#recklessness

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ileolai:

Today I’m having a lot of feelings about. ok. Aziraphale knew there was a demon causing a big ruckus in the Garden. and the very FIRST thing he does is. give his only means of self defense away!!! like

all he knows about demons at that point is what Heaven has told him. and he’s quite certain they’re irredeemably Evil and possibly out to settle a score from the War. and he. he’s not just being nice to the humans. he’s potentially risking his own life for them. he just. does that. immediately

and then said demon waltzes up to him and starts blabbering on about the moon and acting precious about getting damp idkgjfg

like i imagine if Crowley hadn’t shut him up his next words to Anathema would have been like. ‘’…and technically I was supposed to plunge a flaming sword into his head. but well, anyway. he was yammering some nonsense about meta-ethics and the moon and he hates it when his toes get wet, it’s adorable. we’re married now.’’ they’re so absurd 

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@tabbystardustreply: And also when the demon asks about his sword he just tells him he gave it away instead of lying like he LIED TO GOD what a disaster angel gotta love him

@ileolaireply: lmao right and like. no wonder crowley immediately splashed his pants over it. first day on the job and this angel is off his chain. he’s fucking mental. he lets humans raid the no-no tree and gives them free weapons for their trouble. immediately blurts out what he did to the Enemy but lies to the boss’s face about it. That’s more Nonsense than Crowley managed to cause in five minutes and causing Nonsense is his job

I have a huge soft spot for bad boys, and t is really not good for me… But I just LOVE their

I have a huge soft spot for bad boys, and t is really not good for me… But I just LOVE their recklessness, softness, easy-going, living in the now - way of life. So many times I’ve been a moment in their time and it’s enough to make me feel so much more alive.

BAD BOYZ 4 EVER!


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It’s pivotal that Luke doesn’t have patience. He doesn’t want to finish his traini

It’s pivotal that Luke doesn’t have patience. He doesn’t want to finish his training. He’s being succumbed by his emotional feelings for his friends rather than the pratical feelings of “I’ve got to get this job done before I can actually save them. I can’t save them, really.” But he sort of takes the easy route, the arrogant route, the emotional but least practical route, which is to say, “I’m just going to go off and do this without thinking too much.” And the result is that he fails and doesn’t do well for Han Solo or himself.

It’s the motif that needs to be in the picture, but it’s one of those things that just in terms of storytelling was very risky because basically he screws up, and everything turns bad. And it’s because of that decision that Luke made on [Dagobah] to say “I know I’m not ready, but I’m going to go anyway.”

— George Lucas


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The assumption here is the Jedi, in their sort of more mature wisdom, have a sense of how much dangeThe assumption here is the Jedi, in their sort of more mature wisdom, have a sense of how much dangeThe assumption here is the Jedi, in their sort of more mature wisdom, have a sense of how much dange

The assumption here is the Jedi, in their sort of more mature wisdom, have a sense of how much danger that Obi-Wan is in and will eventually go and deal with it. But they don’t see him as in imminent danger, where the kids do. So the kids kind of jump off immediately to impatiently go after him. The others wait to get a fell for the situation of what is actually going on. That’s why Yoda says there’s more going on there than we know at this point, which is a way of saying that you really shouldn’t jump in there until you actually know what’s going on.

― George Lucas


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