Anyone know what type of wine this is??đ€
Sorry I am procrastinating. đ
I am very distracted lately. I got the watercolor brushes for procreate and just needed to try it out. This is the first installment of the "Dancing Across Faerûn" set.
đŠ Kudos Crab đŠ
If you are scrolling and see Kudos Crab, your fics will be blessed!
You will get good comments and kudos!
You will beat your writers block!
GO AND WRITE!
Hi y'all....it's been a while. I've had a lot happen the past year and that's kinda why I'm posting right now...mostly asking for help or even to share this, but I'm financially struggling heavily to the point where I had no choice but to make a gofundme. Please feel free to take a look. You don't have to donate, but even if you could share it...it would mean a lot to me.
https://gofund.me/86f71f5d
Happy Easter đ
musk is going to die in a Tesla explosion in 6 months after sticking his nose where it doesn't belong and we will never get a conclusive answer on whether it was a CIA car bomb or just a normal Tesla malfunction
Based on an anon ask about how my Durge and Astarion first met! If you want to read my comics WITHOUT Minsc, Boo, Withers, and the Strange Ox ruining everything then you can join as a free member on my patreon to see the goods. đ€
Gale having a one-sided conversation with Tara about how he can't/won't confess his feelings to Tav.
I was mentioned in a pro-Ascendant Astarion post with this quote: "Astarion does not have a well-developed sense of self, and by default, he also lacks many of the skills that a well-adjusted adult should possess." This is the post itâs taken from: click me!
No problem at allâit's public, and I donât see why anyone shouldnât reference it. Naturally, the post was in opposition to that statementâgenerally speaking, I meanâbut thatâs fine too. Everyone has their own opinion and is free to express it. Thatâs not the point of my upcoming ramble! xD
Itâs just that rereading my own words got me thinking more deeply about the topic and made me want to explore it further.
Now, Iâm not a psychologist, but I did study psychology. I took several exams at university and I actually did pretty well, lol. I didnât complete my studies because life took me elsewhereâmost importantly, my daughter was bornâbut the general knowledge I gained from psychology still follows me in everything I do every day.
So itâs second nature for me to analyze characters from the media I consume through that lensâAstarion included. Of course, this is just my perspective; I canât say for certain whether the developers intended this for his character or whether they did specific research into his psychological development.
That said, today I feel like going off on a little tangent about this beautiful science. Still in reference to that heart-stealing vampire spawn that Iâm aaaaabsolutely not obsessed with.
Let me also add a disclaimer. The concepts mentioned are just examples and cannot be applied literally, as every person is different and reacts differently to situations and stimuli. Likewise, the brain is plasticâneural connections change and adapt, and there is almost never a fixed or definitive condition. Above all, Iâm not making any kind of diagnosis! Thatâs not within my competence! Keep these ideas well in mind!
So, why do I say that Astarion doesnât have a well-developed sense of self? Letâs take it step by step and talk a little about the concept of the "self". I'm copy-pasting something from another post, lol. Rewriting it from scratch is too much work! xP
The self is quite a complex concept with many facets. Briefly put, itâs shaped by various internal and external factors and reflects a conscious image of "me." In psychology, itâs key to building the Ego of an individualâthe capacity to act, understand, organize, and interpret experiences. The Ego provides a sense of uniqueness, coherence, and personal continuity since the self encompasses many "faces." All this forms the personality of an individual, which naturally develops (and changes) throughout life.
Particular attention in the formation of the self is given to sensitive periods, such as early childhood. The self determines the level of self-esteem based on an individualâs assessment of their worth and competence in the characteristics they attribute to themselves (Real Self), their future aspirations (Ideal Self), and what they want to avoid (Feared Selves). The greater the discrepancy between these aspects, the lower the level of self-esteem. Social support and approval, as well as competence in domains deemed important to the self, obviously contribute to perceiving oneself as a person of value.
Astarion, as we know, has had his sense of self fundamentally undermined. For him, the world is divided between those who have power and those who donât, with the former always being the "winners" in his eyes. The magistrate he once was is long dead, along with his moral compass and the life he used to liveâespecially after 200 years of servitude to Cazador.
As vampire spawn, akin to a newborn in some respects, Astarion learned to exist solely within Cazadorâs world, revolving around Cazador, for Cazador.
There are lines of dialogue within the game that highlight this in a painful and terrifying way. For example, when Tav/Durge directly confronts Cazador, or when Cazador ends up on his knees in front of Astarion after one of his brothers or sisters dies during the ritual. Cazador says: âHe [Astarion] is afraid. Heâs afraid because all he has ever knows is you and me. And without us, he is nothing.â Or: âAnd then? What will you be without me? A shade? A specrte in the shadows, devoid of all purpose.â
Itâs a terrible thing, but itâs true. Cazador represents everythingâAstarionâs entire worldâand when he dies, he leaves behind a void thatâs even more frightening. And letâs not forget that, in the real world, it takes very little to completely erase a personâand two hundred years in the hands of an abuser is an overwhelming amount of time, a detail that too often gets underestimated or completely forgotten.
