YES i noticed this too
they're all wearing converses.
He’s my best friend, best of all best friends, do you have a best friend too? It tickles in my tummy, he’s so yummy, yummy - you should get a best friend too!
Or in other words: Sangihun summer sweethearts
@der1r3ye5 thanks for preaching the Sangihun life style with me, this is for you xD
@der1r3ye5
i miss him 😔
sangihun coded
♌️
January 13 ● Full Moon in Cancer (Wolf Moon) January 29 ● New Moon in Aquarius February 2 ● Imbolc February 12 ● Full Moon in Leo (Snow Moon) February 27 ● New Moon in Pisces March 14 ● Full Moon in Virgo (Worm Moon) March 15-April 7 ● Mercury Retrograde March 20 ● Ostara March 29 ● New Moon in Aries April 12 ● Full Moon in Libra (Pink Moon) April 27 ● New Moon in Taurus May 1 ● Beltane May 12 ● Full Moon in Scorpio (Flower Moon) May 26 ● New Moon in Gemini June 11 ● Full Moon in Sagittarius (Strawberry Moon) June 20 ● Litha June 25 ● New Moon in Cancer July 10 ● Full Moon in Capricorn (Buck Moon) July 18-August 11 ● Mercury Retrograde July 24 ● New Moon in Leo August 1 ● Lammas August 9 ● Full Moon in Aquarius (Corn Moon) August 23 ● New Moon in Leo September 7 ● Full Moon in Pisces (Harvest Moon) September 21 ● New Moon in Virgo September 22 ● Mabon October 6 ● Full Moon in Aries (Hunter's Moon) October 21 ● New Moon in Libra October 31 ● Samhain November 5 ● Full Moon in Taurus (Beaver Moon) November 9-November 29 ● Mercury in Retrograde November 20 ● New Moon in Scorpio December 4 ● Full Moon in Gemini (Cold Moon) December 19 ● New Moon in Sagittarius December 21 ● Yule
Hey hey, as a librarian, can I just say don’t pace yourself at the library. I get a lot of customers saying “oh I shouldn’t get too many books out at once” but like you should!!!! Max out your card, take everything we have on a subject you’re interested in, make a book fort in your home. We love that shit! It doesn’t matter if you read them or not; just take them for an adventure and bring them back whenever they’re due!
For public libraries, one of the ways we secure funding year to year is lending. Governments don’t want to fund more books if they’re not being used and the way we measure use is by issues. Regardless of whether you read it or not, whether you have it for a day or a month, if you issue it to your library card, we get the stats! It makes the library look good!
Help your local library; get books out even if you know you can’t read them all!
Shooting Stars
sobbing AGAIN
This is a continuation of the cliff scene in which the Hwang brothers face each other on the same cliff again - and Jun-ho "pew-pews" himself
@crazyhappycat requested this
(trigger warnings: guns, violence, suicide, blood)
❛ ━━━━━━・❪ ○△□ ❫ ・━━━━━━ ❜
In-ho lunged.
Heart in his throat. Legs burning. The world narrowed to the sight of Jun-ho’s finger beginning to tighten on the trigger –
“Jun-ho!”
And then –
The shot.
It cracked through the air, sharp and merciless, echoing off the cliffs like the final word in a conversation they never finished.
Too late.
The recoil snapped Jun-ho’s head back, his body jerking once before crumpling like a marionette with its strings cut.
“No!”
In-ho reached him just as he tipped backward, just as gravity began to drag him toward the cliff’s edge. His hand shot out, grabbing Jun-ho by the wrist, fingers wrapping around cold skin as the rest of his bory crumpled.
“No. No, no, no –”
The wind roared around them, cold and merciless, howling over the crashing waves below. But In-ho didn’t hear any of it – not really.
All he could hear was the ringing in his ears. The echo of the gunshot.
The silence that followed.
He gritted his teeth, muscles straining as he hauled Jun-ho’s body back, dragging him away from the ledge and into his arms. The sea roared below, indifferent.
He collapsed to his knees, cradling Jun-ho’s limp form against his chest. His hands were everywhere. Desperate. Wild.
One clutched at the blood blooming at Jun-ho’s temple. The other searched blindly – his throat tightening – fingers trembling as they pressed against his neck. His wrist. His chest. Desperate for a pulse. Any sign. Any hope.
“Come on. Come on, please –”
But there was nothing.
No pulse. No breath. No flicker of life behind Jun-ho’s eyelids.
Just stillness.
And blood.
So much blood.
In-ho let out a sound that didn’t belong to any language – broken, raw, and guttural. A noise ripped from the part of him he’d buried so deep he thought it would never surface again.
“No,” he gasped. “No, no, no –”
He pulled Jun-ho into his lap, cradling his head with shaking hands. One palm pressed uselessly against the wound, trying to stop blood that had already stopped flowing.
His other hand cupped Jun-ho’s face, thumb brushing gently over a cheek that was already growing cold.
“Don’t do this,” he whispered. “Please, don’t do this. Not like this.”
He rocked back and forth, holding him close, forehead pressed to Jun-ho’s.
“You’re okay. You’re gonna be okay,” he mumbled over and over again, like if he said it enough, it would make it true. “I’ve got you. I’m here. I’m right here.”
But Jun-ho didn’t move. Didn’t speak.
Didn’t breathe.
In-ho’s arms tightened around him, curling protectively as if shielding him from the wind, the cold, the finality of it all.
He’d done everything – everything – to keep this boy safe. Raised him. Carried him. Loved him harder than he ever allowed himself to love anything.
This was the boy who had clung to his pant leg at five years old. The boy who waited by the window when In-ho came home late from night shifts. The boy who used to fall asleep with his head in In-ho’s lap during movies.
And now…
Now he was gone.
“Come back,” In-ho begged, rocking him gently. “Please… please come back.”
But there was only the wind. The sea. And the weight of the body in his arms.
The weight of failure.
The weight of the one thing he couldn’t save.
He rocked him gently, like it would do any good. Like it would pull the life back into him. Like he was five years old again and just needed to be held.
But Jun-ho didn’t stir.
In-ho sat there, knees scraped from the rocky ground, arms wrapped tightly around Jun-ho’s lifeless body. The blood had soaked through his sleeves, staining his chest, his hands, his skin.
It would never come out.
Nothing would.
He didn’t know how long he stayed like that. Minutes. Hours. It didn’t matter. Time didn’t exist in this place anymore – not when the person who made it mean something was gone.
them