Tag: Picard

hamenthotep:

ladyzootie:

ohmygil:

more-hopeless-than-romantic:

tehjennismightier:

I reblog this every time I see it, because it’s one of life’s hardest lessons.

“Do or do not, there is no try” is the worst damn advice I was ever been given as a child. Fuck telling kids that their mistakes are the result of deliberate choice; let them know that they can fail for reasons totally beyond their control, and let them know that it’s just important that they earnestly try.

I can’t believe Captain Picard learned everything he knows from Beyoncé.

Always reblog Picard and Beyoncé

Do or do not, there is no try doesn’t mean your mistakes are the result of your own choices. It doesn’t mean you can’t fail and learn from those mistakes to do better next time.

Yoda was trying to tell Luke that The Force was already a part of him, he could still make mistakes and he had to practice to get better at controlling his abilities, but the power was always there waiting to be harnessed. It wasn’t intended as a life lesson for the audience, and definitely wasn’t meant to be used to tell kids if they fail once they’ll never be able to do it.

Luke was pushing too hard, but he didn’t believe in what he was doing. Yoda wanted Luke to get back to the mindset he was in when he destroyed the Death Star. He wasn’t overthinking all the variables and absolutely believed in The Force and what he could do. But just because he could focus and fire exactly where he needed to doesn’t mean it still couldn’t have gone wrong. There could have been a grate over the vent, or a shield that deflected the shot. Even though he did everything right it still could have gone wrong through no fault of his own.

Yoda wasn’t trying to teach Luke that if he did his best he would always succeed, just to believe in himself and his abilities. Whether it works out the way he wants after that or not is beyond Luke’s control.

Yoda was essentially saying “Come on, you can do it. You’ve got this!” Not “Do it now or you’re a failure forever”

glumshoe:

wireslide:

glumshoe:

apparently Whoopi Goldberg headcanons that 1.) Guinan is Jean Luc Picard’s distant ancestor and 2.) she and Q used to hook up

which suggests the possibility that Q is Picard’s great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great grandfather, who decided to introduce himself to his grandson by putting him on trial for the crimes of all humanity, and that’s why he’s Like That

I just rewatched the series and I know two things about Guinan for sure:

1) she and Q are absolutely exes, and

2) Q is scared shitless of her because she’s something powerful. When he flashes himself and Picard into Ten Forward, she lifts both hands to strike and he recoils into the bulkhead and starts shrilly demanding that Picard rid the ship of her that instant. She is not afraid of him at all, not even the small, healthy amount that Picard is.

the face of an unfathomly ancient and powerful grandma who knows all about the mean pranks you’ve been playing on her grandson