Stays in the family - Russia
anonymous
October 26 2010, 19:05:06 UTC
1.
It starts with an old helmet. It always does. Running plump fingers over the strange, time tested material.
Then, the mirror. And his grandfather's voice. "Smile. Smile and never stop."
This is something that he inherited. What stays. What his grandfather gives to him every time anew.
He smiles. He always smiles, because it is so much easier than controlling complicated expressions. Because he only has one expression always, anyway, and this one fits Russia much better than the nervous bubblegum chewing perfect neutrality.
He smiles because his grandfather told him to, and he keeps his promises. "Good morning, America." And the other male flinches before he catches himself and straigthens up, boisterous and young so much younger than him, nearly shouting when he greets the taller man back, patting him on the back before shooting over to greet a new arrival
( ... )
Again, you people make me discover aspects of this I hadn't considered. You introduced identity heritage in the meeting,s and it makes so much damned senseeven when his granpa has moved on to become General Winter, in his mind. I'm fascinated by the fact he cultivates his attraction to Lithuania but doesn't really feel it, and that Liet is a character usually played by women, but he finds it easier now it's a man and not his granmother (holy shit, talk about screwedXD).
it figures he'd have self-steem issues over his appearance. Big boned Russia, we love you! ^^
"Smile. Smile and never stop."
This line gave me the creeps for some reason. probably because I've been watching Urasawa's Monster recently
also, this pervy RusAme anon got a little turned on by the fact he mentions America's much younger age 0//0
It starts with an old helmet. It always does. Running plump fingers over the strange, time tested material.
Then, the mirror. And his grandfather's voice. "Smile. Smile and never stop."
This is something that he inherited. What stays. What his grandfather gives to him every time anew.
He smiles. He always smiles, because it is so much easier than controlling complicated expressions. Because he only has one expression always, anyway, and this one fits Russia much better than the nervous bubblegum chewing perfect neutrality.
He smiles because his grandfather told him to, and he keeps his promises. "Good morning, America." And the other male flinches before he catches himself and straigthens up, boisterous and young so much younger than him, nearly shouting when he greets the taller man back, patting him on the back before shooting over to greet a new arrival ( ... )
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Again, you people make me discover aspects of this I hadn't considered. You introduced identity heritage in the meeting,s and it makes so much damned senseeven when his granpa has moved on to become General Winter, in his mind. I'm fascinated by the fact he cultivates his attraction to Lithuania but doesn't really feel it, and that Liet is a character usually played by women, but he finds it easier now it's a man and not his granmother (holy shit, talk about screwedXD).
it figures he'd have self-steem issues over his appearance. Big boned Russia, we love you! ^^
"Smile. Smile and never stop."
This line gave me the creeps for some reason. probably because I've been watching Urasawa's Monster recently
also, this pervy RusAme anon got a little turned on by the fact he mentions America's much younger age 0//0
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Also his inner talk is like Russias so it makes it so much more ...;; Because its like he IS Russia because his grandparents passed it down to him.
The tradtional side is also shown since all this is tradition
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