Any fics where they are both very lonely, a bit depressed and they have never had a boyfriend before??
This is a toughie. I set out below ones where they are lonely. - HKVoyage
The Lonely Warbler by idareu2bmeÂ
Summary: At the beginning of Kurtâs senior year at McKinley High, he skips class to avoid a bully and ends up meeting the most interesting boy heâs ever laid eyes on.
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That Breathless Charm by Anwamane_13
AU: Kurt has it all. Fame, fortune, friends, guys falling at his feet with the hope that he might consider acknowledging them; he knows how shallow and empty fame can be. Heâs still trying to let go of some of the traumas caused by McKinley and so he tries to forget how lonely his life has become by centering it around his job. That is until he visits Lima on vacation and meets a certain someone whom he decides to help for a project regarding their glee club. The someone, Blaine, works in musical therapy for children and teenagers with disabilities. Kurt never has time for anyone but himself, yet somehow he finds himself in the middle of this project. Blaine is like an over sized puppy, always happy and full of life. He and his glee club may be exactly what Kurt needs in order to learn that there is more to life than fame. Kurt thinks that he may be falling for Blaine but then, thereâs always a catch.
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Letters From A Wallflower by pulling-the-puzzles-apart
Blaine meets Kurt when he moves to Lima and McKinley High in his junior year. He starts writing letters to Kurt in secret when he feels lonely. Rated M for later chapters. Inspired by Perks of Being a Wallflower but a new plot.Â
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A Perfect Collision Verse by @fictionallylost
Kurt is a New York writer living in London, UK. He loves his life, surrounded by everything he could want but is still a littleâŚlonely? Heâs on his way home from work, sitting in a sea of awful London city traffic when he literally bumps into somebody who suddenly makes him a little less lonely.Â
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Glass Houses by @sanctumslider
In an alternate universe, all babies are born with a level of empathic sensitivity to others; an ability to sense emotions, to glimpse deep into a personâs soul with just a kiss. Except Kurt Hummel. Registering at a mere 0.5 on the Hawkins Scale of Empathic Sensitivity, Kurt has resigned himself to a lonely life, empty of touch or true love. That is, until the mysterious Blaine Anderson transfers to McKinley, and everything Kurt thought he knew was changed. But finding love is never easy, even in a world where everyoneâs emotions are shared. This is the story of the boy who could not feel, and the boy who felt too much.
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Now that @idareu2bme recieved their gift I can share. Bi, axe wielding icon, Timothy Jane Stoker. Made with colored pencil and marker. I'm honestly really happy with the color blending & the axe.
Summary: Derek hadnât meant to involve Stiles in all this âStiles who was warm and pliable in his sleep, whose warm, brown eyes reflected light they would never again see, who had a smile brighter than the sun, and who could see Derek when others never did.
Can we talk more about nurturing Todd and touch-starved Dirk? It seems there is much to be said.
You are asking a lot. Or rather two separate things that I suspect will dovetail neatly together. Unfortunately that means this answer is going to be long. Fortunately I can wax lyrical on both.
Letâs start with Todd.
We know a few things about Todd. We know Todd was kind of a self-absorbed asshole for a significant portion of his life. We know that he has a tendency to lie, cheat and steal. We know that Todd spent a significant portion of his life putting himself and his own interests ahead of everyone elseâs. We know that all of this changed the second Amanda got sick. We know that he carries a tremendous amount of guilt for the things heâs done. We know he is mired in self-loathing.
We also know that he is the first person to help when no one else ever has. We know that he prioritizes Amanda above even his own safety.
Now I suspect some people would assume this is Toddâs version of atonement. I donât think thatâs the case.
Now, donât get me wrong. People can change. People change all the time. Life and experience shapes and molds us, and we in turn adapt accordingly. But a personâs core personality is still their core personality. You donât start an ESFJ only to become an ISTJ*.
So I suspect Toddâs caregiver tendencies have always been there. This isnât counterintuitive. People who are drawn to care for others are more than capable of hurting others, just as a nurturing personality type does not always preclude selfishness.
In fact, caring for others can be a decidedly selfish act. It gives us purpose. It makes us feel good about ourselves. It is a means through which we can showcase love and in turn feel worthy of being loved. Carry this too far and youâre looking at a saviour complex. But keep this reigned in and suddenly there are well-defined parameters to justify our existence.
