đľđ¸đ Free Palestine đđľđ¸
but you know that you had it once
and you know that you want it back
but you know that you're needing it
and you need it bad
When you're so doomed by the narrative you lose two people you thought would become your everything
(and yes i did this same type of post with steddie and stancy however long ago but listen....mitski is so angst and so them...)
"... a stark reminder that genocide is about more than just the premeditated mass extinguishing o human life; it's also about the calculated, and often vindictive, destruction of a people's culture, language, history, and shared sites of community." [source: Gabrielle Bates on X, formerly known as Twitter. 11/27/23.] Original post they are responding to on Literary Hub: "Gaza's main public library has been destroyed."
hello im sorry for this post but i need to make it in case i will go mia for couple of days i just got back grom a vet with my cat maya and i found out she needs to get both of her back tooth pulled i'm so worried how much it will cost because if you have pets you know that vets are expensive, i got to the vet because i was worried with her lack of dry food eating and yeah from what vet said her teeth at least the back ones are in bad state, on monday i will find out how much it will cost if it will cost a lot i'm afraid i will try to set up a gofund me because i do not make that much money to be able to afford an expensive pocedure, i will keep yall upodated once I know everything, she also got her blood test done today and results will be on Monday as wellâŚ.
In the meantime here is a picture of my cat đââŹ
Myy little diva is hurting and it breaks my heart đ
Seong Gi-hun's relationships and how the Squid Game affected them.
Jodi Picoult, 'Vanishing Acts' / Catherynne M. Valente, 'Deathless' / Zeke Russell, 'Wintered Over' / Zora N. Hurston, 'Their Eyes Were Watching God' / Anne Carson, 'H of H Playbook'
Iâd love to absolutely yap about Gihun and Sangwoo and how Gihun is in this season so here it is âźď¸ ( sorry for any spelling mistakes, English isnât my first language đ)
I donât see a lot of people really talk about just how much of an affect Sangwoo had on Gihun, especially on this season and how he takes his actions, and even the intentions behind it, but Iâd love to go on about Gihun first.
Gihun was never a remarkable person, his life before the games was already in shambles. The company he worked under went on a strike, and thatâs when he came in touch with death for the first time, witnessing a coworker die right infront of him when their workplace got attacked, the same day his wife gave birth, which he couldnât attend, since then heâs been losing things more and more, his wife and daughter, and to cope with it all he turned to unhealthy ways, gambling and detaching from the pain by doing so. Lots of people say he was happier back then, but he was just ignoring all his issues. Heâs stuck in the past, his mind refuses to register the pain he went through, and in turn to find a way to heal and work on his life. And being stuck on the past means attaching to things in his childhood, one indirectly being Sangwoo, considering he spends a lot of time with his mother. He knows his state, and indulges in it instead of pretending to be something else.
Sangwoo on the other hand, was the opposite of him. Which is everything Gihun admired in him, and everything Sangwoo envied in him. Gihun views him as someone remarkable, and obviously doesnât shy away from saying so. But Sangwoo isnât, and doesnât believe so. Sangwoo his entire life was fixated on a image he wants to put out to the world, and does whatever it takes to do so, betting on everything and even his mother, who just like Gihun, views him as â the pride of their hometownâ. His methods of doing so however, were immoral and illegal, which caused him to be heavily in debt, a physical proof of his failure. Unlike Gihun, his coping mechanism simply is either money or nothing, to be something else or nothing, anything but himself, and something better than him. Because of his failure, he feels like an imposter in a suit, pretending to be everything heâs not, the image he so desperately wants to portray would falter infront of his mother, and already does infront of Gihun, so his instinct is always to run away from the past, to never go back to his hometown, to his mother, because of how ashamed he is of himself. Seeing Gihun again reminds him of everything he couldnât be, and that reminder is a constant agony to Sangwoo.
Sangwoo envies the authenticity Gihun has, how he unapologetically connects with others in a death game, helps out Oh Ilnam, an old man who is deemed to be a weak link in a game where everyone is out to get each other, and how despite it all, he still keeps his humanity intact and doesnât let it falter, how even though Gihun treated his mother horribly, he still had her love, while Sangwoo believes his mother only loves the image he put, not himself. Gihun is the only person who saw his image falter, in the scene where he asks him if heâd push him if it was him instead of the glass maker. Sangwoo breaks, immediately arguing back like a defensive child, his argument almost childish when he calls Gihun a âpea headâ and a âdumbassâ. When Sangwoo mentions how his entire life is pathetic, Gihun replies that he knows the state of his life, and asks why Sangwoo, the pride of their hometown, the graduate of SNU, is right here in the pits with him, despite their vastly different lives, to which Sangwoo replies with nothing. Gihun through the show realises more and more how insecure Sangwoo is, and in turn also perfectly broke down the image he was trying to hard to put to justify his actions. Sangwoo, probably because of the pressure of Gihunâs own admiration, feels like his actions if for the sake of Gihunâs, no matter what, is justified, which he tries to use when arguing with Gihun, but in reality, itâs his own desperation, his own need to present as something else than himself, if it means bringing worth to his life, which he deems meaningless.
