jausters:

dragon-in-a-fez:

my friend’s four-year-old son wouldn’t go to sleep because he wanted to keep looking at the stars and she tried to bribe him with a piece of chocolate and he just said “would you rather get a reward or be happy” and turned back to the window

Oh my… God?

jausters:

dragon-in-a-fez:

my friend’s four-year-old son wouldn’t go to sleep because he wanted to keep looking at the stars and she tried to bribe him with a piece of chocolate and he just said “would you rather get a reward or be happy” and turned back to the window

Oh my… God?

creepyartbabe:

positivity is cool and all but repressing negative feelings is toxic to yr mind and body. dont feel guilt for having an array of emotions. its corny to fake positivity when it isnt sincere, feeling stuff even bad stuff is nothing to be guilty over. its okay to feel bad sometimes

creepyartbabe:

positivity is cool and all but repressing negative feelings is toxic to yr mind and body. dont feel guilt for having an array of emotions. its corny to fake positivity when it isnt sincere, feeling stuff even bad stuff is nothing to be guilty over. its okay to feel bad sometimes

demo-ness:

indecisivepsyche:

The lighting was so pretty in the end.

*SLAMS MY ENTIRE FACE ON MY DESK* IT’S PURPLE

I’ve never made a post about it, but hoo boy, tons of really important scenes had either red or blue lighting.

My absolute FAVORITE of which being Stan and Ford’s fight, 30 odd years ago:

image
image

The lights are clashing, just like the Stans.

image
image

But as the fight starts to end, they move away from the red light into predominantly blue light, although the red is still present.

image
image

And when Ford’s gone, there’s no red light left at all. Stan, as well as the blue lighting, are alone.

image

I’m too sugar crashed to tell the difference between red and blue lightings’ specific (respective) meanings throughout the series, but they both represent a problem. I never made a post about this scene because I was always trying to think of which Stan each color could represent, but now it’s so OBVIOUS. The blue and red lighting don’t represent people, they represent conflict. That even matches up with other Stans-less scenes with color lighting throughout the series.

For the show to end on purple lighting, the coming together of red and blue lighting, right after the two clashing brothers came together…. 

I’m pretty dang pleased about this.

demo-ness:

indecisivepsyche:

The lighting was so pretty in the end.

*SLAMS MY ENTIRE FACE ON MY DESK* IT’S PURPLE

I’ve never made a post about it, but hoo boy, tons of really important scenes had either red or blue lighting.

My absolute FAVORITE of which being Stan and Ford’s fight, 30 odd years ago:

image
image

The lights are clashing, just like the Stans.

image
image

But as the fight starts to end, they move away from the red light into predominantly blue light, although the red is still present.

image
image

And when Ford’s gone, there’s no red light left at all. Stan, as well as the blue lighting, are alone.

image

I’m too sugar crashed to tell the difference between red and blue lightings’ specific (respective) meanings throughout the series, but they both represent a problem. I never made a post about this scene because I was always trying to think of which Stan each color could represent, but now it’s so OBVIOUS. The blue and red lighting don’t represent people, they represent conflict. That even matches up with other Stans-less scenes with color lighting throughout the series.

For the show to end on purple lighting, the coming together of red and blue lighting, right after the two clashing brothers came together…. 

I’m pretty dang pleased about this.