Either way, it stems from low self-esteem.
I suspect Todd was like this as a child. I suspect he spent a lot of his youth helping. I suspect this is probably something he carried with him into his band. I suspect the band would have fallen apart long before they did had Todd not been around. I suspect a lot of his actions (the lying, the stealing) arose from frustration and resentment. These are both common traits of caregivers. Itâs hard not to grow resentful when we expend so much of our energy caring for others but get nothing in return.
And thatâs the crux of it, because caretaking is not by definition an altruistic act. People who caretake donât do so purely from a place of good. They do so to feel useful. They do so to feel needed; wanted. And without that feedback caretaking quickly takes on a much darker tone.
Take Todd and Amanda.
Todd has assigned himself as Amandaâs caretaker. He routinely travels an hour out of his way to visit her. He does her dishes. He likely does her shopping. He pays for her medication. And yet nowhere in that does he allow her autonomy.
Remember what he said to her? You canât go with them. Not you shouldnât. Not are you sure itâs safe. You canât. This is after he dragged her away from her life because he decided she would be safer with him. He has assigned himself as her protector and feels entitled to dictate the terms of her existence. Amanda wasnât wrong when she said he didnât care about her. Caring about someone is selfless. Taking care of someone is not.
Dirkâs arrival throws Toddâs life into complete and utter chaos. Itâs unsurprising that his first instinct is to reject Dirk outright, to want him gone simply because the disruption is too much to bear. But, of course, Dirk refuses to leave, which leaves Todd on somewhat unfamiliar ground. Heâs never had a friend before. Friendship requires selflessness. Todd, I suspect, has only ever had people heâs taken care of (his sister, his bandmates, etc.).
Itâs a role he falls instinctively into. Todd needs to feel needed. He needs to make himself feel useful. Look at the first time he met Farah. His first act was to get her a glass of water. It wasnât something she needed. It was something Todd needed so that he could feel like he was doing something useful.
His relationship with Dirk unfolds in much the same way. He makes himself useful. He bandages Dirkâs minor cuts and scrapes (none of which required bandaging). He is, in fact, the perfect assistant because Dirk requires constant assistance and by assisting Todd can continue to feel needed and useful. At some point itâll backfire, because codependency is not the cornerstone of a healthy relationship, but for the time being I suspect it is the foundation upon which their friendship is being built.
That all sounds rather hopeless, but character growth canât exist if a character doesnât start from a place of imperfection. Toddâs season 1 character arc ending with You Get What You Deserve playing is both fitting and telling. In order for Todd to grow as a character he needs to experience loss. He needs, universally, to atone for his past mistakes. Only then can he begin his journey, and ultimately his journey should end with him becoming a better person. He needs, over the course of however many seasons this show runs, to learn the difference between caring for someone and taking care of someone.
So what does all of this have to do with Dirk being touch-starved?
Well, Iâd argue touch-starved isnât the word weâre looking for. Heâs care-starved. And as I mentioned above, this isnât a good thing. Itâs a dangerous setup for a codependent relationship that runs the risk of destroying them both. It also has the potential of fuelling their personal growth storylines so that they eventually end in a place of equality. Only time and Max Landis will tell.
So now letâs talk about care-starved Dirk.
To do that, we need to talk about Dirkâs childhood. More specifically, we need to talk about Dirkâs time in Blackwing.
Because Dirk was taken into Blackwing when he was what, 9? 10? Possibly even earlier and who knows what his childhood was like before then. Now letâs say, for argumentâs sake, that Dirk is 36 (Samuel Barnettâs age). Heâs been out of Blackwing 16 years now, meaning that he was in their custody for at least the better part of a decade. Â More specifically, he was in Blackwing custody for the entirety of his adolescent years.
Now we know from Bart that she knew about the others. We also knew she never met them. So itâs reasonable to assume neither has Dirk.
We know for a fact that Dirk has interacted with Col. Riggins. We can assume from his reaction to Toddâs âexperimentâ request that he has likely interacted with contingent of doctors and scientists. Â Given the visceral reaction he had to Toddâs request (and to seeing Riggins again) it is also safe to assume that most of his interactions with these scientists and doctors were unpleasant.
