skyeventide:

angamaite-der-ritter:

angamaite-der-ritter:

Perhaps Curufin is not absent from the family tradition of great and famous works of craft, between his father and his son – but all his greatest works, arms and armour and tools of war, sank with Beleriand into obscurity instead. Little enough of the Fëanárian camp survived to tell of them, Gondolindrim and Iathrim bards and historians never knew them; under the sea lie treasures that would put Turgon’s swords to shame ten times over, and Middle-earth has forgotten them.

#something something the deliciously marked symmetry of destruction being met ultimately with destruction - that even generative acts#(done for purposes of war and violence and conquest)#are doomed in the end to be effaced by a larger litany of misdeeds#and something too about the sons of fëanor expecting - even counting on - being remembered forever; heroically or not#and then they just… disappear. barely even a matter of song

@riding-with-the-wild-hunt gets it spot-on.

It’s hard to speak well of weapons that were used as tools of war and terror, whose heritage is inevitably stained by the blood of kin; it’s hard to find beauty, though beauty there surely was, in tools that have become not just synonymous with, but emblematic of slaughter and cruelty. In swords used to slay your mothers and your brothers and plate that will haunt your children and their children and their children’s children like a spectre of sin for millennia; perhaps there is a heritage left, yes, but it is one that has become a cautionary tale.

it’s funny you should bring that up because even Thingol has a hoard of Feanor’s stuff. the Narn in the Unfinished Tales version has:

Now Thingol had in Menegroth deep armouries filled with great wealth of weapons: metal wrought like fishes’ mail an shining like water in the moon; swords and axes, shields an helms, wrought by Telchar himself or by his master Gamil Zirak the old, or by elven-wrights more skilful still. For some things he had received in gift that came out of Valinor and were wrought by Fëanor in his mastery, than whom no craftsman was greater in all the days of the world. 

so like, crazy right? that stuff definitely existed and was gifted to Thingol, who ostensibly hated the guy and his offspring and who couldn’t even know for sure if the literal actual things in his hoard had killed his brother’s people or not. they were just that good. and they drowned with Beleriand.

(via maironsmaid)

miiilowo:

having anti role models is a beautiful thing. it’s not easy to live up to someone else’s behavior but it is easy to lasso yourself into behaving right when you realize you’re reminding yourself of the worst person youve ever met in your entire life

(via valtsv)

awesomebutunpractical:

I am going to clarify that when I say “if your romantic pair would have no appeal as a platonic duo, they’re going to fall flat”, I’m not necessarily saying they needed to have a pre-existing friendship within the narrative.

I’m saying that if you can’t pitch the dynamic to me without referring to the fact that they think the other one is hot, they don’t have a dynamic, they’re just attracted.

(via nerdomancer)

mysteryteacup:

ach-sss-no:

when brandon sanderson talks about villains in his famous free youtube writing class video lectures he’ll say ‘what’s the difference between gollum and sauron’ and of course he means the villain that’s present in the narrative and characterized in a way the audience can potentially relate to or sympathize with vs. the looming threatening anonymous far-off force (among other things). but every time he asks that i think 'well one of those guys tracked down frodo and got his ring back’

Brandon Sanderson: What’s the difference between Gollum and Sauron?

OP: Skill issue.

(via slipsthrufingers)

mortallyperfecttimemachine asked:

Heya! I read your post on the differences in body mechanics in afab and amab people, and I really enjoyed it! My hema group is lucky to be large enough to warrant having an equality representative, which happens to be me :D

In that position, I've been meaning to implement some kind of sensitivity training and a productive approach to adapting strategies for different body types this year, and input from different hemaists is always welcome.

I was wondering if you still had any of the resources on women in martial arts you mentioned? Your observations make sense to me based on my own experiences, but I'd like to approach my guys with more than "This guy on tumblr says it works". Although if you'd be willing to compile your advice in a pdf or something of the sort, I'd happily take that too.

On an entirely unrelated and more personal note, WHAT are you doing with that oberhau with the greatsword. Am I tripping or is that a regular oberhau? With a montante?? Are you just messing around and having fun or do you have access to some obscure manual I've never seen? I admit that I'm more familiar with sources from southern europe, but the montante is my favorite, so if you're doing more than just providing a fun challenge for your squire I would like to know 👀⚔️

we-are-knight Answer:

Heya!

