thinking of picking up writing again, but it's so damn hard when you already have a super busy working schedule.
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@maymaymay5th
thinking of picking up writing again, but it's so damn hard when you already have a super busy working schedule.

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Love takes centrestage in this weekâs episode⌠with a Gilead-style twist.
I really was going to try and simmer down on this whole topic for the evening but then I had to read this article that was at the top of my Google feed and it lit a fume around a few particular takes I keep seeing from anti's and general viewers that the THT writers seem to want to confirm.
âLove is conditional.â
Oh, okay. Thatâs the grand feminist takeaway now? That the only love worth having is the kind that fits some impossible moral checklist? Sure â love should be conditional on safety, respect, and trust. Iâll give you that. Especially for all the Luke defenders out there.
But this idea that June can only love someone whoâs already perfect, whoâs never been complicit, never compromised, never made a mistake â thatâs not empowering. Thatâs not feminist. Thatâs moral absolutism in a red cloak.
Love can transform people. Itâs not weakness â itâs the most human reason to fight. And itâs exactly how change actually happens.
The fake moral high ground only shows up when Nick is involved.
Iâm sorry â are we seriously still acting like Nick is the only morally grey character on this show? Serena literally orchestrated rape and child theft. Lawrence designed the system. Lydia tortured women daily. But no one questions whether they can change or be complex. The minute Nick shows up with guilt and nuance and love in his eyes, suddenly itâs âhow dare June still care for him?â The selective outrage is exhausting. You donât have to ship it â but letâs not pretend itâs about morals when your fave has done worse. So why is Nick the one character in the end whoâs suddenly held to a standard of purity no one else is asked to meet?
Acting out of love is a bad reason to change?
Iâm begging you to live in the real world. Most people donât risk their lives for causes theyâre not passionate about. People take action because something personal cracks them open. Because someone they love is affected. Because they canât live with the silence anymore. Nick risking everything because of his love for June and Nichole? Thatâs not a flaw. Thatâs human. Thatâs exactly how revolutions start.
And honestly? Luke hasnât taken a single risk. Not one. So this image of him as the âgood guyâ makes me want to scream. He judged. He waited. He punished. He had the freedom to act and chose comfort every time. But sure â letâs drag the man who was stuck inside the system and still found a way to protect the woman he loved when no one else did. And who would be dead if not for him.
And this article seriously suggests Luke and June are like Katniss and Peeta. You are out of your damn mind if you think thatâs the case.
Peeta didnât judge Katniss for being changed by trauma. Peeta never resented her pain. Peeta didnât demand softness from a woman who had been at war. And Peeta actually experienced war.
Nick is the Peeta. Always has been. Luke is Gale with a better PR campaign.
And Iâve got to be honest â Iâm seriously confused (and outraged) at the final message this show seems to be suggesting, which is:
Love is only valid if itâs morally convenient. Change only matters if it comes from the "right" person. Redemption is for the chosen few â not the ones who actually earned it.
What happened to the show that made space for contradiction? That let women be angry, messy, and in love with the wrong person and still be right?
What happened to the story that was supposed to live in the grey?
Because this? This ainât it.
Loving someone who once served the regime doesnât make June naĂŻve.
It makes her human.
Nick made his choices. He chose June. Again and again.
Even knowing it could cost him everything.
Real freedom isnât about being âcleanâ in a dirty world.
Itâs about choosing love in a world that tells you not to feel anything at all.
If you ask me, the most powerful thing about The Handmaidâs Tale was never that it taught you how to be a hero â
it showed you how to remain human in the darkest of circumstances.
The moment it shifted into a âmain character success narrative,â
it betrayed the very essence of what it once stood for.
and this depressed me most
If you ask me, the most powerful thing about The Handmaidâs Tale was never that it taught you how to be a hero â
it showed you how to remain human in the darkest of circumstances.
The moment it shifted into a âmain character success narrative,â
it betrayed the very essence of what it once stood for.
Love, Agency, and the Real Meaning of Feminism in The Handmaidâs Tale
⸝
I just finished The Handmaidâs Tale Season 6, and honestly, Iâm heartbroken and angry.
The relationship between Nick and June has been one of the most powerful threads in the series since Season 1. Nick risked his life again and again to protect her. Their love wasnât a fairytaleâit was born from pain, danger, and limited choices. But thatâs what made it real. In a world built to crush them, they chose each other. That wasnât âbeing a lovesick fool.â That was human courage, emotional agency, and resistance in its purest form.
