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A Whumpity Blog

@awhumpityblog

Sometimes I post about fictional characters suffering harm and distress. And sometimes I forget this website exists for a month. Which will it be this time?
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digital-nova

Winged whump prompts

  • plucking out ‘ugly’ feathers and replacing them with synthetic ones.
  • adorning the wings with heavy, gold jewellery that weighs them down.
  • feathers that can’t grow back.
  • wings hurting to open properly because they’ve been uncomfortably restrained for so long.
  • painting the feathers. a small, intimate task that requires time and patience, from both whumpee and the artist.
  • wings being held up by chains/ropes, on display for anyone to marvel at.
  • breaking wings as punishment.
  • wings being removed entirely to go on display in a gallery/museum. are they known to be real? or does someone take credit for creating them as an art piece?
  • in a medical setting, wings requiring their own set of restraints to keep whumpee from moving.
  • wings being the only part of whumpee that is valued and cared for. without them, they are worthless.
  • whumpee forgetting how to fly after being in captivity.
  • alternatively: not being able to because of how damaged their wings are.
  • feathers starting to fall out because of how terrible whumpee’s condition is.
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dehumanization whump

yeah the "spitting on whumpee's face, using them as an ashtray, calling them like "mutt" and making them thank whumpers for their punishments" kind of dehumanization is so good but what about the "numbers instead of names, id tags, whumpees carried around like other objects and all this legalized and systemized for the Greater Good™ kind of dehumanization that's my absolute beloved

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When the whumper ties the whumpee’s hands high above their head so they are all stretched out. And then the whumper can invade their personal space with no obstacles. When the whumper strokes the whumpee’s chin and they can barely move away because they are stuck, so they just grit their teeth and look away. It’s just great.

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whumporama

The whump that comes with this that isn’t even physical pain. The vulnerability of it all. Especially if it’s a Whumpee who prides themselves on their fighting skills, their ability to defend themselves. Who can’t do anything now as Whumper touches them, wherever they want.

It’s not even a painful touch, or a bad touch in any other situation. But Whumpee can’t stop it and the torment coming from that is so huge.

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whumpcember

Welcome to the 3rd annual Whumpcember!

Once again, it is just me running the event, so please be aware of any human error. I am grateful for all the participation with choosing the blog theme as well as picking this year's prompts! I hope everyone has a good Whumpcember, and now, here are the rules:

  1. Prompts should be answered with whump as the main focus
  2. Fanfic! Gif! Text post! Fanart! Fan video! Any piece of media that you can possibly make that has whump counts!
  3. You can use the prompts any time! Don't feel the need to rush
  4. Though, prompts answered during December will most likely be reblogged
  5. Post anywhere! AO3, Wattapad, Tumblr, or even Fanfic.Net! So as long as you make a Tumblr post with a link to the answered prompt it may be reblogged.
  6. When posting onto Tumblr you can either @ the blog or tag with #whumpcember24 and the day's tag, such as #whumpcember24 day1
  7. Don't forget to add any warnings necessary, such as NSFW or sexual content
  8. An AO3 Collection will go out on December 1 and close January 1, it's not mandatory, but if you want your works saved in a collection, make sure you get it in on time!

At the end of the month a masterpost will go out to all participants and a badge you can save stating that you are either a participant or completionist. In order to be on the masterpost though, you will have to fill out a google form at the end of month; don't worry it'll take two minutes!

If you have any more questions, send me an ask, but please read the FAQ first!

Written Prompt list below:

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Whumpees tied to tables. Their limbs stretched to each corner, spread out leaving them vulnerable.

Tied to a kitchen/dining table. An office desk, lab table. Pool table?

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Medical procedure done and done, and I return with insight on sedation and how it feels! From my experience in a proper medical setting, at least.

So to begin, it doesn't feel like drifting off at all. You go from being lucid and prepping for the procedure, to waking up in another room.

When you wake up, it's sort of like waking up from a two hour nap. You're kinda groggy, a bit confused, somewhat drowsy. But then when you stand up to be moved anywhere, your whole body gets so trembly! Feels kinda feeble. You'll be holding on to a nurse's arm for sure.

The needle thingy that goes in your hand that they put the medications through, it hurts the most when it's being put in, but it's pretty ignorable once in place. Taking it out also hurts though. They leave the head and needle in place until you're being discharged, which is kinda scary because the head is full of blood. It is inserted into one of the most prominent veins of your hand, after all.

You will feel low key kinda groggy for the rest of the day. Perhaps not fully out of it as sedation isn't proper general anaesthesia, but you will want to rest. And eat something. You haven't eaten all day and you feel HUNGRY.

