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I 100% agree that it feels exactly like the weird comic aesthetic to have random gods show up to the kids' space adventure and kick off time travel nonsense. Like, Animorphs hits on all the classic sci fi tropes — other planets, nanotechnology, eldritch moral dilemmas, shapeshifting, body swapping, mind control, alternate histories, robots, you name it. And the Ellimist (and to a lesser extent Crayak) are excellent fuel for all of that to go down without simply handing the protagonists a plot-breaking time machine.

And in-story there is reasonable justification for their being there. Turns out the fate of the human species really does hinge on the protagonists' actions. So does the fate of the Yeerk Empire, and maybe the entire universe. Between that and the rules of the game — minimal intervention, Toomin tries to preserve diversity as Crayak tries to destroy it — the level of involvement does feel more or less consistent.

Like, the Ellimist doesn't make total sense if you follow his power set and motivations to the extreme, but he makes more sense than the Watchers or the Endless do.

Ask me a question

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[personal profile] runpunkrun posting in [community profile] fandomcalendar
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mark: A photo of Mark kneeling on top of the Taal Volcano in the Philippines. It was a long hike. (Default)
[staff profile] mark posting in [site community profile] dw_maintenance

Hi all!

I'm doing some minor operational work tonight. It should be transparent, but there's always a chance that something goes wrong. The main thing I'm touching is testing a replacement for Apache2 (our web server software) in one area of the site.

Thank you!

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Watsonian answer: It'd make no sense within the universe itself for them to be present after the war. They only get involved in the Animorphs' lives when they do because humanity — and the Yeerk Empire — are at a turning point. If these six kids can't pull off the near-impossible, then that's the end of humans as we know them. If they can, that's the end of the Yeerk Empire as we know it. Potentially the whole inhabited universe hangs in the balance: with 6 billion human bodies, the Yeerk Empire could potentially conquer every other species and wipe out the ones they don't enslave.

If the cosmic chessmasters continue to hang around Earth after that moment is over... why? To help some Animorph's boring sibling decide which job to take? Like, I get that Toomin can be arbitrary in his applications of power, but even that feels way too petty for him to notice.

Doylist answer: Fuuuuuuuck writing deities. Even before r/rationalism destroying all discussion of plots that aren't video games, writing a deity was a trap 95% of the time. The millisecond you introduce an omipotent-ish benevolent-ish character to your story, and don't immediately end every single plot in a way that satisfies your loudest and most ignorant reader, you're done for. Like, I already have enough dumb arguments about my fics not containing the absolute most ideal possible outcome for every single character (ideal according to that particular reader). Acknowledging the Ellimist exists would up that nonsense exponentially.

Sawbones: Tear Gas

Feb. 3rd, 2026 05:00 pm
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Right now in the news you may be hearing about the use of tear gas against protesters. But what exactly IS tear gas and where did it come from? Dr. Sydnee and Justin talk about the origins of this chemical agent, what it is meant to do, and what one should do if they come into contact with it.

Music: "Medicines" by The Taxpayers https://taxpayers.bandcamp.com/

Immigrant Law Center of Minnesota: https://www.ilcm.org/donate/

Drabbles (&More) for a Good Cause

Feb. 3rd, 2026 08:02 am
kalloway: A blond knight from the mobile video game Lord of Heroes (Lord of Heroes Johan)
[personal profile] kalloway
Fuckit, I'm going to do this-

Listen, the world sucks right now. It sucks a lot! But there's also a lot of good and people doing good. If you are out there doing good, I would like to do something for you. It's apparently been like six years since I've managed to put one of these together but here we go:

If you have made a financial contribution to a good cause* between the beginning of 2026 and now, the moment you are reading this, or any point during 2026 thereafter**, I'd like to do something for you.

However, I am fully aware that not everyone can do financial contributions. So if you have volunteered, signed petitions, contacted your representatives***, protested, trained, networked, etc., I would also like to do something for you.

Details Under This Cut )

Comments are screened, PMs open, thank you for being awesome.

*seriously, I'll leave 'good cause' up to you and that can include community arts programs, museums, little pantries, conservation, etc.
**unless I get absolutely buried which would be great but also would make me need to pause things til I caught up a bit
***not just US reps
****we'll sort by category if you claim this, lol, and if I'm working on a project for an event, 'next' means once my desk is available
*****likely either illustrated with terrible doodles or public domain art
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So I think I mentioned that I had a plot in Eleutherophobia that involved the kelbrid coming to Earth, and that it really didn't work so I scrapped it for parts. I have reused most of those parts, though. Roughly, it was:

