It’s called Booster Buddy, it’s free, and it’s available for both Android and iOS.
It works by giving you ‘quests’ (daily tasks) that you are encouraged to complete each day. They are very small things and it caters to you (it asks you questions at the start about what you struggle with).
It’s designed to be child friendly and easy to understand. I’m finding it really helpful. You can also input medication times for a reminder and emergency contact details.
I love this app and I had to share it with you all!
I can’t get over the fact that Sherlock knew exactly where to go when MP Molly told him “to control the pain”.
If he has a specific room, that must mean he’s had to control the “pain” before. Not just any pain either. MP Moriarty even said what kind: Pain, heartbreak, loss & death.
Well, we see him die.
What about pain? We’ve seen him experience pain before.
But what about heartbreak? This is obviously about John.
And loss? He lost Redbeard before and most recently lost John.
And then there’s this scene:
He’s asking himself that question. The devoid of emotions, hard, cold, “sociopath” self. And then his inner self (MP Moriarty) reminds him that he always feels it. And that he doesn’t have to fear it anymore. That its okay to feel, even if most of the time its unpleasant feelings.
One of my favorite documentaries… I don’t know if it’s still on Netflix or not… is
Dear Zachary: A Letter to a Son About His Father, but it’s such a rage inducing and downright tragic piece of work that if you haven’t seen it yet, then you definitely need to approach it with the utmost caution.
I’ve never screamed so loudly at a piece of film ever. If you don’t want to be upset for your entire life, maybe you shouldn’t watch it…
this is a terrible rec.
I will check it out!
My two favorites, and I don’t know if they’re still on there, are “Step into Liquid” which is a gorgeous doc about surfing and “My Architect” which is Nathaniel Kahn searching for his father Louis Kahn’s life and legacy through his architecure.
But what if they just happened to cast Andrew Garfield as the boyfriend in Deadpool 2, and someone in the movie is like, “hey, you look just like Peter Par-” but Deadpool tackles them before they can finish and then just looks directly at the camera and is like, “this is my boyfriend, Pete Parkley, and he is definitely not Spiderman because that would be a serious breach of licensing rights.” and then he just grabs Pete and tows him away by the suspicious red spandex collar poking out over the top of his T-shirt
Someone get this to Ryan Reynolds stat
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I genuinely wish that everyone would delete the word “Mary Sue” from their vocabulary. In its original, fanfic usage, it described a character who was, yes, usually female, but whose greatest crime was not perfection: it was twisting the story. A Mary Sue in that sense literally walks into someone else’s world and makes everything about her. Flash forward to the modern day and it’s a rare female protagonist who doesn’t get accused of being a Mary Sue, and hence worthless. Here’s the thing: she can’t distort the story if the story already belongs to her. The protagonist, regardless of gender, is awesome and interesting and has a milkshake that brings all the boys, girls, or genderfluid space pirates to the yard, because that’s why they’re the star of the story. So calling female protagonists “Mary Sue” is sexist, belittling, and reduces them in a way that is very rarely applied to their male counterparts—even when those male counterparts are just as guilty of being a little too perfect to be real.