But in Season 6, the writers reduced Nick to a mere background character, labeling their history a âsituationship.â This not only breaks character logicâit disrespects everything that viewers have emotionally invested in. Years of life-or-death devotion were tossed aside for thematic convenience.
But hereâs my truth: Feminism doesnât mean stripping women of love, tenderness, or emotional complexity. Feminism means giving women the freedom to choose, fully and freely, without judgment.
I loved June in Season 1 because she was imperfect. She made mistakes. She still chose to love Nick. She still fought for her daughter. And she did all of it while holding on to her own sense of self. Thatâs not weakness. Thatâs personhood.
Season 6, on the other hand, flattened her into an abstract figure of righteousnessâwho erases people not because of real harm, but because they no longer fit her narrative. Thatâs not strength. Thatâs inhuman.
⸝
đŁ So letâs stop calling love a weakness.
Letâs stop telling women that to be âstrong,â they must be numb, angry, or alone.
Feminism means freedom. Freedom to choose love, freedom to walk away. Freedom to be a person.
Iâve seen so many shippers feeling deeply disappointed and angry â and I understand them completely.
But honestly, I think the answer lies exactly in what The Textual Poachers says: fanfiction has power.
Fanfiction is not just about indulging fantasies â itâs about reclaiming meaning. When the official narrative abandons characters weâve loved and followed for years, we have every right to take them back. We reshape the story, not to ignore canon, but to challenge it, to heal what it broke, and to honor what it erased.
Even if the writers dismissed Nick and Juneâs relationship as a âsituationship,â we remember what it actually was: sacrifice, longing, mutual recognition in a broken world. That kind of bond doesnât vanish because a script says it does.
We write because we remember. We create because we refuse to let someone else tell us what mattered and what didnât.
In a way, fanfiction becomes a form of emotional justice â a space where readers and writers say:
âNo, this was real. You donât get to take that from us.â
And maybe thatâs the most powerful resistance of all.

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We should have known already after 6x03, huh? When the official channel called Nick a situationship. đŞ
wth
This literally pissed me off
I feel like Spencer Reid wrote this
âThe more difficult it was to love the particular man beside us, the more we believed in Love, abstract and total. We were waiting, always, for the incarnation. That word, made flesh.â
This line from Atwoodâs THT novel has been etched into me ever since I first read it. Itâs messy. Romantic. Rooted in theology, philosophy, desire. Itâs a contradiction â just like the book. And itâs the most honest thing Iâve ever read about love.
Because it doesnât speak to fairy tale love. Or safe love. Or easy love.
It speaks to the kind of love that lives in the ruins with you. The kind that changes you. That doesnât need to be pure to be real. That doesnât need to be public to be true.
This quote â this entire passage â is the thesis of THT. Atwood was never writing about "happily ever after." She was writing about how people stay human inside systems designed to hollow them out.
And June? She survives not because she becomes cold or perfect or self-righteous. She survives because she remembers how to want. Because she lets herself love, even when itâs dangerous, even when itâs wrong, even when it makes no sense.
âWe were waiting, always, for the incarnation.â
Thatâs Nick.
Not a fantasy. Not a savior. Not a symbol. A real man. Flawed. Quiet. Bleeding. Complicit. And the incarnation of love in the darkest place imaginable.
Loving him didnât save June from pain. But it kept her whole. It tethered her to the part of herself Gilead couldnât take.
I didnât need a happy ending. I didnât need sunshine and closure and a white picket fence.
But what I did need was an ending that was earned.
What I needed was: A woman who doesnât walk away from the love that sustained her. A man who doesnât get reduced to a ghost in the machine. A story that understands that messy, complicated, gut-wrenching love is not weakness â itâs humanity.
Instead, the show told us: That loving someone like Nick â someone flawed, dangerous, but loyal â is a mistake. That Juneâs survival means detachment. That the âreal worldâ doesnât have room for complex love, only correct, simple love. It told us that traditional love â clean, sanctioned, externally approved â is the kind worth fighting for. That the love that fits neatly into boxes, that doesnât challenge the status quo, that doesnât ask hard questions â is the one that wins.