The whole matter becomes even more disturbing and painful when Cazador suggests that without Tav/Durge, Astarion would have come crawling back to him with his tail between his legs. To his fucking tormentor. And sadly, it's a painful concept because it really happens in real lifeâwhen you have nothing and no one, when you have no means of your own and are completely dependent on another person, no matter how terrifying they are. Cazador is certain that Astarion will return to him, even if it means dying. And it's a concept with a devastating impact.
So Cazador was the domineering father figure, and vampire society functions under strict rules handed down by vampire lords. In this hostile context, without any room for self-expression or choice, Astarion developed a fragmented and damaged self-image. Constantly belittled by Cazador as an individual (small, weak, useless, incapable, all words he uses in the game), always pitted against his brothers and sisters, and degraded from a magistrate to a prostitute (this is important because itâs the only skillâor "talent," as he calls it himselfâthat Astarion believes gives him any value or power, forming the basis for his self-image). Itâs easy to imagine just how high his self-esteem must be, right? Most importantly, he never developed the skills to navigate life as a free individualâat least not in a healthy way.
Good Lord, he thinks that in order to receive support, he has to sell himself to Tav/Durge and offer his sexual servicesâotherwise, he has no hope of survival! And thatâs why I say he doesnât possess all the skills of a well-adjusted adult. Other glaring examples of thisâso glaring they hit you like a punch in the eyeâare his inability to say no and to recognize his own limits. And shall we talk about the infamous question: What do you want? The first time, he deflects, and essentially gives the answer the player wants to hear. The second time, he states it plainly: he doesn't know. He doesn't know how to make decisions, he hasnât done it in 200 years, and the very idea terrifies him to his core. These are all skills that a well-balanced person possessesâletâs not kid ourselves.
Like any mature and well-balanced adult, one knows how to recognize their feelings, define them, communicate them, and most importantly, not fear them. Astarion, on the other hand, is unableâafter 200 years of pure shitâto understand what he feels for Tav/Durge, and he wonât be able to until the end of the Pale Elfâs quest. âI donât knowâbut isnât it nice, not to know? Youâre not a target, nor a victim, not just one night it's better to forget. But then... whatever in the world could you be?â
So, even if reluctantly (and despite his fear), he ends up leaning on Tav/Durge. He needs a guiding figure to help him figure out what to do because making decisions and acting independently donât come naturally to him. Especially outside of his talents, sex and survival. He needs to be rehabilitated, re-educated, and to achieve this, he requires a safe and healthy environment where he can experiment and grow, perhaps developing other faces of the self on which to base a new evaluation. Like, I'm not just a slave or a whore: but I'm also a companion, a friend, a lover, a hero and I'm able to listen, to help, to learn, to collaborate, etc.
And letâs not forget that when the fateful confrontation with Cazador is brought up, Astarion explicitly asks Tav/Durge for help. âI need to take the fight to him. And I need you to help me,â he says. How to help himâwhether to ascend or notâis up to the player and how they choose to play. But the fact remains: Astarion needs support.
Meanwhile letâs take a look at some of the consequences of low self-esteem:
Difficulty opening up in social settings and communicating one's emotions and needs
Extreme self-criticism
Devaluing or ignoring oneâs own qualities
Tendency to constantly apologize and feel guilty for things that are not actually one's responsibility
Tendency to appease others due to perceiving oneself as inferior to oneâs peers
Use of negative words to describe oneself
Difficulty making decisions and maintaining personal goals over time
Negative and self-blaming internal dialogue
Belief that success is due to luck, with difficulty attributing accomplishments to oneself
Not believing compliments that are given to them
And now, letâs look at the most common causes for the development of low self-esteem:
Being raised by extremely critical and demanding parents
Being heavily devalued by parents or other authority figures
Being ignored or ridiculed during childhood
Being a victim of physical, sexual, or psychological abuse
Achieving poor academic results
Experiencing episodes of bullying or mistreatment in the workplace
Suffering a financial collapse or a significant breakup
Being subjected to a prolonged period of stress
Suffering from a chronic and persistent medical condition
Suffering from psychological disorders (e.g., anxiety or depression)
Does this remind you of something? Or maybe someone in particular? Does that person, by any chance, have red eyes and pointed teeth?
Naturally, these are just examples, and everything varies depending on the individual, but I believe these points still manage to convey the concept.
They especially give the idea of how much eventsâand especially the context in which we liveâimpact our psyche. For example, thanks to neuroscience and increasingly detailed brain imaging, we know that brain areas change according to the factors mentioned above; they train like muscles, so to speak, becoming larger and more reactive every time they are activated.
