was having a chat with DeQuidt this morning bout Tim an got lotso feels
this is of..
if Jack just latched the mask on without letting the wound scar, which would fester probably and wouldnt heal or the blood dry even… pretty mean man but jacks a mean goiokay look i think about this too much to not say something: they find a doctor before he gets his mask, so i’m assuming some medical care went into it, but i’m also assuming that you aren’t supposed to suffocate a wound
i’m gonna also assume that jack only takes his mask off to shower or sleep, if even then, in which case he probably wears it upwards of like, what, probably 14 hours a day? or more?
that being said: jack either brands tim or he doesnt. realistically speaking, it’d be easier for him to not brand tim and just give him a mask, but this is handsome jack. he absolutely branded him under the guise of tim being a perfect match, and also probably to inflict it on someone just for fun
after that, who’s to say he doesn’t genuinely bolt the mask onto tim’s face? as in, his mark never heals and sometimes blood and pus will leak from the sides and bottom of the mask, and tim will disgustedly, embarrassedly wipe it away before anyone sees
illegalcockbiting is so important to me.
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Tag: blood tw
a gross sketch of a crazy Jack with ms. Peirce brains all over
wtf thats not patrick swayze
An Open Letter to YA Authors About Sex
“Dear YA Authors,
Please stop making sex hurt.
That’s a weird request, I know, so let me clarify what I mean a little. You know the (heterosexual) sex scenes in YA books (the ones that don’t fade to black) where it’s the girl’s first time and it goes something like this:
I felt a sharp pain and he paused. “Are you okay?” he asked. I gritted my teeth and nodded. Eventually the pain turned into something better… later, after we were finished, I saw a red stain on his sheets and cringed.
I’m not exactly going to win the Printz here, but you get the idea.”This about a million times over. The sex ed I got was from the playground and books, and I bought into these sorts of myths for a very long time. It’s simply not healthy. YA authors (although their editors and publishers may have a greater role in this) have a responsibility to keep their work at a ‘teen’ rating because adults are scared that adult themes will have an adverse effect; surely they also have a responsibility to write accurately about the more mature themes for the same reason.