  • Tom and Eva are in downtown L.A. for a Matter Over Mind event when they get handed a package that proves to be a bomb (X); Tom manages to save them both by grabbing Eva and jumping out a window (X).
  • They quickly realize that it's not just them: the whole electricity grid is down and even battery-powered devices that should be working are not, so they end up having to spend over a day (X) slogging north back to Santa Barbara (X) to find the Animorphs and get help.
  • There's some kind of blanket EMP over western North America, and long-distance communication is impossible, but what little information Jake has indicates that POTUS is being spectacularly unhelpful about the whole thing.
  • Along the way, Tom sets Jordan up to be their designated survivor (X) by teaching her to use a dracon beam. She then drops the bombshell that, oh by the way, she can morph.
  • An awkward alliance of zombies and Animorphs ensues, with a few rebel yeerks thrown into the mix to make things extra awkward, as they realize no one is coming to save them. (X)
  • Eva realizes Visser One's cell phone has missed messages (X), but it takes her and Tom and Ax a while to figure out how to get in (X). When they do, they figure out that the kelbrid are offering Visser One an alliance, and appear to think that the Yeerk Empire is still the authority on Earth.
  • During this conversation, Menderash (who knows xenobiology) and Bonnie (who knows linguistics) start picking apart a tag at the end of each message, which they figure out is a kelbrid religious phrase like "God be good" or "Bismillah."
    Menderash: It's... 'bless us,' and then this deity's name...
    Bonnie: Yeah, in human sounds it'd be... Crack? Cra-aack?
    Marco: Crayak.
    Bonnie [looking at paper]: I guess? You could say it like that.
    Marco: The kelbrid worship Crayak. Of course they do.
    Tom [mentally]: I have no idea why all the Animorphs just closed in a circle around Jake, but I am joining said circle, goddamn it!
  • They decide to call the kelbrid back on Visser One's phone, with Eva pretending to be Visser One. The kelbrid they get on the line is stilted and dismissive, appearing to really dislike Edriss, which is why Cassie suggests a different ploy: Tom will pretend to be Visser Seventeen (X) and call them back to suggest going behind the Empire's back.
  • Once again it's hard to tell how the call goes, but they definitely get the kelbrid to agree to a meeting. They load every yeerk, zombie, and alien they can find into any yeerk ships that are available and fly out to the agreed-upon spot (X), trying to pretend that they are in fact the Yeerk Empire. The kelbrid take one look at the group that showed up and go "yeah, no, nice try, we know you're not yeerks." A battle ensues, with Tom on the ground among the snake-taxxons (snaxxons?) and Bonnie in a Bug fighter returning fire while Marco (who is about to be grounded for a decade) tosses Eva over his shoulder and bodily carries her away from the front line (X).
  • The Anizombie alliance mostly kills most of the kelbrid, but Tom barely notices because he starts looking for Bonnie as soon as the battle is over (okay, technically before) and quickly realizes she's not in any of the intact Bug fighters (X). Marco finds her but she's badly hurt, which Tom does not handle well (X).
  • Part of the reason the aftermath is such a clusterfuck: Jordan is now trapped in morph. Naomi straight-up wants Jake dead at this point, but also reluctantly realizes that Jake is her best bet for helping her out of this situation. Tom's parents offer to let them move in for a time, which Tom decides works out well for him since — with nothing else holding him here in Santa Barbara — he might as well return that phone call he got back in the first chapter. It's an FBI agent, wanting to know if he'd like to come to DC for an interview. They need specialists in intra-species crime, because it turns out those kelbrid weren't the only ones on Earth.

Anyway, I scrapped the idea for parts for a whole bunch of reasons. It felt un-Animorphs like for me to build up this complex threat and then resolve it with a battle, it was really bleak in a way that felt like undoing parts of the happy-ish ending I built with earlier fics, and it precluded some other stuff I wanted to do (e.g. bringing Rachel back). Plus, it required me to bring in Crayak, and I do not want the cosmic beings in anywhere close to my zombieverse. I think I ended up reusing over 80% of that fic in other Eleutherophobia stories or in AUs, so I'm ultimately glad I decided against it.

pendulumscale: (zarcyuu)
[personal profile] pendulumscale posting in [community profile] fandomcalendar

Description: [community profile] ygorarepairs is a mini bang event that focuses on rare pair ships for all Yugioh series (including crossovers), open to writers, artists, and image & video editors.


This year's mini bang is in regular bang order. Authors have drafted fics for their chosen rare pair. Artists will claim at least 1 fic to use as inspiration for fanart. Partners will collaborate and share their fanworks together during the posting period for this event. Please read our specifications page for more details about expectations for event works.

Claims for the 2025-2026 mini bang are open! 

Artists can see summaries and complete the claim submission form here: 
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Dates (see Schedule for more info):

  • Signups: Nov 1-Nov 30 (writers may start immediately)
  • Check-in #1 (writers only): Dec 21-23
  • Check-in #2 (writers with claim pitch): Jan 30-Feb 1
  • Claims: Feb 2-6
  • Claims assigned: Feb 7/8
  • Artist WIP share: Feb 20-21
  • Check-in #3 (all participants): Mar 6-7
  • Posting prep: Mar 12-14
  • Posting: Mar 15-Apr 4
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• Jake wakes up.  It’s a Southern California day like any other: sunny, 70, chance of aliens.  He showers, slumps downstairs, pours himself a bowl of Frosted Flakes.  Does his best to ignore the controller sitting across the table and staring at him.  Brushes his teeth.  Catches the bus.

  • Jake goes to Homeroom.  Jake goes to Algebra.  Jake goes to French.  Jake goes to U.S. History.  Jake goes to lunch.  Jake goes to Remedial English.  Jake goes to Biology.  Jake goes home.
  • “Remember,” Marco says, as they’re heading out.  “Tonight.  The usual place.”
  • Jake sighs, nodding.  It seems like that’s all they do these days, meet and try to talk their way up to going on the next mission.
  • He’s tired.  They’re all tired.
  • Maybe none of them more than Rachel, who is already grinding her teeth when she walks through the door.  “I can’t tonight,” she says.  “My mom needs me to babysit Jordan and Sara again.”
  • “Seriously?” Marco asks.
  • Jake knows why — this has been happening a lot lately.  It’s unlike Rachel to put off a mission, and yet.  It’s the yeerk pool.  None of them want to go back, even her.  Even if it means destroying an entire kandrona shipment Erek has pointed them toward.
  • But Jake’s in charge.  It’s Jake’s job to say “Fine.  We’ll try again tomorrow.”  And so he does.

• Jake wakes up.  He showers, he eats his sugar-covered corn, he does his best to hope he hasn’t caught the wrong kind of attention from the thing that looks like Tom.  He leaves for school.

  • Algebra seems like it’s been getting easier lately.  In French, he finishes a sentence correctly the first time the teacher prompts him.  Maybe he’s been getting better at balancing it all.
  • Or maybe it’s just been forever since they’ve been on a real mission.
  • “I can’t tonight,” Rachel says, when they’ve barely started the meeting.  “My mom needs me to babysit Jordan and Sara again.”
  • Marco’s response is sharp and sarcastic.  Jake curls his head forward, pressing it against his knees.  He gets why Marco’s annoyed.  This keeps happening.
  • “Jake?” Cassie asks softly.
  • He lifts his head.  “If this happens again tomorrow, we might need to plan to go without you,” he tells Rachel.
  • «That makes no sense,» Tobias says sharply.  «We can’t go without our strongest fighter.»
  • “Tomorrow.”  Jake can hear the tiredness in his own voice.  “We’ll make a decision tomorrow.”