There is also so much paperwork. At reception. In the getting ready area. I was signing papers in the theatre itself. It doesn't help with the nerves. You will write your signature and repeat your legal info so many times. You will know so many people by the time you are discharged. Also the anaesthesiologist chats to you before the doctor themself does. Anaesthesiologists are cool.

But on the comfort side of the spectrum, I also have much to report. To begin, the Blanket Warmer. When being checked in, along with putting your things in the basket and putting on the cotton gown, the nurse helping you out will fetch a blanket from the Blanket Warmer and tuck it right up to your neck. It is so dang cozy, like a warm cocoon. The blankets are a sort of weighted kind that is woven so you can't suffocate with it, no proper doona or anything, but they are still very comfy. Helps with anxiety. I could talk about the Blanket Warmer all day.

The nurses, also, are great. They may be strangers, but if you need some extra support while getting the needle put in place, a nurse will come in, chat to you, help keep you distracted, even offer to hold your hand. If only one could tip nurses. I ended up squeezing my poor nurse's hand and she just kept on chatting to me. Ten out of ten excellent love to see it excellent comfort.

Also they give you snacks after. I got a sammich and a cookie and some hot chocolate and they kept the apple juice coming til discharge.

There's a lot to work with here. Perfect for hurt/comfort purposes or anything else. Expect to see such a scene in my writing at some point involving the Blanket Warmer.

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hidden restraints in public:

  • bound ankles under a long skirt
  • shock collar under a turtleneck
  • chained hands inside the pockets of a hoodie
  • a gag under a facemask
  • clear tape gag
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defire

Prisoner of war whumpee with a bit more agency

  • Trying to escape over and over. Each time they get caught, the punishment is worse, until finally they're facing down losing a limb and they're begging, promising to never do it again. Because how are they going to escape with only one leg?
  • Making friends with the interrogator. Sarcastic joking, "Let's not and say we did, huh?", going quiet when he picks up the torture weapon. Stupid to think that would work.
  • Planning an escape with the other prisoners. Whumpee is trying to form a team that can actually get out together. Conversations and planning hush when a group of their captors suddenly barge in.
  • Someone with a lot of intel trying to fake that they're a different person that doesn't know much. Until that same person is also captured and brought in to confront them.
  • A high-risk prisoner shackled around the wrists, ankles, collared, gagged, walking up to the front of their cell as far as they can come to stare the enemy commander.
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reblogged

There's a flavor of whump I'm always craving that I don't see very often, I think because the possibilities are so context-specific. You can do some things in some universes that you can't in others! You can do certain things with non-human characters that you can't with others!

But hear me out:

Whumper making physiological changes to Whumpee's body.

Could be through programming for robot characters, dedicated brainwashing for humans, magic for fantasy settings, weird biology for aliens...

A few examples off the top of my head:

  • Alien species that instinctively responds to neck squeezing by going limp like a scruffed kitten, because this helped them survive encounters with predators. Delicious all on its own -- now throw in a quick surgery to permanently clamp the nerve responsible. Whumpee wakes up in a permanent state of relaxed submission and can't even show how terrified they are.
  • Obedience programming/training that's wired directly into a character's brain. When the system detects unwanted thoughts, it applies pain. Even after rescue, Whumpee can't think of themselves as an autonomous being because their mind is desperately protecting itself.
  • Characters with magic having their magic corrupted or bound so it either hurts them to use, or it can only be used to serve Whumper's purposes. Bonus points if Whumper has full control over their magic AND the use of it hurts them.
  • Characters given a brain implant or parasite that stimulates the reward center of the brain, which would be great, except they can't turn it off. They're kept in a constant state of bleary euphoria... with just enough sense of self left to know they want it to stop.
  • Characters being spelled or programmed so they physically cannot function independently. Characters who very literally NEED to be given permission to do things like relax or take a walk or even use the bathroom. Not being given this permission leaves them in a state of locked stasis -- fully aware of the time passing. Bonus: Caretaker can't reverse it, so they just HAVE to navigate All Of This.
  • Alien species that will a develop chronic physical illness if deprived of touch for too long. Said illness can only be treated through regular physical touch. Defiant Whumpees will often be locked in solitary confinement and fed through a slot in the bars until symptoms start to manifest. Sometimes they'll be left even longer, to make sure they end up a severe case. And now, oopsie, the only way to ease this horrible pain is by letting your captors put their hands on you!

Just. Physiological whump. The horror of someone else controlling your body or your mind. Betrayal of body. Etc. Do you understand.

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On conditioned whumpees...

