It's a short term of agreement, even to go so far as to call the content relatable to the viewer, which is why the word 'mood' is used.
And, 'af' is short for 'as fuck'... It's just for emphasis on the point. { Ambrose remembers a time when he played the part of naïveté, eyes round and glittering with a teetering confusion gilded in an unbalanced hopefulness, asking one of his theatre colleagues this very same question. to have the tables turned, to be the teacher in matters of modern day culture, is otherworldly. }
Are you haunting my social media platforms this evening, mon cœur?
[ Armand, on the other hand, has shifted his role throughout the years many times, but never his core - he is doomed or perhaps enlightened into being a perpetual student. Ever-seeking a teacher, he has latched onto an unlikely person for one reason and then found many to follow; Ambrose is a multifaceted young vampire, a creature born more out of hope than fear.
And, it seems, a creature imbued with the particular knowledge of twenty-first century acronyms. }
So they're letting you know that they agree with you. With your artful photos and your sublimely inhuman form and voice, all of which you share for free on that platform. [ Is it clear enough that Armand is new to the concept of getting an Instagram set up? He looks feral and suspicious on a site so modern; but so far not many have harassed the account following Ambrose Sinclair called armandlarusse and whose description reads only 'private account, do not request for access'.
Maybe some other day, he'll master the selfie. ]
I am, in the absence of haunting you in person. I am learning your Internet habits. You use many of those colorful pre-existing images that phones all seem to share. They look cheap but artistic with your intent behind them.
I think the image of yours that I feel most mood af about is the one of you trying on your new work costume. You continuously surprise me with your forays into cross-dressing. [ He's...trying. ]
{ haunted Ambrose is then, and in a manner that feels like sunlight from a previous life — weighty and warm, but immaterial and distant. that warmth might be how jubilant he feels at reading his nightbound cohort attempting to adapt the phrase 'mood af' in earnest into their conversation. }
I am a house long abandoned, and you're the spirit that fills my hollow veins.
I'm very excited to be delving into this art form and sharing it as I go, I'm sure the progress will be traceable. Would you like to see me dressed as this, in person?
I have found, however, that 'cross-dressing' refers specifically to heterosexual men who like to dress themselves femininely.
You're familiar with Shakespeare; then you may recognize the phrase 'drag' in this purpose, and you might be satisfied to know it's the key term of use for this kind of artistry. { despite the centuries of time, some things never change. Billy S gave us wonders such as 'drag' and 'vomit'; could this be an ancestor to the popular modern day phrase, 'sickening'? is Shakespeare a progenitor of modern gay culture? ...probably not, or not intentionally, but it sure is nice to connect the dots. }
I would do much more to fill your hollow veins, if you would but let me. [ But that's the beginning of a known argument; of Ambrose's refusal to embrace his nature, and perhaps of Armand's refusal to embrace his earlier interpretation of it.
He's grown too used to himself as he is now, but that's why he seeks out Ambrose now, isn't it? ]
And you are a homosexual man who likes to dress himself femininely?
Drag, yes, I saw that tag on your posts as well. I know the term but didn't realize it was what you call it as an art. Perhaps you can tell me more when I see you dressed as that, in person, as you suggest? Whether by your voice or by your expression when I meet you.
mood af
And, 'af' is short for 'as fuck'... It's just for emphasis on the point. { Ambrose remembers a time when he played the part of naïveté, eyes round and glittering with a teetering confusion gilded in an unbalanced hopefulness, asking one of his theatre colleagues this very same question. to have the tables turned, to be the teacher in matters of modern day culture, is otherworldly. }
Are you haunting my social media platforms this evening, mon cœur?
no subject
And, it seems, a creature imbued with the particular knowledge of twenty-first century acronyms. }
So they're letting you know that they agree with you. With your artful photos and your sublimely inhuman form and voice, all of which you share for free on that platform. [ Is it clear enough that Armand is new to the concept of getting an Instagram set up? He looks feral and suspicious on a site so modern; but so far not many have harassed the account following Ambrose Sinclair called armandlarusse and whose description reads only 'private account, do not request for access'.
Maybe some other day, he'll master the selfie. ]
I am, in the absence of haunting you in person. I am learning your Internet habits. You use many of those colorful pre-existing images that phones all seem to share. They look cheap but artistic with your intent behind them.
I think the image of yours that I feel most mood af about is the one of you trying on your new work costume. You continuously surprise me with your forays into cross-dressing. [ He's...trying. ]
no subject
I am a house long abandoned, and you're the spirit that fills my hollow veins.
I'm very excited to be delving into this art form and sharing it as I go, I'm sure the progress will be traceable. Would you like to see me dressed as this, in person?
I have found, however, that 'cross-dressing' refers specifically to heterosexual men who like to dress themselves femininely.
You're familiar with Shakespeare; then you may recognize the phrase 'drag' in this purpose, and you might be satisfied to know it's the key term of use for this kind of artistry. { despite the centuries of time, some things never change. Billy S gave us wonders such as 'drag' and 'vomit'; could this be an ancestor to the popular modern day phrase, 'sickening'? is Shakespeare a progenitor of modern gay culture? ...probably not, or not intentionally, but it sure is nice to connect the dots. }
no subject
He's grown too used to himself as he is now, but that's why he seeks out Ambrose now, isn't it? ]
And you are a homosexual man who likes to dress himself femininely?
Drag, yes, I saw that tag on your posts as well. I know the term but didn't realize it was what you call it as an art. Perhaps you can tell me more when I see you dressed as that, in person, as you suggest? Whether by your voice or by your expression when I meet you.