• Jake wakes up.  He goes to school.  He sits through classes, through lunch.  He confirms with Marco that they’re still just meeting in Cassie’s barn for tonight.

  • “I can’t tonight,” Rachel says.  “My mom—”
  • “We know.”  Jake speaks more sharply than he means to.  He’s just.  He’s tired.  It feels like he hasn’t slept in weeks.
  • “She’s just really busy right now,” Rachel mutters.
  • «Yeah, dude.»  Tobias glares, or maybe he just looks Jake’s way.  «Chill.»
  • “We go tomorrow,” Jake says.  “No matter what.  Tomorrow.”
  • Marco salutes.  “Tomorrow it is!”

• Only they don’t go the following day.  Jake suggests it, and the others all shout him down.  It’s just one night, Rachel and Tobias keep telling him, it’s just for now.  The kandrona shipment can wait one more night, Ax says.  Cassie suggests they all just take a breath, take a break.

• Jake messes up.  They don’t go the next day either, and this time it’s Jake’s fault; he fell asleep during what felt like the world’s most repetitive History class, and got detention.

  • “You doing all right?” his dad asks, picking him up after school that day.
  • “Yeah.”  Jake stares dully out the car window.  “Yeah, I’m fine.”
  • “And...”
  • Jake can tell, by the change in tone, that they’ve gotten to the real reason his dad started this conversation.
  • “And Tom.”  Steve clears his throat.  “Has he seemed... off to you, lately?”
  • Yeah, Dad, he seems like he’s been replaced by a fucking alien, thanks for asking.  Jake wants to slide off his seat and onto the floor.  He wants to curl up in the footwell of the car and cry himself to sleep, right there on the spot.  “I don’t know,” he says.  “He seems fine to me.”

• The following day, Jake gets to the barn early.  He doesn’t like going on this mission without Rachel, but there’s a difference between waiting for a day and waiting for... he doesn’t know how long.  Several.  It’s been forever.

  • “Hey.”  It’s Cassie, standing in the door.  “You ready to go tonight?”
  • “Yes.”  Jake pushes to his feet.  “Yes.  Even if Rachel’s busy, we need to get this over with.”
  • Cassie frowns.  “Rachel didn’t mention being busy.  I know she’s had to babysit a lot lately, but she shouldn’t need to tonight.”
  • Jake snorts.  “No kidding, she’s had to babysit a lot.”
  • The doors of the barn swing open.  Rachel’s there, Marco trailing behind.  Two raptors land in the rafters, one after the other.
  • “Okay,” Jake says.  “I talked with Cassie, and we go ahead no matter what.”
  • “I can’t tonight,” Rachel says.
  • “Wow,” Jake mutters, “how did I know that was coming.”
  • Everyone stares at him.
  • He stares back.  “No one else is getting frustrated with this?”
  • “My mom’s just really busy right now.”  Rachel crosses her arms.
  • “When is she going to get un-busy?”  Jake knows he sounds mean.  He knows it.  But it feels like they’ve been having this conversation since... Since... He doesn’t know when.
  • “Definitely by this weekend she’ll be fine,” Rachel says.
  • “Weekends.”  Marco sighs, flopping his wrist against his forehead.  “I remember what those were like, back in the days of yore.”  He’s overdoing it, trying to break the tension.
  • “What...”  Jake frowns, a sudden uneasiness saturating his stomach.  “What day is it today?”
  • “It’s Thursday,” Rachel says.  “So the weekend starts tomorrow.  I promise, it’ll be fine.”
  • “Thursday.”  Jake looks at his watch, not that that’s any help.  “I could’ve sworn it was...”  He trails off, looking into space.  He’s never sure what day it is anymore.  And yet, that answer doesn’t sound right — this whole thing doesn’t feel right — for some reason he can’t put his finger on.
  • «Let’s just go tomorrow, yeah?» Tobias says.  «We can’t go without our strongest fighter.»
  • “Yeah,” Jake mutters.  “You keep saying that.”
  • Still, they go home.

• Jake wakes up.  He doesn’t feel rested, but at least he doesn’t remember dreaming.

  • “Jake?” his mom asks over breakfast.  “Have you seen Tom this morning?”
  • Jake shakes his head, hoping that’s not a bad sign.  He leaves for school.
  • “Remember,” Marco says, as they’re heading out.  “Tonight.  The usual place.”
  • It’s not like Jake was at any risk of forgetting.  This is their third? fourth? meeting in a row.
  • He goes to Cassie’s barn.  “I can’t tonight,” Rachel says.  “My mom needs me to babysit Jordan and Sara again.”
  • “I thought you said she’d be free by Friday,” Jake points out.
  • “Yeah, and today’s Thursday.”  Rachel crosses her arms.
  • “It can’t be Thursday, yesterday was Thursday,” Jake snaps.  “We’re already at the weekend.”
  • “Weekends.”  Marco sighs, flopping his wrist against his forehead.  “I remember what those were like, back in the days of yore.”
  • Jake stares at Marco.  His whole brain is tilting, spinning, horizon losing its contours.  It’s not unease he’s feeling.  It’s dread.  Panic.
  • “Hey Ax?” Jake says, voice very small.
  • «Yes, Prince Jake?»
  • “N...”  He takes a breath.  “Never mind.”

• Jake wakes up.  He checks the level of the Frosted Flakes.  He should’ve gone through the box, and yet...