When he tries to connect with someone authentically, that person being Ali, he finally tries to allow himself to be without guilt, to help without thinking of any ulterior motives, and to have a relationship that isnât wholly transactional, but that ultimately shatters when he teams up with Ali, who he ends up actually using his skills ( intelligence and manipulation, which he wanted to use hand in hand with Ali for each other instead of against each other) and like his old clients, cheats and robs him after promising to help. A painful reflection of how Ali, who was always cheated off his money and used in his workplace in unjust ways, the people who were his bosses, now gets cheated off by someone who he used to call from boss to Hyung. Thatâs when Sangwoo ultimately reverts back to his mindset, that he should be striving to save himself, make worth for himself, to make the blood in his hands make sense, and for the guilt to be worth it in the end, but also sees how Gihun still helps others, how he still helped Saebyeok, and is filled with anger about how he can pretend that he doesnât also have blood on his hands too, that theyâre all gonna die because of each other, but he still moves in the same empathetic way, as if they can afford to be kind.
Season 1 to me really is about how circumstances change the people who you once knew, how capitalism and money twists people, and even the most innocent things to bloody. Itâs best portrayed with two childhood friends, Sangwoo and Gihun, who once played together with just fun in their minds, the adrenaline and the joy of childhood innocence and childlike wonder in their minds, to playing the same games for money with life and death in their minds. Iâd argue and say theyâre both just overgrown kids, two who are stuck in the past, Gihun who refuses to accept it as it is, and stays behind, his personality almost childish and pathetic as a grown man, while Sangwoo who runs after his childhood dreams by any means, stuck in the image thatâs already tainted with blood, his personality almost like an angsty teen who pretend to be older than he is, but both come from poverty, both struggling with money, and both their issues starting from that, which shaped them to be who they are, and turned them both to things they donât recognise anymore when they reunited till and till their last moments together.
Maybe itâs my own point, but I believe that Sangwoo was relieved that Gihun hated him for that brief moments, that theyâve argued and fought, and that the image Gihun had of him was shattered, which in turn also freed him from his own lies and image he tried to convince himself too. He could finally feel angry without any restraint, without acting like he isnât, without covering up his selfish desires and needs, and projects it all onto Gihun, absolutely shattering the image he tried so hard to keep infront of him on purpose. Their fight was brutal and lacked any real training, both not knowing how to fight properly, and their emotions speaking louder, their movements are sloppy and awkward, and Sangwoo, whoâs way more brutal in this fight, gets a hold of the knife for longer and stabs Gihun, while Gihun who when he manages to get a hold of the knife ( which is impaled to his hand ) realises that he canât complete his actions, Sangwoo realising so when he opened his eyes to see Gihuns sad ones looking back. When Gihun walks right to the very edge of the triangle of the squid, he realises that the money, all of it, would never be worth his friends life, his childhood friends life, waking back limping and bloody to ask the guard, referencing what Sangwoo said to use clause three and for both of them agree to stop the games and leave.
Sangwoos anger waters down with the rain puddles next to him, and he realises the irony of their place. The same two grown adults, who once used to play the same games, and as he says â When we were younger, we used to play just like this and our moms would call us for dinnerâ the intensity of their fight, this one being bloody and violent, reflects on how they as kids would imagine their fights to be that intense and bloody, the adrenaline copying one of someone facing life and death, except they are now, and like Sangwoo says. âNobody is calling us anymoreâ his voice here ( lovely detail from the actor thank you park haesoo!) broken like a child, and Gihun raises his hand to him, telling him that they can go him, that they will go home. All the anger they had seconds before now gentle and caring, all of it was always once love, all the anger was once love. Gihun gives him is pure clean hand, one without a drop of blood, while Sangwoo stretches his own bloody hand, one that isnât tainted with his own blood, but the blood of others and the person above him, the one whoâs other hand he impaled.
Gihun was so willing, so willing to make it all worthless. Everything theyâve been though, all the scars they got and had, all the deaths theyâve caused indirectly, directly, and witnessed from close or afar, the death of the people he cared for, even Saebyeoks, and his own bleeding wounds and stabs, all if it meant bringing back Sangwoo with him, heâd go penniless willingly, because he couldnât truly blame him for everything, he couldnât truly blame him for turning out the way he is, he admired him with his soul, loved him with every fibre of his being, and adored him and saw him as someone so remarkable and great despite it all, so he gave him his hand, his clean, untainted hand, as to tell him that he, Sangwoo, can taint it with all his sins, and heâll still hold his hand, heâd still want him by his side. Sangwoo almost took it, almost. He wanted to let himself be, to accept that gentleness Gihun so willingly offered, and to accept the hands of his childhood friend.