But thatâs not The Handmaidâs Tale. Thatâs not the story Atwood wrote. This story was never about choosing the man with the cleanest rĂŠsumĂŠ. It was about breaking the rules â all of them. About surviving in ways youâre not supposed to. About loving in ways the system canât predict, and therefore canât control.
Nick and June were never traditional. They were never safe. But they were true. And they were dangerous to Gilead precisely because their love didnât follow the rules. Because it wasnât handed to them â they built it. They bled for it.
So when the show decided that love like that had to be sacrificed for something simpler, more acceptable, more palatable â it didnât just abandon Nick and June. It abandoned the point.
But thatâs not the book. And thatâs not The Testaments, either â where love and loyalty still survive in the background, where the human heart remains a factor.
So yeah, Iâm disheartened.
Not because Nick and June didnât get a romantic ending. But because the writers refused to give them a narratively honest one. Because they pretended this story was never about love â when it always, always was.
Atwood understood that choosing to love someone who is difficult, complicated, flawed â especially when you are too â is one of the most radical things a person can do.
Itâs not blind. Itâs not passive. Itâs a conscious, daily act of seeing someone fully and still saying: yes, you. Especially when the world tells you that love is dangerous. Or selfish. Or futile. And that love ânot the violence, not the vengeance â is what ultimately broke Gilead.
And that, to me, is what real feminism is about. Not perfection. Not purity. Not moral absolutes. Choice. The power to decide who you love, how you love, and what youâre willing to risk for it. To say: this is mine, and I choose it â even if itâs messy. Even if the world tells you not to. You own it. Out loud.
And thatâs what hurts the most: June never got to make that choice. Not fully. Not freely. The show skirted it, deflected it, passed it off in glances and silence. And in doing that, it robbed her of what shouldâve been the most radical act of all â choosing the flawed, complicated love that made her feel alive.
And thatâs why Iâll never accept a version of this story that treats love as weakness. That frames complexity as failure. That suggests safety is more noble than honesty. That tells us simple is more righteous than real.
Because love isnât less valuable when itâs complicated. Itâs more. And choosing it anyway? Thatâs the most radical thing she ever did.
Atwood's "Offred" fearlessly admitted she would've done things for that man. Things he didn't even require from her. She admitted that she felt safe with him, that they were passionate together.
None of it is demeaning because that's how we act when we're in LOVE, when we DESIRE. That's not a "woman" thing, it's a human thing, so it shouldn't be viewed as embarrassing for a woman to feel those things, to accept them and enjoy them to the fullest. Especially when we are lucky to be with a person that actually wants us as we are, doesn't try to change or control us in any way. A person with whom we can just BE.
I don't get why it's so hard to understand that THAT is what drew us to that story. It's not just because it's romance, and we are women and of course we like romance (ugh), it's because of the type of love it shows.
Love that doesn't restrain, doesn't hold back, doesn't tell you what to do, doesn't stop you, doesn't possess you. It's a love that IS, that STAYS, that TRUSTS and it's TRUSTFUL, that GIVES and most of all, only requires for you to be on the other end.
It's such a wasted opportunity to have shown us this for an entire 6 seasons run, just to tells us that, in the end, it never fucking mattered.
Well, it didn't to them I guess, but it did to me. It will always be important to me, and thank God I got both books to remind me, it IS canon, and it WILL forever be.
on soulmates
f. scott fitzgerald / friedrich nietzsche / florence and the machine /Â andrea dworkin / kiersten white / euripides / audre lorde / phillip pullmann / bob hicok

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Nick x June - The Handmaid's Tale - Season 1, 2017
Okay i did not read the books, i only watched the show SO LET ME BE DELUSIONAL IN PEACE OKAY?
ALSO PROBABLY HANDMAIDS TALE SEASON 6 SPOILERS AHEAD MAYBE NOT IDK.
The way Nick and June just LOOK at each other?? The tension??? The âI would burn the world for you but we can'tâ energy??
THEIR EYES HAVE MORE SEX THAN HALF THE ACTUAL SEX ON TV.
And meanwhile Juneâs husband???
Iâm sorry but heâs just there. Like a tree. A supportive tree, sure, but a non-sexy, beige tree. Thereâs no fire. No ache. No âmeet me in the shadows and betray our regime for a single kissâ vibe.