  • “Hey Mom,” he calls, still inside the pantry.  “Did you replace these lately?”
  • A shadow falls over the door.  Tom is blocking the opening, staring hard at Jake.  “Why are you asking that?”
  • Jake tries for a natural smile.  “Just wondering.  Did Mom ever find you?  She was looking for you yesterday.”
  • “Wait.”  Tom’s eyes narrow.  “What?”
  • The shelf impacts Jake’s lower back, which is how he knows he stepped back.  “Just wanted to make sure that...”
  • “Jake?” his mom calls.  “You said my name?”
  • He grabs the cereal box and runs.
  • When he gets to school, they’re still on integer-valued polynomials.  And conjugating “tournoyer.”  And Chumash-Mexican alliances.  And split infinitives.  And the krebs cycle.
  • “Remember,” Marco says, as they’re heading out.  “Tonight.  The usual place.”
  • And for the first time in his life, Jake doesn’t even bother to go.

• Jake wakes up.  Jake stays in bed.  He’s tired.  He’s tired, and he’s starting to understand what’s happening here.  If his mom asks, he’ll fake sick.  But either way, fuck school.

• Staying in bed gets old fast.  Jake spends an entire day actually teaching himself the one-hour lesson on polynomials.  And then another day on regular conjugation of multipart verbs.  And then two more, one each for the Chumash and Mexicans.  And then skips another school day, because he doesn’t give a damn about infinitives, and then finally the krebs cycle.

• He hasn’t been on an Animorphs mission in...

  • A while.  It’s been a while.
  • And he’s feeling fine.

• “I’m telling you, if you even tried kidnapping Spider-Man and adding him as a Robin,” Marco says over lunch, “then Aunt May would just go out, buy a shotgun, and cap Bruce Wayne’s ass.”

  • Jake stares at him.  He’s been letting this conversation wash over him, but now... “Don’t you ever get sick of talking about this stuff?” he asks.
  • Marco’s face does something complicated.  It takes less than a second, before his smile is back in place.  It has an edge now.  “It’s not like we can talk about anything real here, you absolute gravy stain,” he says through his teeth.
  • Jake nods.  He pushes to his feet.  And then he stands up on the table.
  • “Marco!” Jake says, and the cafeteria falls silent.  “Marco Sant-Alonso Grant Dominguez, will you marry me?”
  • There’s laughter, and then there’s whispering, and then there’s booing.
  • And then there’s detention, for breaking the school’s policy against homosexual conduct.
  • It’s something different, anyway.

• Jake lives.

• Some days he walks out of the house before anyone else is up.  He goes flying, and spends the day with Tobias and Ax.  He morphs wolf, runs out to find Toby, and spends the day there instead.  He attends a Sharing meeting, walking uninvited to its back room and noting as many faces as he can before they drag him back out.

• Maybe it’s not fair to everyone else, Jake thinks on some days.  Maybe they deserve to live and grow.  But maybe they deserve to not be at war, and maybe they’re not, not really, not while they’re in this holding pattern.

• Jake thrives.

• “Detention, young man,” Chapman says, because Jake hasn’t bothered to go to English class for quite a while now.

  • Jake whirls around, staring him down.  “Did you just try to put my host in detention, Iniss 226?” he demands.
  • Chapman’s face freezes.  His whole body is caught between one motion and the next, mouth hanging halfway open.
  • “That’s what I thought,” Jake says.  And then he spins back around and walks out the door.  He’s laughing by the time he reaches the sidewalk.  Laughing uncontrollably, laughing with stupid little snorts mixed in.  Laughing like he hasn’t since...
  • A while.  It’s been a while.

• Jake goes joyriding in his mom’s car.  Jake goes joyriding in a stolen Bug fighter.  Jake’s lonely, but Jake’s been lonely for a long time.

• “My name is Jake!” he announces, the next time he feels like standing on a cafeteria table.  “And I’m an Animorph!”

• Jake messes up.

  • “Hey Jake?” Jake’s mom says over dinner one night, the way she often does.  “Cassie called a few times.  She sounded worried about you.”
  • Jake stirs his food (he’s so so sick of stuffed cabbage), not looking up.  “Don’t worry,” he tells his mom.  “She’s annoyed because I’m not planning our ten thousandth attempt to bring down the Yeerk Empire.  But it started to feel pointless after a while, you know?”
  • His dad asks if this is something to do with a video game.  His mom asks if he and Cassie are dating.  His brother’s face is blank, twisting into horror.
  • Jake throws Tom a wink, and waits for the explosion.
  • It never comes, to his surprise.  Instead Tom stares at him in silence for the rest of dinner, not eating, not talking.
  • The yeerk must be — and Jake laughs aloud at the thought — planning on doing something about it tomorrow.

• Jake wakes up.  He wakes up, because he can’t breathe.

