hearseeno:

savingpeoplegiffingthings:

Hey so, is this a thing? 

Have people been talking about this and I missed it? 

I was just trawling through 10×23 for some stills, and this caught my eye, and somehow I totally missed it before? 

Just so we’re clear THERE’S AN ANGELLY-LOOKING THING COMING OUT OF THE DARKNESS.  I don’t know what it means. But if anyone knows of any meta/discussions/ideas about this, can you send them my way? Because now I’m really curious! 

I keep thinking about Pandora’s box.  How the curious opened the box and let evil of all kinds into the world, and hope lay at the bottom of the box.  


Hope is the Thing with Feathers

Hope is the thing with feathers
That perches in the soul,
And sings the tune without the words,
And never stops at all,

And sweetest in the gale is heard;
And sore must be the storm
That could abash the little bird
That kept so many warm.

I’ve heard it in the chillest land
And on the strangest sea;
Yet, never, in extremity,
It asked a crumb of me.

-Emily Dickinson

“Hope comes in the morning,” says Jenna.  

“But apparently not for Jenna,” says me.

The Darkness & the Imprisoned Feminine

butterflydm:

The first time we hear about the Darkness directly, it’s from Charlie’s research into the Book of the Damned (10×18).

Okay, here’s what I’ve learned so far.  About 700 years ago, a
nun locked herself away after having visions of darkness.
 After a few
decades squirrelled away by herself, she emerged with this. Each page is made out of slices of
her own skin written in her blood.
 I told you, it’s eekish. According to the notes I found, it’s been owned and
used by cults, covens, and the Vatican had it for a while.  There’s a
spell inside that thing for everything.  Talking some black mass, dark
magic, end-of-times nastiness.  As far as what language it’s written in,
I’m thinking it’s some kind of…uh…

The first time we hear of the darkness, it’s already being associated with women. The Book of the Damned, which would open the key that had locked the Darkness up, was written by a woman who, most likely, had spent much of her life solely with other women.

I also noticed that the book is made out of self-sacrifice. The nun didn’t kill someone else to make the book – instead, she took the time (decades) to do it using her own skin, her own blood. She must have done it a page at a time, then waited until her body was healed enough to do the next page. It was a slow, painful process of dedicating her life to this, not anything quick or easy. The key that opened the lock to the Mark of Cain was made out of self-sacrifice. And, potentially like the Darkness herself, the Book was said to be indestructible (and, so far, that appears to be true).

This self-sacrifice is emphasized again in the next episode. We see that Sam is required to bleed into the lock holding the Codex that will translate the Book. We also learn that the person who wrote the Codex that can translate the Book was a woman – Nadya, a grand coven witch who was murdered by the Men of Letters, her works stolen.

Susie, the reluctant and semi-unknowing guardian of the Codex’s current lockbox, is killed during Sam’s retrieval of the Codex. The next episode, one woman is sacrificed for the cause while yet another has been imprisoned. In season 10, Sam appeared to follow closely in the footsteps of the Men of Letters – women do the majority of the work, but then a man reaps the reward.

Keep reading

evil-wears-a-bow:

twice-five-miles:

thisisntmyrealhair:

classictrek:

Why Star Trek matters.

Why representation matters too.

Everyone should know, in the 70s Nichelle Nichols went to NASA and asked why there weren’t black astronauts in the pipeline, and they said, “Come recruit for us.”  And she did.

“From the late 1970’s until the late 1980’s, NASA employed Nichelle
Nichols to recruit new astronaut candidates. Many of her new recruits
were women or members of racial and ethnic minorities, including Guion
Bluford (the first African-American astronaut), Sally Ride (the first
female American astronaut), Judith Resnik (one of the original set of
female astronauts, who perished during the launch of the Challenger on
January 28, 1986), and Ronald McNair (the second African-American
astronaut, and another victim of the Challenger accident).“
(x)

Yaaaaaaaas