81 - 86 of 86 Works by parsnipit
Navigation
Listing Works
-
Tags
Summary
Prince discovers that the other sides have never had dreams before and decides that he must remedy that. One miscommunication, several poor attempts at flirting, and a boatload of self-loathing later, three of the sides find themselves in a relationship—and Anxiety is not one of those sides. He would only cause nightmares, after all. (It takes a sword fight, an argument with Anxiety’s self-loathing personified, and a sobfest to convince him that this is not the case.)
-
Tags
Summary
Inspired by a Tumblr post: self care is getting drunk as hell, wandering into the woods and seducing a dragon.
It’s one of those days—Prince can’t think of any good ideas, his daydreams are decidedly ominous, and everything he normally enjoys doing just seems boringboringboring. But, in spite of all that (or perhaps because of it) he’s still incredibly proficient at creating one thing—problems—and his boyfriends must be the ones to come to his rescue this time.
-
Tags
Summary
Morality decides that the mindscape could use a coffeeshop, and when he starts giving out “complimentary” coffees things take a turn for the better. Anxiety adores reading the little compliments Morality leaves on his napkins (although he’ll never admit it) but discovers that running the coffeeshop has been more of a burden on Morality than he’d like to admit.
-
Tags
Summary
Prince has been feeling down, so the other sides put their heads together to create something to cheer him up. Anxiety, despite his creative ability, discovers that creating nice things is not his strong suit—at all—and is utterly certain that Prince will hate what he’s made.
-
Tags
Summary
Prince attempts to teach his boyfriends about the intricacies of sword fighting, with limited success.
-
Tags
Summary
Anxiety is having a bad day. While he’s usually good at hiding it, Logic’s also good at seeing it anyway. After twenty-eight years of living together, and almost one of being romantically involved, there’s very little that Anxiety can slip past him. So today Logic does what he always does when he wants to help—he gets his notebook.
AKA, the one where Logic keeps comprehensive notes about his friends and feels terrible about it.