  • There’s a hand pressed over his nose and mouth.  There’s a two-hundred-pound human body pinning him to his bed.  There’s a knee jammed into his diaphragm.  Any one of these could account for Jake’s drowning-man struggle, clawing at Tom’s wrist as his body starves for air.
  • “Don’t worry.”  Tom’s voice is silky-low in his ear, and Jake doesn’t care because THERE’S NO AIR.  “I’m not going to kill you, you little shit.  Then I’d be alone in this loop.”
  • He lets go, sitting back.  Jake sucks in a breath so violently his whole chest arcs off the bed.
  • Jake sits up.  They stare at each other.
  • Yeah, Jake fucked up.
  • “Hi,” Jake says at last, hoarse.  “My name's Jake.  You are?”
  • The yeerk doesn’t try anything cute, like claiming to be Tom.  “Ardek 5851.  Sub-Visser Two-Oh-Nine.”
  • Jake nods.  “You’ve been in the loop... how long?”
  • “For me, this is the eighty-sixth time it’s been Thursday, May tenth,” Ardek 5851 says.  “What about you?”
  • Jake has no freaking clue how many days it’s been since he noticed, and he has a nasty suspicion it took him at least a week to notice at all.  He settles for shrugging.
  • “Fine.”  Ardek sits Tom upright, cross-legged on the end of Jake’s bed.  “On to the elephant in the room.  You’re helping the andalite bandits.  And so is Cassie Moises.”
  • Jake is aware that he’s the stupidest person ever to live, thanks.  There’s no need to point it out.
  • “Well?” Ardek raises Tom’s eyebrows.  “I gave you my name and rank, midget.”
  • “Don’t call me that,” Jake snaps.  He shoves to his feet, fists clenched, chest aching.  “And yeah, I’m helping them.”
  • Ardek snorts loudly.  “Clearly they’re not helping you, or else you wouldn’t still be here.  What, no Time Matrix on loan for their lowly human ally?”
  • Jake shrugs.  He has to play this carefully.  The variables have changed overnight: now his survival is likely to hinge on that of this creature.  This is bad.  “Maybe I like it here.  Maybe I haven’t bothered telling my andalite contact, because I don't think it's worth the trouble."
  • Ardek squints at him.  “If I didn’t know you, I’d think you were telling the truth.  Since I do know you, midget, I know you’re telling the truth. Damn.”  He laughs, shaking his head.  “I mean, I knew you were fucked up, because Tom knows you’re fucked up.  But this...”  He shakes his head again.
  • “So.  Guess we’ll go back to how it was, then.”  Jake shrugs again.  “You do your thing, and I’ll do mine.”
  • “Jake.”  The name seems like a deliberate choice.  “Jake, you know we can’t go on like this forever.  Work with me, kid.  If you don’t want out, what do you want?”
  • Jake lets his gaze flick to Tom’s body, and then back up to his eyes.  “I think you know.”
  • Ardek grimaces.  “Fine,” he says.  “Agreed. He sucks as a host anyway.  But you can’t let him go blabbing the truth after I give him back.  And you let me go my own way."
  • "Fine."
  • "There’s this bod I’ve had my eye on anyway, this local cop who’s also a ranked weight-lifter.  Shouldn’t be too hard to grab.”
  • “I wish you hadn’t told me that,” Jake murmurs.
  • “Hey, you get Tom, I get Officer Jenna Richards.  Everyone wins.”
  • “Just...”  Jake presses his index finger and thumb to the bridge of his nose.  “Tell me what you've already tried, to end the loop."

• When they part ways, Jake doesn’t go to Ax.  The part about not wanting to trouble him was true.  And after their little trip to the Cretaceous, Jake is pretty sure Ax has no idea what he’s doing when it comes to sario rips.  Instead, Jake finds Erek.

  • He doesn’t start by asking about time loops, but with “You remember when we helped you guys fix the pemalite ship?”
  • Erek nods, because of course Erek remembers.
  • “Okay,” Jake says.  “So this is going to be one hell of a return favor, but...”  He smiles weakly.  “How do you feel about breaking the space-time continuum?”

• Jake wakes.  Ardek is sitting on the end of his bed again.

  • “Rise and shine, little bro!” he says.  “Who’s ready for some breakfast?”
  • Jake groans, rubbing a hand over his face.  “I’m not your brother.”
  • “And I’m guessing Tom got better sleep on the last-ever May ninth than you did.”  Ardek grins at him.  “So?”
  • “My contact didn’t get an answer right away.  I’m supposed to come back.”
  • “So Prince Whoeverthefuck can start running the calculations again?  From the top?”  Tom’s fists are tight on the bedspread.
  • “Yep.”  It’s Jake’s turn to grin obnoxiously at him.  “So I’d better get over there, don’t you think?”
  • Ardek flips him off, and stalks out of the room.

• Erek starts from the top, every morning.  Usually after an hour’s worth of exhausting the same suggestions he made yesterday, with Jake shooting down each one at ever-increasing speed.  Erek hits a dead end, every evening.  And he gives Jake something to memorize and recite back to him the following morning.

• Jake comes home to find Tom splayed out on the floor, the whole room stinking of strawberry schnapps.  Ardek is vague-eyed, loll-headed.

  • “What are you doing?” Jake says slowly.
  • “Livin’...”  Ardek hiccups.  “Livin’ like there’s no tomorrow.”
  • Jake considers.  And then he sits on the floor next to Tom.  “Strawberry schnapps, huh?”
  • “Yep.  Dad’s got shit taste.”
  • “He’s not your dad.”
  • “Thank god for that.”  Ardek hands over the bottle.
  • Jake takes it. “No tomorrow, right?”
  • Ardek fumbles behind himself in the pantry, comes up with cooking sherry this time.  “No tomorrow.”  He toasts with it.
  • Jake sips the schnapps.  Yep, even more awful than it smells.  He sets the bottle on the floor, grateful when Ardek doesn’t push the issue.
  • “So how’s the world’s slowest war-prince doing for you?” Ardek asks.
  • “‘Slow’ is about it.”  Jake doesn’t sip again.  “Why can’t you ask any of your fellow sub-vissers for help, while we’re waiting?”
  • Ardek snorts.  “I wish.  Cooperation within the Empire isn’t...”  He trails off.  “It isn’t.  Period.”
  • “Sounds like a pain.”
  • “Okay, so.  You got Visser Three, stomping around on his itty-bitty hooves like he hung the stars and we should all be kissing his ass.  You got Visser One, whose deal is...”  Ardek blows a raspberry.  “I don’t even know.  Scary-ass lady.  And you gotta pick one or the other or else your ass is grass.  But you’re stuck either minioning for Visser Three, or betting everything on some alleged revolution that inn’t even going to come through ‘cause...”  He hiccups again.
  • Jake chuckles.  “Sounds like politics.”
  • “Y’know, every time I try to tell people my host used to live next door to Visser One’s host, they think I’m making it up?” Ardek says.  “That I’m trying for, like, the position of kissass-in-chief.”
  • “Would you take it, if you could?” Jake asks.  He takes another wincing sip.
  • “What, a vissership?”  Ardek slurs the word, stopping to work Tom’s mouth when he’s finally got it out.  “In an instant.  An instant.  It means being safe, being visser.  It means not having to kiss up anymore.  It’d mean no longer having to deal with this...”  He flicks Tom’s finger against his temple, like getting rid of a bug.  “And getting a nice, quiet, voluntary host instead.  I’ll kiss all the ass in the world for that.”
  • “I guess I never thought about it that way before,” Jake says quietly.
  • Ardek snorts.  “Like you’re not kissing the ass of some war-prince, just to be allowed to be in the war at all?”
  • Jake hums noncommittally.  Sips again.  Wonders if he should try to hide the bottles before his parents get home.
  • Let them ground Tom.  It’s not like it matters.