For resources on AFAB people, I actually don’t know of many studies on training methods. Instead, my group (Order of the Blade) follows an ethos of “work the lessons to the students”, and helped me focus on that. I actually had to deprogram a lot of HEMA mainline attitudes to integrate into a wider perspective.

To actually use resources though, I mostly talked to women in HEMA that do well or teach effectively. Emilia Skirmuntt, Kimberley Roseblade, especially, were people I paid close attention to. I then watched and listened to my AFAB students on what they found worked best for them, and where they struggled especially when fighting AMAB folks.

I did not entirely neglect the science, but I am a historian, not a scientist, so I’ll leave the explanations to biologists and sport scientists. It is worth noting that while men gain muscle mass faster, women gain muscle fibre at approximately the same rate as men, which is supported by recent studies.
(Again, for anyone who is casually reading this without the prior post context: this isn’t for anti-trans arguments, this is for looking at how you can build up your body in the way you want for fighting sports)

The important details of note are that male skeletal muscles are generally faster and have higher maximum power output than female muscles. Conversely, during repeated contractions, female muscles are generally more fatigue resistant and recover faster. This being said, the main thing to note is that AFAB people have a higher proportion of lean muscle mass in their legs than AMAB people do, which generally means, proportional to their bodies, AFAB people can output more strength there, and recover faster, than AMAB folk. These are the main things I keep in mind as a teaching aid. I hope that’s helpful.


On an entirely unrelated and more personal note, WHAT are you doing with that oberhau with the greatsword. Am I tripping or is that a regular oberhau? With a montante?? Are you just messing around and having fun or do you have access to some obscure manual I’ve never seen?

I am using an incredibly obscure manuscript for greatsword that few people would have studied. As we know, greatsword never resembles longsword in any way, at all, ever.

Jokes aside, the sword I’m using is a BlackFencer two-handed sword, which is really just a slightly upscaled longsword. At 145cm, it sits in that spot between a late longsword and early greatsword, as I wanted a ‘greatsword’ that could fill both niches. As such, I use it as much like a longsword as I do a greatsword, which as the Goliath manuscript shows, is not incorrect.

I’m also not a purist when it comes to using any weapon. Most greatsword manuscripts focus too deeply on group combat/crowd control, and I find too many HEMA folk are precious over the idea of greatswords being too dangerous to spar with. I use the synth greatsword as a longsword or a greatsword depending on who I am fencing and what we are trying to practise.

In the clips with Squire Jess, I’m just throwing basic cuts at her, because this was the 1st or 2nd time she’d ever used dual daggers. As she’s smol, she mostly gets attacked from above, so I made sure she had many attacks from that angle to work with. (The few rising cuts did, indeed, throw her off because it almost never occurs for her).

mortallyperfecttimemachine:

we-are-knight:

Things I’d like to add to this for any AFAB people, based on how I teach my AFAB students.

- Your leg and core strength are going to be the easiest thing to develop initially.

- Footwork is indeed your friend. Almost everyone complains about it, but footwork lets you dictate what your opponent can do, from what angle. If your opponent is already bigger and stronger than you, don’t let them dictate your movement to you.

- Rather than trying to cut with your arms and back, power your cuts from the hips and tensing the core as you strike. AMAB people can deliver more force at a base level without rotating, you can generate more by centrifuge. (So can AMAB folks, a lot of martial arts teach you to rotate into a punch or strike for this reason; the distinction is this is much more valuable to AFAB people as an initial action to power the whole strike).

- When making a step/passing cut or thrust, you want to drive everything from the legs and waist. Throw all your momentum behind the action from the legs, and you’ll be able to knock a big guy backwards if they don’t try to move.

- You aren’t going to (easily) win a bind against AMAB folk. It’ll still happen, but you’ll have the most success if you assume your sword will be displaced by their strength when performing the same action. Ergo, overshoot slightly for whatever you want to do against an AMAB person, and you can let their force autocorrect you to the middle. Aikido folks here will understand the concept better than most, I think.

- On the whole, AFAB folk tend to be smaller than AMAB. Sexual dimorphism is real. Don’t panic, as the Masters say, if strength and size were all we required, this would not be a science nor art. You are just going to have to embrace your small size, and focus on getting uncomfortably close to your opponent. I mean, so close you can hug them. So close you are basically shoulder-checking them. From there, you are essentially pressed against a pillar of meat, blood, and bones, and can insert your sword into this target as strongly and as many times as your wise bloodlust dictates.

