strides forward and scoops it off the ground.
Meditations Portrait Series
Part 4 – Thomas HamiltonLife’s been really crazy lately so I wasn’t able to post last week, but here’s the next piece in this series! Turns out that painting a sad-looking Thomas is kind of emotionally wrecking, but it had to match the rest of the series and here we are.
sea candy
The human brain is amazing. It functions 24/7 from the day you were born and only stops when you sit down to do some writing and drawing.
hey remember the fact that thomas hamilton was a gay revolutionary and would have 100% still love and support james in his war against the oppressive regime that made him a slave 🙂
“Here’s an article about our thoughts on poverty and by the way we think you should pay money to read a glorified blog”
You should support journalism, yes.
Or are these people just supposed to write “glorified blogs” that you still somehow want to read for free? You expect to be paid for your labor, I assume, but not them?
For fuck’s sake. The entitlement people have towards journalism astounds me. You bitch and moan about ads, you bitch and moan about messages asking you to turn off your ad blockers, you bitch and moan about not getting unlimited articles for free, and you have the gall to demean the very coverage you want to access.
Journalism is labor which should be compensated. They have a skill which they’re trained for and they use that skill to survive. Consuming the labor of workers while giving them nothing in return doesn’t make you radical, it’s literally the Marxist definition of a ruling class parasite.
quick question op, why do you hate journalists and don’t want them to earn a living
also – they’re asking one dollar. that’s… beyond cheap for something that people took hours of their lives to do.
I used to think that adulthood was one crisis after another. I was wrong.
as it turns out, adulthood is multiple crises, concurrently, all the time, forever
Confirmed
Dear everyone who is currently working on a Thing, whatever that Thing may be,
Good luck with the Thing. You can do the Thing. You will do the Thing. You just have to do the Thing.
Best wishes,
Someone who is also doing a Thing