• Erek makes little progress.  Ardek comments on it constantly, but Jake still won’t let him come along to meet this contact.

• Jake wakes.  This time, it’s because he’s been dumped out of bed and onto the floor.

  • “Hey.”  Ardek crouches next to him, straightens up, bounces on the spot.  “Hey, hey, asshole.  I tried your idea, man.  I tried your brilliant damn idea of, of, asking our technician about time loops.”
  • Jake sits up slowly.  “And?”
  • “I died, man!”  Tom’s voice rises into a screech.
  • Now Jake scrambles to his feet.  “You died.  Yesterday.  Last loop.  You—”
  • “Those utter grass-munchers reported me, said I was losing the plot, and of course they didn’t want to deal with me, we’re already over budget and understaffed, yadda yadda, so they shot me!”  Ardek is still bouncing, wide-eyed, manic.
  • “They shot Tom,” Jake says.  “And you both died.”
  • “Yes, you stupid human, he died too!”  Ardek makes a dismissive gesture.  “I’ve done the drills, we’ve all done the drills, on how to get out of the skull in an emergency, but all the blood was coming out everywhere, and all the circuits were shutting down, and the stupid host was screaming, and...”  He wraps both arms around himself, shuddering.
  • “I’m sorry that happened to you,” Jake says slowly.
  • Ardek punches him in the arm.  “Damn straight you’re sorry.  ‘Why don’t you try asking your people’s technicians?’” he says in a truly awful imitation of Jake’s voice.  “‘See if they can help.’”
  • Jake gets a hand around Tom’s bicep.  Gently pulls Ardek down to sit on the edge of the bed.  Ardek curls forward, both hands pressed over his face.
  • “You people aren’t even worth it, you know that?”  Ardek speaks through Tom’s fingers.  “You don’t have blades, you fall over all the time, and pretending to be you involves wasting so much time on the most inane crap...”  He lifts his head.  “You know, if you’d take one tenth the time and resources and brainpower you people spend on this shit—”  He plucks at his shirt hem — "and ditch the clothes, you’d be shuttling to deep space and outgunning the andalites by now.”
  • “Probably,” Jake says.  “Why are you here, then?  If we’re such a crappy species.”
  • “No choice,” Ardek says dully.  He flops back onto Jake’s bed.  “If you try to not go to whatever shitty backwater planet they assign you and recruit the locals, you end up...”  He shudders again.  “Like me, yesterday.”
  • Jake never expected to feel this much sympathy for a yeerk.  Much less the one currently puppeting his brother.  “You could stay,” he offers.  “In the loop.  Just... hold.”
  • Ardek rolls onto his side.  “I,” he says slowly, “have not eaten—” He pokes Jake’s leg.  “A single drop of kandrona.  In one-hundred forty-three fucking days.  I was scheduled to go first thing, the morning of May eleventh, but nooo.  I haven’t talked to my friends in that long either, because I can’t exactly pick up the phone and do a check-in, now can I?”
  • Another angle Jake has never considered before.  “Do you even... want a host at all?” he asks slowly.
  • “Beats being stuck in the kandrona tank twenty-four-seven,” Ardek says.  “I don’t like eating that much.”
  • There’s something in there, something about all the yeerks feeling like there are only two choices and both suck, that... Jake has a half an idea.  Less than.  He has to run it by Cassie, and then...
  • And then have Cassie forget the whole thing, over and over again.
  • “Why is this happening to us?” he asks Ardek, flopping next to him on the bed.  “I mean, why us?”
  • “Extremely localized sario rip went off in the basement,” Ardek says immediately.  “Caught us both sleeping, sent us into a loop that’s spiraling slowly down until we both die.  Like that... Jacob’s Ladder movie.”
  • Jake hums.  He’s already lived that one out, in Brazil, and he’s pretty sure this isn’t it.  “Wouldn’t it have collapsed when you died, then?”
  • “Yeah.”  Ardek sighs.  “For the longest time I thought it was something you andalites did to us, but that doesn’t explain why you’re here.  What about you?  Any thoughts?”
  • “Crayak.”  It slips out almost before Jake means to say it.
  • “What’s that?”
  • “Cosmic being.”  Jake stares at the ceiling.  “Doesn’t like me.  Would pull crap like this, most likely.”
  • “Then why am I here?” Ardek whines.
  • Jake doesn’t answer.  And then he figures there’s no harm in answering.  “I think... he wants me to make a choice.  The same one he’s been pushing me toward for a long time now.”
  • “And that is?”
  • Jake rolls over enough to look Ardek in the eye.  Enough to look into Tom’s eyes.  “I’m working with the andalites.  You’re a controller.  Figure it out.”
  • Then he stands up, and starts getting dressed for school.  One more round of infinitives won’t kill him, and if his suspicion about how to get out of the loop is correct then it beats the alternative.

• Erek works out a shorthand for himself.  Jake teaches it back to him every morning, and memorizes a page of notes written in the shortened code every evening.  He deserves extra credit in Algebra for this, even with his new expertise on polynomials.

• Jake’s parents keep catching him to ask about Tom.  They’re worried — he’s stayed in his room all day today.  All day today.  All day today.

  • “I’m close.”  Jake stands in the door of Tom’s room.  Ardek is curled in a ball on his bed.  “I swear, I’m getting close.”
  • Ardek lifts Tom’s head.  His eyes are dull.
  • Jake has been there.  Jake knows.
  • He shuts the door when he leaves.

• “Forget all of that,” Erek says, ten seconds after handing Jake today’s notes.  “Forget all of it.”  His auto-generated voice sounds excited.  “How long do we have?”