In short, Dirk was a lab rat. If you want to get more specific I think itâs fairly safe to say that the vast majority, if not all of Dirkâs formative adolescent (and possibly pre-adolescent) years were spent in CIA custody where the only people he interacted with were the ones using him as a research subject.
Now as someone who has a sister who interacts with research animals on a regular basis, I can assure you that research animals have their basic needs met. They are fed. They are watered. They are looked after when they are sick. They are permitted sleep.
But thatâs about it.
They are not socialized (unless an experiment calls for it). They are not educated (unless an experiment calls for it). They are not touched beyond the necessary handling required for a given experiment.
We know that adolescence is a time of significant neurological development. We know that studies have been done examining the long-term psychological consequences of social isolation during adolescence. We can extrapolate from studies done on human research subjects, solitary confinement in prison populations, long-term hospitalization during childhood and adolescence, and the long-term side effects of childhood abuse and neglect. We can look at all of this and reasonably hypothesize that Dirk Gently did not come out of his time in Blackwing unscathed. At the very least he is a deeply traumatized man. It is equally likely he experienced developmental delays and/or impairments as a direct consequence of his captivity.
We also know, based on his comments to Todd, that Dirk doesnât have friends. That Todd is the closest thing he has ever had. It is reasonable, then, to assume that the vast majority of Dirkâs post-Blackwing life has remained relatively solitary. He has undoubtedly interacted with suspects, victims and possibly the occasional assistant, but nothing that lasted beyond a case and certainly nothing that would provide any sort of emotional connection. Whether this was the will of the universe or a direct consequence of his trauma/impairments remains to be seen. Either way, it is highly unlikely anyone has ever taken care of Dirk, whether it was something as simple as bandaging a cut or providing a sounding board for his theories. And if season 1 taught us anything, itâs that Dirk Gently rather likes having someone take care of him.
He certainly goes out his way to praise Todd for it. Youâre quite a good friend. You saved my life. I couldnât have done it without you. Hell, his desperation for a friend is also indicative of this. And while tender and sweet and something fandom tends to latch onto, itâs not a good thing. What we end up with is a man who needs to be needed taking care of man who likes being taken care of. As I mentioned above, this is not the basis for a healthy relationship. Itâs the basis for a codependent relationship. One in which Toddâs caretaker tendencies are rewarded by Dirkâs need for attention/love.
Now I know thatâs not what you wanted to hear, but donât despair, because as I mentioned character growth (on both their parts) is whatâll lead this relationship into something healthy. Itâs already started. The basis for their relationship may be flawed, but that doesnât mean Todd wonât learn to let others take care of themselves (heâs already started by letting Amanda go) or that Dirk wonât learn to stop relying so thoroughly on others (their fight sets the foundation for that).
So eventually weâll end up with two characters on an equal footing, each bringing their own strengths and weakness that perfectly compliment the other. In the meantime, though, we get Todd bandaging Dirkâs cuts and Dirk preening under the attention, relishing the fact that another human being actually cares, that someone wants to take care of him and keep him safe and run soothing fingers over his cuts and he has never, not in living memory, known that. And because Dirk is Dirk, he will be sure to tell Todd this with ample praise, which will reaffirm the connection between Toddâs sense of self-worth and his ability to take care of others.
TL:DR: The whole thing is going to snowball until it eventually explodes, but hopefully what comes out the other side are two people who complement each other perfectly and are better for having known each other. But as I said, only time and Max Landis will tell.
Basically, it all comes down to this: Ainât human psychology grand.
Some Notes:
*I use the Meyerâs Briggs personality types only as an example here. I do not mean to imply this is Toddâs personality type, and in fact would discourage anyone from using the MBTI as it is a highly flawed test with significant psychometric deficiencies.
Articles worth reading on the psychological effects of: social isolation, long-term hospitalization, solitary confinement, human research studies.
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Okay okay okay, so yâall remember my post about Michael Sheen being a great face cast for Peter Lukas?? Welp @idareu2bme found the perfect picture as an example.Â
Not quite as big as i picture him, but STILL. i kind of still love this