#SCREAMS COULD WE NOT #(but also omg isn’t it so fitting for the doctor) #(she left him in tears because she was wrecked by him and choosing to go) #(and when he died) #(he needed to see her one last time) #(so that his last memory of her) #(wasn’t of the weeping girl choosing a life without him) #(it was of his sweet amelia) #(who still loved him more than anything) #(oh you selfish old man you make me cry so much)
hvrryhvrt-deactivated20190704:
litany against fear
Why “Raggedy Man, Goodnight” was the best line that Amelia Pond has ever uttered:
Because it’s the end of a bedtime story. The story of a little girl who waited in a garden and grew up to be one of the most remarkable women in the universe. The story of a woman who was forever seared onto the hearts of a raggedy man, who never forgot her. Even after she was gone, it was all still a story…a story in his head. And that’s okay. Because it was a good one. Because it was the best. This is the story of our raggedy doctor, and this is how it ends.
A fox in snow because it’s winter somewhere.
I don’t know where I am. I just know I’m running. Sometimes it’s like I’ve lived a thousand lives in a thousand places. I’m born, I live, I die. And always, there’s the Doctor. Always, I’m running to save the Doctor, again, and again, and again. And he hardly ever hears me. But I’ve always been there.
He’s been a fool, about Jane… about so many other things. But then so have I.
He and I are so similar. We’re both so stubborn.
You know the sound the TARDIS makes—that wheezing, groaning? That sounds brings hope wherever it goes.