Nick walks on screen and suddenly I canât breathe. June says ONE WORD and heâs already undressing her with his soul.
LET THEM BE TOGETHER. LET THEM DO CRIMES. LET THEM FUCK!!!
If this show doesnât give us what we want Iâm writing fanfic out of pure spite.
They are out here acting like war-torn soulmates in the middle of a dystopia and STILL canât get 5 minutes alone without someone interrupting or society collapsing???
BABES. THIS IS AN INJUSTICE.
June is out here risking her life, screaming at power structures, smuggling people, and Nick is just standing in the rain looking like heâs about to confess eternal love or rip off his coat and kiss her against a wall.
THEYâRE IN LOVE. LET THEM BE TOXIC. LET THEM BE MESSY. LET THEM HAVE ONE NIGHT OF RELEASE.
Iâll wait. But if episode 4 doesnât deliver, I riot. Or write smut. Same thing.
FUCK. LUKE.
He can pack his boring-ass beige button-up, sip a lukewarm cup of Canadian government coffee, and go braid Moiraâs hair in peaceful irrelevance because June?
June needs to be with Nick "Iâd Burn Gilead for You" Blaine.
Like bro, Luke had YEARS. YEARS!!!
And all he gave us was guilt trips, confusion, and passive-aggressive trauma invalidation.
Meanwhile Nick???
Soft voice. Intense eyes. Absolute devastation every time he looks at her.
New Bethlehem Nick is PEAK HOT.
Diplomatic. Dangerous. Emotionally repressed with simmering passion underneath?
Sir, build June a life there. You already built a home in her chest.
Also⌠the baby???
The sacrifices???
I need therapy.
LIKE SIR, YOU HAVE POWER NOW. DO SOMETHING HOT WITH IT!!!
Nick, baby, youâre a Commander. Youâve got:
Access.
Authority.
Smolder.
A tragic backstory and incredible jawline.
USE THAT TO GET HANNAH OUT.
GET JUNE IN.
THEN GET. đTO. đFUCKING.
Like bro. Youâre literally one stolen key and one whisper to Lawrence away from starting the greatest forbidden loversâ revolution in dystopian TV history.
Meanwhile June is out here sobbing in the rain, writing trauma poetry in her eyes, waiting for a real man to commit one sexy rebellion.
AND YOUâRE STANDING THERE DOING THAT LITTLE âLOOKING AT HER FROM A DISTANCE WITH A PAINED EXPRESSIONâ THING???
ENOUGH.
Save Hannah.
Steal June.
Raise Nicole.
FUCK. IN. A. DUSTY. DYSTOPIAN. ROOM. WITH. A. SINGLE. LAMP. ON.
Honestly? Iâll write it myself if the show doesnât.
Iâm MAD.
JUNE is probably mad too, she hasnât had a real orgasm since Season 2!!
Nick is out here Commandering like a sad little simp in a tailored coat and the writers are like:
âLetâs focus on Aunt Lydiaâs diary instead.â
NO.
Give us:
Window sex
Desk sex
âWe shouldnât be doing this but do it anywayâ sex
âWe are broken people but somehow whole togetherâ sex
Until then?
We riot.
We manifest.
We write fanfic with unholy levels of detail.
It's a sweater weather and sweaters are meant to be removed.
my brain tumor for the past 2 weeks

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âItâs one thing to fantasize about a perfect proposal or an expensive gift; thatâs high-maintenance, sure, but itâs also par for the course. Itâs asking something from a man, but primarily itâs asking him to step into an already-choreographed mating dance. But asking to be thought of, understood, prioritized: this is a request so deep it is almost unfathomable. Itâs a voracious request, the demand of the attention whore. Women talk ourselves into needing less, because weâre not supposed to want moreâor because we know we wonât get more, and we donât want to feel unsatisfied. We reduce our needs for food, for space, for respect, for help, for love and affection, for being noticed, according to what we think weâre allowed to have. Sometimes we tell ourselves that we can live without it, even that we donât want it. But itâs not that we donât want more. Itâs that we donât want to be seen asking for it. And when it comes to romance, women always, always need to askâ
â Jess Zimmerman, Hunger Makes Me (via brosandprose)
how the old gods lose their powers because people stop believing in them, but thereâs nike, the goddess of victory, and sheâs like even more powerful, just strolling up on olympus in limited edition air force onesÂ