  • “The loop resets at midnight,” Jake says.
  • Erek nods.  He’s grinning.  “We’ll be cutting it fine, but I think you can do this.  Because it all fits, if you just add in the Neuguyn Equation and drop the exponential term—”
  • “—over lambda,” Jake finishes.  “Because then it’s symmetrical, and simplifying it takes half the time.”
  • Erek raises his eyebrows.  “Dude, how many Thursdays have you had?”
  • Jake shakes his head.  “Neuguyn Equation.  Teach it to me.”

• Jake wakes up.  Jake throws himself out the window, hitting the ground hard.  But he’s up, morphing to Homer even as he goes at a mad sprint for Erek’s house.  Neuguyn Equation, in place of the exponent.  Neuguyn Equation, in place of the exponent.

• Jake throws open his front door, three hours later.  “Ardek!” he yells.  “Ardek, we’ve got it!”

  • “Jake?”  His mom’s straightening up from where she was working in the living room.  “Shouldn’t you be at school?  Tom’s home sick, are you also...?”
  • Jake ignores her.  He’ll apologize tomorrow, if there is a tomorrow.  “Ardek!”  He pounds on Tom’s bedroom door.
  • Ardek yanks it open.  “You have an answer?”
  • Jake nods.  “We got it.”
  • Ducking back into the room, Ardek yanks on shoes and socks.  “Yes, yes, yes!”  He leans down the stairs.  “Mom!  We’re borrowing the car!”
  • Jake’s mom says something in response, and it doesn’t sound like an affirmative.  Ardek’s already grabbing the keys.
  • Jake gives directions to the Kings’ house.  His own heart is pounding, his fingertips tingling.  Please let this work.  Please.

• Erek answers the door, smiling pleasantly.  “Please do not be fooled by my human morph,” he tells Ardek.  “This is just a temporary means of avoiding suspicion by the neighbors.”

  • Ardek takes this with a nod.
  • “You’re ready?” Erek asks Jake.
  • Jake takes a breath, and rattles off the math.  It’s a ten-minute process.
  • Erek nods.  Then he reaches out, grabbing Tom by the wrist.  “I need you to stay here, as you risk getting hurt if you stand too close to the collapse when Jake sets it off.”
  • “Yeah, okay,” Ardek says.  “Fine with me.”
  • Jake walks over to the sphere of what looks like ball lightning, floating in the middle of the Kings’ living room.  It’s hard even to look at, eating light and energy from the world around it.
  • He grabs the first of the metal rods from the floor, and plunges it into the current.  The power jolts up his arm, throwing off the rhythm of his heart, making his hair stand on end.  He grabs the other rod, closing the circuit.
  • He shifts them apart, then brings them together, building up the flow.  Does it again.  Does it again.  His body is burning, stuttering.  He’s falling apart.
  • There’s a pop of displaced air, and the world goes into reverse.
  • The sun plunges down to the east, the sky going dark.  Ghostly shapes, echoes of past possibilities, shoot past in reverse.  Jake feels those universes collapsing into his chest, thousands of possibilities yanked back into his body in a single brain-exploding instant.  The air sucks out of the room, drops back in.  Shutting his eyes does nothing to help, because he can still feel those branches being pulled back into him.
  • And then it’s done.  He’s standing in the living room, the ball lightning absent, just Erek and Ardek and Tom.
  • “Did it work?” Ardek asks.
  • Erek frowns.  “Did what work?”
  • Jake’s head snaps around.  “Emergency override: six.  I’m sorry, friend, but we cannot play today.  You require maintenance.”
  • The pemalite code, despite being translated, despite not having been spoken in forty thousand years, works perfectly.  Erek goes blank and dead, hologram shutting off entirely, body freezing in position.
  • “Uh.”  Ardek tries to yank Tom’s wrist away, makes no progress at all against that relentless thousand-pound grip.  “What the hell?”
  • “Mr. King’s in the other room,” Jake says levelly.  “He’ll get you food and water, and he’ll make sure Tom doesn’t die.  But he can’t hurt Erek, or Tom, trying to get you loose.  And he doesn’t have any kandrona.”
  • Jake doesn’t know if the math suddenly fitting helped him to make a decision, or if it suddenly fit because he finally decided.  But he does know that one thing is always true about Crayak’s traps: that the Ellimist is very good at leaving the Animorphs a third way out.
  • “Please,” Ardek is begging.  He’s yanking harder now, but Erek doesn’t move.  Can’t move, until Jake turns him back on.  “Please, please, I’m sorry.  I’m sorry!” he screams, in Tom’s voice.  Straining Tom’s throat.
  • “I know,” Jake says.  And then he walks out the front door.
  • It’s Thursday.  It’s Thursday, but he’s pretty sure tomorrow will be Friday.

• Jake wakes up.  He wakes because his mom is shaking him.  “Honey, we need your help.”  She sounds frantic.  This is new.

  • “What day is it?” Jake asks.
  • “Friday,” she says dismissively, not noticing his sharp inhale.  “Honey, nobody’s seen Tom since yesterday morning, your dad and I have called everyone we know, and —”
  • Jake rolls out of bed.  “I’ll go looking for him.  I know which friend he might be with.”
  • His mom rushes out of the room.  It’s Friday.  It’s Friday.

• When he gets to Erek’s place, Tom is slumped against Erek’s unmoving legs.  His wrist is swollen black within Erek’s grip.  Ardek lies dead on the floor.  It’s Friday.

• The cops knock on Jake’s front door, less than an hour after they get home.  This, even though Jake’s mom called to cancel the missing-persons report 30 minutes ago.

  • Tom answers, right arm tucked into the pocket of his coat.  Tom tells the officers, his voice hoarse and ragged, that it was just a stupid bender and that he’s very sorry for going out drinking underage.  Tom assures them both it won’t happen again.  Tom sees them on their way.
  • Jake shuts the door, locks it.  “Those were...”
  • “Controllers, yeah.”  Tom coughs, winces.  Ardek must have screamed all night.  “And they’ll be back within the hour.”
  • Jake nods.  “Pack your stuff, then.  We’re running.”  He knew this might happen.  He knew.
  • “They’re going to find us,” Tom rasps.
  • “Only way out was through.”  Jake thinks.  He hopes.  “Don’t know about you, but I was getting pretty sick of Thursdays.”
  • Tom nods.  “Should contact your war-prince first, though.”
  • “Yeah,” Jake says.  “About that.”
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While we’re busy busting out of snow-bound homes with our five-pound mattocks, we’re also swinging solid advice about duck detectives, the world of shoe-shines, and fancy hand-squished burgers.