So, if someone is subjected to chronic stress, the brain areas responsible for managing it will become easily activated, bringing with them a whole series of consequences that affect performance, behavior, perception, thinking, and so on.
Likewise, the more the ârightâ areas of the brain are activated, the more the brain itself will develop in a healthy and balanced way, forming neural connections that support the tools (perception, thinking, etc) mentioned above.
Meanwhile, other areasâsuch as those related to stress responsesâwill remain small and more difficult to activate. (Obviously, brain areas donât literally âgrowâ or âshrinkâ in size, but the connections between neurons (synapses) are strengthened or weakened depending on how much theyâre used. This is a principle known as âneural plasticityâ: what you use becomes reinforced, what you neglect becomes weaker.)
A curiosity: even our mood influences how we perceive people and the world around usâand consequently, our thoughts and impressions too! xD
This image is heartbreaking, because these brains belong to two three-year-old childrenâand the differences are significant.
The brain on the right is missing key areas that are present in the one on the left. These missing parts impact the abilities of the child with the smaller brain:
this child will likely be less intelligent as an adult compared to the one with the larger brain,
will be less capable of empathizing with others,
and will be at higher risk of becoming addicted to drugs and involved in violent crimes.
Additionally, the child with the smaller brain is more likely to remain unemployed and dependent on social services, and may develop mental health issues or other serious health problems.
The large difference in size and development between these two brains is not due to illness or injury, but rather to how the two children were treated by their mothers.
The child with the larger, more developed brain was loved by their mother, who was consistently present and attentive to their needs. The child with the smaller brain, on the other hand, was neglected and abused. It is precisely this difference in treatment that explains why one child's brain developed fully while the otherâs did not.
Of course, our favorite vampire spawn isnât a developing childâbut the point is that certain environments and experiences have a profound impact and shape many aspects of our lives, making us more or less equipped to face challenges.
At this point, Iâd like to focus a bit on the reasoning process in general. Itâs easy to believe that when humans think, make decisions, and reflect on a problem or task, they do so in the most rational way possible. And thatâs where we go wrong! First of all, the cerebral cortex â the part of the brain responsible for complex cognitive functions such as thinking, awareness, memory, attention, and language â is located in the upper region of the brain. Most stimuli, in order to reach the cortex, must pass through all the lower areas of the brain, which often trigger behavioral responses even before the stimulus reaches rational thought. For example, the activation of the sympathetic nervous system, which is responsible for danger responses. A silly example: how many times have we jumped out of our skin before realizing that the loud, scary noise was just a window slamming shut? First comes the fear response, then the evaluation of the stimulus follows.
As if that werenât enough, the brain plays other little tricks on us â without us even being aware of it â because that sneaky thing does a whole lot on its own, especially when it comes to thinking and making decisions.
So... Astarion has a very limited perspectiveâmostly the one offered by Cazador. As we said earlier, the world is divided into those who have power and those who suffer it. Period. But we all know that in between there are infinite shades of gray, and that canât be denied. In the same way, Astarion believes that Tav/Durge is the exception to the ruleâthe only kind person in the world, the one and only for him. But as much as it flatters our ego to hear that, we know very well that no one is that special. Itâs always Astarionâs perspective thatâs extremely limited. And in fact, here too, Tav/Durge has the opportunity to broaden his view, to point out that the world is full of kind people who would care for him if only he opened himself up and showed kindness in return. This narrow way of thinking and seeing things, this resistance to noticing alternatives, fits perfectly into the category of cognitive biases.
Letâs start with the premise that the human brain needs to be both effective and efficient. That means reaching a result in the shortest time and using the fewest resources. Therefore: when we think and make decisions, we donât always do so rationally. We use heuristicsâmental shortcutsâoften following patterns we've used before. A silly example: if I have to cook a dish Iâve made a hundred times, I donât sit down to rethink how and why I should cook itâI just switch off my brain and do it the way Iâve always done. Many heuristics are good and usefulâothers, not so much. And when they fall into the latter category, they become biases.
There are many types, but letâs look at one that we all, even us Astarion fans, share. xD Confirmation Bias!
Confirmation bias manifests when we tend to search for, interpret, or remember information that supports our pre-existing beliefs, ignoring anything that contradicts them or isnât completely aligned.
Once a certain mental imprint forms, new experiences only deepen that groove, without any willingness to explore other interpretative modesâin fact, they tend to further crystallize internal beliefs.
We can say that the person is cherry-pickingâin a complex set of data and information, they pick out only what resonates with a belief they already hold, which, in some way, is convenient for them.
The reason is easy to see: if I donât challenge a beliefâeven if itâs irrationalâIâll save time, create less friction, and reduce internal and external resistance to a given situation.
