Hello!You have suffered some drastic mistake in your life choices, and as a result you have found yourself in similar enough circles to encounter me. Great to meet you! My pronouns are they/them, I am a quantum mechanics nerd, I practice various forms of scattered tomfoolery to fill my time, and I am apparently an avatar of The Desolation for those TMA fans out there, so that’ll give you fair warning about the quality of my choices. Proceed at your own risk!

77 posts

The First Thing Ive Drawn In A Long Time, Maybe Years

The First Thing Ive Drawn In A Long Time, Maybe Years
The First Thing Ive Drawn In A Long Time, Maybe Years

The first thing I’ve drawn in a long time, maybe years

The First Thing Ive Drawn In A Long Time, Maybe Years
The First Thing Ive Drawn In A Long Time, Maybe Years
  • the-river-dreamer
    the-river-dreamer reblogged this · 9 months ago

More Posts from Schrodingers-sanity

9 months ago
a drawing of a person with dark blonde hair, headphones and a raincoat, who's holding a bag of red and yellow flowers. it's the first panel of a comic. in the background, some doves fly. the text reads "how lucky am I to be born human. With hands to create and a complex brain to think with"
we zoom in on the doves in the sky, who are flying high above a grassy park, in which a cat is laying on a dirt path. the text reads "how lucky am I to be born a dove. To be able to fly, and do so in a flock"
we zoom in on the cat laying on the path, which is white with red markings. next to it, a line of ants is walking with a great deal of food. the text reads "how lucky am I to be born a cat. to be able to catch mice and enjoy the sun whenever I please!"
we zoom in on the ants, who are walking towards some half-eaten fruit  in the grass, next to a picnic basket. there's a greenfly sitting on the red apple on the left. the text reads "how lucky am I to be born an ant. To always walk with purpose and work as a team"
we zoom in on the greenfly on the apple. it has an explanation above its head. the text reads "how lucky... how lucky... hm... oh! I know! how lucky am I"
the text continues on the next and final panel, which is a stylised view of earth from space. to the top left is the sun and it is surrounded by stars. the final sentence, now complete, reads "how lucky am I to be born"

I don't think it should be weird, for me to put a fruit fly outside

9 months ago

Halloween month is bringing so many amazing pieces of Martin art to my phone, and I am loving it so so much

I love Martin art more than you could possibly understand

Martin Delivery Service At Your Service?

Martin delivery service at your… service?

Suggestion by @fiuworks :DD

9 months ago

tma headcanon . grifters bone is just the mechanisms

9 months ago
Halloween Cat!Martins

Halloween Cat!Martins

Suggestions from: @yeahitstismtime @seabunnysworld @sugar--brown

9 months ago

In highschool I wrote a story about a middle-generation of stellar travelers. Their parents were born on earth and left as children, and the middle generation will not live long enough to see their destination. They live their entire lives on the ship and I wrote about them trying to find their place in everything. They will never know blue skies and warm beaches and open fields with warm breezes. They’ll never know birdsong or crickets or frogs. They’ll never hear the rain on the roof of a dreary day. I never could find the right way to end the story. I wanted it to be a happy ending, but I didn’t know how to do it.

I realize now that it was a book about me dealing with depression before I even knew it. Looking back at how blatant the projecting was, it’s obvious now. It wasn’t then.

In the story, the middle-generation people are lost. They’re apathetic. They’re just a placeholder. The only job they have is to keep the ship running, have kids, and die. As the middle generation of people began becoming adults, suicide rates were skyrocketing. Crime and drug rates were jumping. This generation was completely apathetic because they felt that they had no use.

In the story, a small group of people in the middle-generation create the Weather Project. They turn the ship into a terrarium. They make magnificent gardens and take the DNA of animals they took with them and recreate them and they make this cold, metal spaceship that they have to live their entire lives on into a home. They take what little they have and they break it and rearrange it into something beautiful. They take this radical idea and turn the ship into a wonderful jungle of trees and birds and sunshine.

And I realize now how much it reflects my state of mind as I transitioned from a child into an adult while dealing with depression. You always hear “it gets better” and “when you’re older things will be easier” and I was so sick of waiting for it to get better. I was in the middle-generation stage. And I was sick of it. I was so sick of waiting.

When I was in highschool I didn’t know how to end the story. I didn’t know how to have a happy ending. I didn’t have the life experience then to finish the story in a meaningful way. I didn’t know how to make it better for these middle-generation characters.

But now that I’m older, I’m learning. That if you sit and wait for things to get better, it never will. You have to take your life and break it apart and rearrange it into something beautiful. You have to make the cold metal ship into the garden that you deserve. You have to make your own meaning. You have to plant your own garden.

You have to teach yourself that being happy is not a radical idea.