Thatâs until he realises they wonât have a single penny for it all. Thatâs when he retracts his hand, and all he can do is apologise, to say sorry to his Hyung, as he stabs the knife through his neck without any remorse. In that moments, I think thatâs when he realised the only way he can truly repay Gihun isnât by taking his hand, but by leaving all the money for him, to repay his mother, to repay for Ali, Saebyeok, for all the people he caused to suffer, to repay it all with his life that was now worth 45.7B when the last person is eliminated. In the end of it all, he ignores even his own will to live and picks the most reasonable choice, letting his childhood friend win, not any random person, but Gihun. He knows him better than anyone, and within his last moments, calls out for his mother, asking Gihun to help her, to repay her in his behalf, because he couldnât face her like this, he knows he wouldnât be able to live with the weight of what he has done, even more-so without a single dim. But he knows Gihun wouldnât forget him, he wouldnât forget his mother, he wouldnât forget his humanity, and he wouldnât forget to care.
And so Sangwoo dies in a playground, dead in his childhood friends hands, a reflection of how everything he chased for as a kid died there too, and was always stuck in the same playground trying to prove his worth by winning.
By S2, Gihun painfully parallels everything Sangwoo was before the games. Both sharing even the same mother, who they both feel too ashamed and guilty to face, calling their families from a distance, and falling into deep depression, both sharing the same sense feeling like an imposter in their bodies for being things they arenât ( both being wealthy, but gaining that wealth in unjust ways) their sense of worth less now and both suicidal. ( Sangwoo who tried to commit suicide in the bathtub, and Gihun who doesnât hesitate to play Russian roulette and shoot himself) the only difference is the reason why they go back to the games.
Gihun in s2 even comes back to the games acting exactly like Sangwoo, even down to the two of them meeting someone from their past within it ( Sangwoo who met Gihun, and Gihun who now met Jungbae) but as vastly different people. Gihun uses what he had learnt directly from Sangwoo to help others ( The red light green light method, Mentioning the third clause, which was even filmed in the same space and manner, and telling others to hide before the fight broke out ) heâd always seen Sangwoo as an example of how to be, and admired him as a figure of something remarkable, so he, who already feels like an imposter in his body, who feels like he shouldnât be the one who made it out, unconsciously begins to create an image of himself that reflects Sangwoos, one he saw as cold, intelligent, and was human despite it all.
Young Il, who Inho created, is an image of who Gihun wishes Sangwoo was. (Yes ik how that sounds lemme elaborate!) Young-il is someone who is equally as smart, someone who uses that intelligence to help the weaker, who thinks for the community, and is willing to help Gihun help others, unlike Sangwoo who limited his intelligence and help to just those who could also equally benefit him, who held back on trusting Gihun, and in the end acted on his own, and reduced Gihunâs humanity to weakness, something Gihun resented about Sangwoo, and something he sees in Young-il, who Inho knew how to build himself to be someone Gihun trusted, a familiar but strange new face. Oh but Gihunâs intentions arenât so pure either, his guilt brought him back to the games, back to something he was stuck in, back to the past he canât move on from and never will, his guilt drives him to think he needs to sacrifice himself for the games to end, even without any real aim or clear goal on how to, or even realising that the players will still suffer anyways, he believes his life will only gain worth if itâs used for something greater, similarly to how Sangwoo also believed his life would be worth something if he gained social status and money, something greater than himself. This time, Gihun gambles with the lives of himself and others ( the people who died for the plan) instead of horses.
Gihuns unwavering trust in others humanity, and in humanity itself, Iâd say is purely because of Sangwoo. He witnessed him turn to so many things, from someone he so dearly admired, to a vile person who spat blood and killed for money, to hearing him never speak to him informally even in their angriest moments, and to crying in his arms, uttering out his mothers name as he calls him Hyung for the last time. Sangwoo, who taught him all he knew right now, couldnât teach him how people could still be harmful, that trusting still blinds, and that being idealistic and naive isnât good, because Sangwoo was human, Sangwoo wasnât evil and irredeemable, he still cared for the boy he grew with, for the kid he found charming but annoyingly naive, for the kid who bragged about him every given chance, and for the same guy who he entrusted his mother to, the one who he drove all his actions for. And Gihun? He bet his entire life on that, on the shred of his cold image breaking to reveal his real vulnerability, on his humanity. And because Sangwoo showed him that, he now doesnât believe anybody is truly evil, that theyâre all victims of something bigger than themselves.
And so Gihun goes back to the games, going back to the place that his old self died in, and the one he doesnât even know if heâll survive in again, but is willing to gamble his life on ending it.
(sorry for how long Iâve yapped for! and if Iâve made any mistakes â¤ď¸ please have some mercy on me! my English isnât the best )
âwhy does this married man keep following me around like a lost puppy with his puppy dog eyes?đ¤â
â Gi-hun, probably
I mean⌠come on, In-ho đ
There it is, the cat is out of the bag, the reason why they have been attacking Gaza and wanting to do an ethnic cleansing
Stealing natural resources, just as they have been doing it in Congo and other places