Because confirmation bias shows up when a person selects only the evidence that supports their point of view, it easily becomes a self-sustaining system, keeping them locked in an interpretive and experiential microcosm that risks becoming increasingly stiflingâa self-built prison.
Astarion is stuck on tracks heâs known inside and out for centuries, forcibly carved into his mindâand for him, itâs all too easy to filter everything through that lens. And this cuts him off from a myriad of possibilities, in a completely unconscious way. Itâs like throwing a wrench in your own gears. So Tav/Durge represents an opening to a different value system, one that could replace or at least expand our vampire spawnâs worldview. Not without resistance, of courseâthose brain connections will get you!
So, to conclude, letâs go back to the beginning and to the statement in question.
"Astarion does not have a well-developed sense of self, and by default, he also lacks many of the skills that a well-adjusted adult should possess."
Yes, maybe out of context it might sound bad. I certainly donât see Astarion as half a man, incapable of thinking or choosing for himself. But I do recognize that he has serious vulnerabilities that need to be treated with care and taken into account. Not when we're playingâwhen we play, we do what we like and have funâbut when we analyze him as a character. When Astarion, at the end of the Pale Elf quest, in the good ending, thanks us for saving him from himself, what he means, in my opinion, is exactly this: thank you for supporting me when my vulnerabilities, my fears, my blind spots, and my narrow perspective were getting the best of me. Because, letâs be honest, Astarionâs story is also about thisâabout rediscovery, about learning to live again, about changing, improving, growing, developing relationships, new abilities and skills. Not as a rogue or as a vampire, or within game mechanicsâbut as a person.
The point is: Astarion has come out of a horrific situation, one that has to have left marks, wounds, infected pus festering beneath the skin. A situation that never allowed him to understand what he liked, what he wanted, who he really wasâsimply because he couldnât express himself, couldnât think about his own needs, couldnât say no. Couldnât develop his sense of self in peace and safety.
A situation that left him unable to face the world and the people in it in a healthy way, unable to identify and express his own feelings, unable to say that damn "no" or to make choices. To decide, yes. And in fact, every time heâs asked what he wants to do, his answers are vagueâor he says he doesnât know, or admits that heâs afraid of those damn choices. Heâs afraid of freedom, of consequences, and of everything else beyond the four things he knowsâthe four fucking things Cazador drilled into him, all around power and control.
And Iâm really supposed to believe that the one choice heâs absolutely sure about is Ascension? Hell no. Just like he's not sure he doesn't want to ascend!
References
Rogers, C. R. (1961). On Becoming a Person: A Therapist's View of Psychotherapy. Houghton Mifflin. â A foundational text on the concept of the self, self-actualization, and congruence between real and ideal self.
Winnicott, D. W. (1964). The Child, the Family, and the Outside World. Penguin Books. â Explores the importance of a safe environment in the healthy development of the self.
Bowlby, J. (1969â1980). Attachment and Loss (Vols. 1â3). Basic Books. â Describes how early attachment figures shape our internal working models and sense of security.
Erikson, E. H. (1950). Childhood and Society. W. W. Norton & Company. â Introduces the theory of psychosocial development across the lifespan.
Herman, J. L. (1992). Trauma and Recovery: The Aftermath of ViolenceâFrom Domestic Abuse to Political Terror. Basic Books. â Explains complex trauma, victim-perpetrator dynamics, and the long-term effects of abuse.
van der Kolk, B. A. (2014). The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma. Viking. â Offers neuroscientific insight into how trauma reshapes the brain and affects emotional regulation.
Siegel, D. J. (2010). The Mindful Brain: Reflection and Attunement in the Cultivation of Well-Being. W. W. Norton & Company. â Discusses neuroplasticity, integration, and the development of a coherent sense of self.
Kahneman, D. (2011). Thinking, Fast and Slow. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. â A deep dive into heuristics, decision-making, and cognitive biases like confirmation bias.
Malaguti, E., & Morganti, P. (2014). Psychotraumatology: An Integrated Model for Trauma Treatment. (Translated from the Italian). FrancoAngeli. â Addresses the psychological and neurological consequences of prolonged trauma.
HE WAS RIGHT THERE
another medium effort bg3 shitpost. Heard the audio, immediately thought of how you can drop all of Rosymorn on Astarion
a little bit about a-i
(more than the A-l itself in art I am tired of people who run around and infringe on living artists, so this is a small scrappy sketch on this topic)
Hi I'm Mona, I'm 35 years old and live in Switzerland, I have a small Twitch stream under Vio_Wolf where I show a lot of DND and also play other games. Baldurs Gate is my absolute favourite at the moment. I hope you forgive my bad English as it is not my native language. You'll see, I love Astarion more than anything, I don't care if Spawn or Ascended, I liked the guy even before I knew his backstory and even more afterwards. .
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