- Similar to this, get comfortable with a degree of wrestling. It doesn’t have to be throwing people around, but feel comfortable using your offhand to control your opponent’s sword or their dominant arm. Having powerful upper body strength in AMAB folk is a bit useless if they cannot swing the sword in the way they are attempting, and if you also happen to be in their face and waving your own, there’s a good chance they will panic first. At that point, you can call yourself Jack or Jill, because you’re about to become a giant slayer.


I hope this is useful to anyone who is thinking about this topic, and if they have anything useful to add that works in their experience, please do add it. :)

I’m including the addition in my reblog because I think it’s super cool and helpful. Thank you so much for the exhaustive answer! I haven’t checked all the links yet, but those I looked at led to interesting studies already. I have looked into studies before but didn’t find much (probably because I didn’t look for them in English haha whoops).

It’s interesting because on a personal level I know what you’re talking about. I’m quite large and burly for a woman, and so I was really surprised to find that 1) I’m absolutely losing the bind if my male opponent knows what he’s doing (but that’s what we’ve got Meyer for hehe) and 2) I’m enjoying footwork because despite being pretty clumsy I improved rapidly and can now outdance many a man. I never connected either of those before I read your post though :D

for use later sword fighting women in combat sports hema notes

aggressivewhenstartled:

mikkeneko:

figtreeandvine:

I want to write a movie that is sort of the flip side of a Hallmark holiday movie. Not an anti-Hallmark movie, just like the other side of the same coin.

It starts with a well-dressed professional woman driving a convertible along a country road, autumn foliage in the background, terribly scenic. She turns onto a dirt road/long driveway, and stops next to a field of Christmas trees, all growing in neat, ordered rows, perfectly trimmed and pruned to form. She steps out of the car–no, she’s not wearing high-heels, give her some sense!–and knocks on the door of a worn but nice-looking farmhouse. An older woman, late fifties maybe, answers the door, looking a bit puzzled. The younger woman asks if she can buy a Christmas tree now, today. The older woman says they don’t do retail sales–and the younger woman breaks down crying.

Cut to the two women sitting at the kitchen table with cups of tea. The young woman (Michelle), no longer actively crying, explains that her mother loves Christmas more than anything, but is in the hospital with end-stage cancer. Her doctors don’t think she’ll live to see December, let alone Christmas. Nobody is selling Christmas trees in September, so could the older woman please make an exception, just this once? The older woman (Helen) regretfully explains that they have a contract to sell their trees that forbids outside sales. The younger woman nods, starts to stand up, but the older woman stops her with a hand and asks her what hospital her mother is in. After she answers the older woman says that “my Joe” will deliver a tree the next day. “Contract says I can’t sell you a tree, but nothing says I can’t give you one.”

Next day “Joe” shows up at the hospital in flannel and jeans, with a smallish tree over her shoulder. Oh, whoops, that’s Jo, Helen’s daughter, short for Joanna, not Joe. Jo sets up the tree and even pulls out a box of lights and ornaments. Mother watches from hospital bed with a big smile as Jo and Michelle decorate the tree. Cue “end of movie” type sappiness as nurses and other patients gather in the doorway, smiling at the tree.

Cut to Michelle sitting in her dark apartment, clutching a mug of tea, staring out at the falling snow and the Christmas lights outside. Her apartment has no tree, no decorations, nothing. She starts at a knock on the door, goes to open it. Jo is standing there, again holding a tree over her shoulder.

Plot develops: the second tree is a gift, because Michelle might as well get it as the bank. The contract for the tree sales was an /option/ contract, which prevents them from selling to anyone else, but doesn’t guarantee the sale. The corporation with the option isn’t going to buy the trees, but Helen and Jo can’t sell them anywhere else, and basically they get nothing. They’ll lose the farm without the year’s income. Michelle asks to see the contract and Jo promises to email it to her.

Next day at a very upscale law firm, Michelle asks at the end of a staff meeting if anyone in contract law still needs pro bono hours for the year. No one does, but a senior partner (Abe) takes her to his office and asks about it. She says the contract looks hinky to her (“Is that a legal term?” “Yes.”) but contract law’s not her thing. He raises an eyebrow and she grins and pulls a sheaf of paper out of her bag and hands it over. He reads it over, then looks up at her. “They signed this?”