Suggested Talking Points: A Murder Most Fowl, We Use All Parts of the Joke, Non-American Burgers, Hot Palm on the Griddle, Must Be the Funny

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Spotlight on Tag Wrangling

AO3 Tag Wranglers continue to test processes for wrangling canonical additional tags (tags that appear in the auto-complete) which don't belong to any particular fandom (also known as "No Fandom" tags). This post overviews some of these upcoming changes.

In this round of updates, we began adjusting existing canonical "No Fandom" tags to add or remove new subtag and metatag relationships. We also continued to streamline creating new canonical tags, prioritizing more straightforward updates which would have less discussion compared to renaming current canonical tags or creating new canonical tags which touch on more complex topics. This method also reviews new tags on a regular basis, so check back on AO3 News for periodic "No Fandom" tag announcements.

None of these updates change the tags users have added to works. If a user-created tag is considered to have the same meaning as a new canonical, it will be made a synonym of one of these newly created canonical tags, and works with that user-created tag will appear when the canonical tag is selected.

In short, these changes only affect which tags appear in AO3's auto-complete and filters. You can and should continue to tag your works however you prefer.

New Canonicals

The following concepts have been made new canonical tags:

Subtag/Metatag Revisions

Additionally, this month we began making adjustments to existing canonical tags to add or remove new subtag and metatag relationships, which help users find related content and filter in/out content as they browse works on AO3.

In Conclusion

While some of these tags may be tags and concepts you're intimately familiar with, others may be concepts you've never heard of before. Fortunately, our fellow OTW volunteers at Fanlore may be able to help! As you may have seen in the comments sections of previous posts, Fanlore is a fantastic resource for learning more about these common fandom concepts, and about the history and lore of fandom in general. For the curious, here's a quick look at a few articles about concepts related to this month's new canonical tags:

While we won't be announcing every change we make to No Fandom canonical tags, you can expect similar updates in the future about tags we believe will most affect users. If you're interested in the changes we'll be making, you can continue to check AO3 News or follow us on Bluesky @wranglers.archiveofourown.org or Tumblr @ao3org for future announcements.

You can also read previous updates on "No Fandom" tags as well as other wrangling updates, linked below:

For more information about AO3's tag system, check out our Tags FAQ.

In addition to providing technical help, AO3 Support also handles requests related to how tags are sorted and connected.​ If you have questions about specific tags, which were first used over a month ago and are unrelated to any of the new canonical tags listed above, please contact Support instead of leaving a comment on this post.

Please keep in mind that discussions about what tags to canonize and what format they should take are ongoing. As a result, not all related concepts will be canonized at the same time. This does not mean that related or similar concepts will not be canonized in the future or that we have chosen to canonize one specific concept in lieu of another, simply that we likely either haven’t gotten to that related concept yet or that it needs further discussion and will take a bit longer for us to canonize it as a result. We appreciate your patience and understanding.

Lastly, we're still working on implementing changes and connecting relevant user-created tags to these new canonicals, so it’ll be some time before these updates are complete. If you have questions about specific tags which should be connected to these new canonicals, please refrain from contacting Support about them until at least three months from now to give us adequate time to do so.


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3 Good Things

Feb. 1st, 2026 06:46 pm
jjhunter: kitten peers playfully at beleaguered peacock from on top of its head (kitten teases peacock)
[personal profile] jjhunter
1.) Yesterday we hosted an playreading brunch with a fun group of friends - may it be the first of many more! This time we did Tom Stoppard's "Arcadia".

I used to host regular playreading potluck dinner parties years and years ago when I lived in a co-op, and losing access to rooms of a size where 8+ people might cheerfully cram themselves on various chairs and couches and floor nooks with cushions was one of the griefs I carried with me from that co-op's breakup. I'm glad to be restarting now.

2.) Today I had the the mindblowing joy of seeing 'Noli Timere' ('be not afraid') at ArtsEmerson.

Calling it an aerial dance doesn't quite do it justice; you can see the local trailer here or read a great WBUR feature about it here. ("In a time defined by uncertainty and distance, this piece isn’t just about resisting the gravity that weighs on us, it’s about choosing to catch each other when we fall, to carry each other through the invisible webs that bind us.")

3.) We have had an entire week+ of snow on the ground, and a foot of it is still here!

This delights me for many reasons, not least that this means another year of the invading fire ants being killed before they can establish themselves. Every winter we get at least ten days in a row of freezing weather is a winter I heave a big sign of relief.

Why I Reject Fascism

Feb. 1st, 2026 11:58 am
jjhunter: profile of human J.J. with goggles and a band of gears running down her face; inked in reds and browns (steampunk J.J.)
[personal profile] jjhunter
Fascism is a form of social cannibalism; it will eat us everywhere it takes root, and it cannot help our species long survive.

Fascism cannot fight climate change, because fascism will not admit limits to its control, not even self-evident limits imposed by basic properties of physics.

Fascism cannot save our children, because fascism is too busy eating them first. Fascism cannot save white people from their own fears of slave rebellions and economic overturns, because fascism will eat them too when fascism has finished eating the rest.

Everywhere fascism goes, it steals and gluts itself on the labor of the people it targets. It divides, and it eats, and it masturbates over its hollow assertions of power and purpose and ascendance.

Most human societies have strong taboos against cannibalism. The ones that don’t have equally strong limits on when it is socially appropriate, or they themselves don’t long survive.

Why do we allow cannibals to walk among us and openly pick their targets to maim and hurt and murder for their dinner tables?

___
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