More plot develops. Abe calls in underlings–interns, paralegals, whatever–and the contract is examined, dissected, and ultimately shredded (metaphorically). It’s worse even than it looks–on January 1st Helen and Jo will have to repay the advanced they received at signing. The corporation has bought up a suspicious number of Christmas tree farms in previous years after foreclosure, etc.

Cut to Abe explaining all this to Helen and Jo while sitting with them and Michelle in a very swanky conference room. The firm is willing to take on the case pro bono, hopefully as a class’s action suit for other farmers trapped by the contract–but there’s no way it can go to court before January. Which will be too late to save the farm’s income for the year. They might get enough in damages to tide them over, but….

After Michelle sees Helen and Jo out, she comes back and asks Abe if there’s anything they can do immediately. Abe looks thoughtful for a long moment, then gets a really shark-like grin on his face. “Maybe….”

Cut to Helen wearing a bathrobe, coming into her kitchen in the morning. She looks out the window…and there’s a food truck stopped in her driveway. She pulls a coat on over her robe and goes out–two more trucks have pulled up while she does this. Driver of the first truck asks her where they park. Another truck pulls up behind the others. Behind that is a black BMW–Abe rolls down the window and waves. Helen directs the trucks to the empty field/yard next to the house. Abe pulls up next to Helen’s car and Jo’s truck and parks. He and Michelle get out–Abe wearing a total power suit, Michelle in weekend casual.

The case will be easier if the corporation initially sues them for violating the (uninforcible!) contract, rather than them suing to corporation (damn if I know, but it’s movie logic). So they’re going to sell the trees now, and rounded up some food trucks and whatnot to draw people in.

Cue montage of Jo and Michelle running around helping people set up while Abe and Helen watch from the kitchen table. The table starts out covered in file folders…and slowly gains coffee cups and plates of cinnamon rolls. It becomes increasingly clear here that Abe and Helen are becoming as close as Jo and Michelle.

Everything gets set up and a very urban, very motley crowd appears–tats and studs and multiracial couples and LGBTQ parents and everything–and everyone is having a wonderful time eating funnel cake and choosing their tree so Jo and a bunch of rainbow-haired elves can cut it for them. At which point someone shows up from the corporation (maybe with a sheriff’s deputy?) and starts yelling at Helen, who’s running checkout. And suddenly Abe appears from the house and you realize why he’s wearing that suit on a Saturday….

Cue confrontation and corporate flunky running off with their tail between their legs, blustering about suing. Cue Jo kissing Michelle. Cue Helen walking over and putting a hand on Abe’s shoulder and smiling at her.

I want the lawyers to be the heroes because they are lawyers and know the law. I want a lesbian who lives in the country with her mother. I want urbanites to turn out as a community to help someone who isn’t even part of their community. I want Michelle to keep working at her high-power job, loving Christmas and grieving her mother.

Feels like a Leverage christmas episode /pos

It’s not Christmas, but if you are interested in a sapphic romance where the big city numbers person helps the artsy love interest about to lose her labor of love small business etc BECAUSE she’s skilled at what she does, y’all should REALLY read Satisfaction Guaranteed by Karelia Stetz-Waters.

Independent bookstore link btw. I’m not attached to this book in any way, emotional reader reccing a favorite only.

(via dr-dendritic-trees)

auxryn:

Many people are aware that copyright originated as and remains a protection for publishers, not authors.

However, there are longstanding rights intended to protect authors. These are legally called ‘the moral rights of authors.’ Good naming.

These rights include:

The right to attribution. To have your name on your work. Don’t repost peoples work without attribution.

The right to use a pen name or to publish anonymously. Publishers should protect the privacy of authors. Service providers shouldn’t require posters to provide ID.

The right to integrity. Editors should not cut up your work to make it say something you do not endorse.

So let’s review:

❌ AI harms authors because it violates copyright.

✅ AI harms authors because it violates their rights to attribution and integrity.

(via dr-dendritic-trees)

redvexillum:

to all my fic writers: be that one rarepair writer. even if literally no one else is there. be the single glowing lightbulb in the void. write the rarepair so good some poor reader stumbles on it at 3am, loses their mind, and then realizes… oh. there’s only one fic. yours. congrats you’re both the blessing and the curse.

(via phoenixyfriend)


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