Y'know, I think one of the things that people get wrong with conditioned whumpees is their rules. Specifically, when a whumpee was in long term captivity/training and they later get released or escape.

Most people write them as latching onto a caretaker or new whumper, and begging for new rules so they know they're doing something right. A new set of laws to live by, a new framework to behave to.

And that's... not really how conditioning works.

Conditioning means automatic reactions. Your body doing something that was trained into you without consulting your brain first.

There is no decision making. There is no choice. The trigger hits, and you are immediately performing the correct action regardless of anything else.

You're told to kneel? Your knees have already hit the ground. You're supposed to be standing in one part of the house when a certain noise is made? You've launched into movement before you even realize what you heard.

These rules are woven into the fabric of your body. And they are insurmountable. The conditioning overrides emotion, internal conflict, hesitation, beliefs, wants... everything.

Your whumpee may very well hate what is being done to them, and after the moment has passed they're cursing themself and their whumper. They're still a person on the inside. And that person is still very much alive. Most of the time, they will have some level of awareness that what's being done to them is wrong. They'll be angry. They'll be hurt. And they will hate that there is nothing they can do about it.

But the next time that trigger occurs, the response still hits them exactly the same.

So now take your whumpee out of that situation. They ran away, were rescued, were sold. They got out. Now they're with new people, a new caretaker, a new whumper. Or they're on their own and trying to make their own way in the world.

But those conditioned responses are still there.

There's no turning them off. You don't just replace them with new rules. They are in your every fibre. They have been built into the very framework of who you are.

The next time someone says the word "kneel", your knees are on the ground again. No matter where you are, or who you're with. The response happens before you can stop it. If they don't know why, everyone looks at you like you're insane. And you feel like you are.

Deconditioning is an agonizing process that takes more effort than I can even begin to describe to someone who's never experienced it.

Every time they hit that trigger, that response will still be there. Over, and over, and over, and over.

Breaking those rules down takes YEARS. And it is a constant effort that the whumpee has to choose to undergo every single time. Progress is measured milimeter by milimeter. You're told to kneel, and you kneel. You're told to kneel, and your mind catches up with the fact that you already did it— but a little sooner than it did before. Then a split second sooner. Then as you're doing it. Then you feel the impulse just before your knees hit the ground. Then you have a split-second of resistance before you go down. On and on and on and on, inching toward progress despite the fact that you're fighting with all your might. And that progress is anything but linear.

You don't just start obeying new rules. You don't latch on to your caretaker's new way of doing things and drop everything that you were conditioned to do before. These rules don't just get replaced.

Conditioning is not a belief system. It's a flinch response. Programmed deeper than the instincts you were born with.

You can be ordered not to obey the old command, and moments later when the trigger comes, you will anyway. Because in conditioning, the action comes before the choice.

These rules, these laws of your existence, come above everything else. And if your new whumper wants to replace them, they are going to have to beat the new rules into you so often and so severely that the pain becomes stronger than the old conditioning. At which point, the newly desired response will very, very slowly start to take over.

You're not swapping out new rules. You're layering new, worse conditioning on top of the old. And your brain will spend time stuck in that split-second between both responses before one finally grows stronger than the other. And even then, the change will not happen quickly.

That is what your conditioned whumpee is up against. That is what makes it such a horrible—HORRIBLE— and powerful tool.

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I have an upcoming procedure, so I thought I'd share some related stuff y'all might use in your own works (man oh man this really is becoming Medical Whump Inspired By My Own Real Life Struggles: The Sideblog, huh?)

First off, anticipation for medical procedures sucks, especially when your past experiences didn't go badly per se, but didn't exactly go as planned, either. For example, my only other experience with sedation saw me go properly to sleep and struggle to wake up after, and now we have ambient worries about things going like that again.

Also, when you have a scheduled procedure, you can be given a heck of a lot of papers to read through. You know, how the anaesthetic works, how the procedure works, and a whole double-sided page on potential risks and complications. Might share that one later, who knows?

And this last one more falls into the "bad caretaker" side of things, but doctors and specialists can have a weird idea of what counts as healthy. Yaboy is apparently healthy because I am 20 and not dying yet, but at the same time I have symptoms usually only seen in old people, and have since I was a kid. Even if doctors do take you somewhat seriously, they can still be bad about it. A whumpee with a pile of injuries and chronic symptoms can still be looked at by a professional and undergo essentially surgical procedures, and is still considered and treated as healthy the whole time.

Apologies if this little post was a bit rambly, I have a lot on my mind :)

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Welcome to the No Pressure Year of Whump!

This is a new event I decided to start on account of the pressure that comes from trying to do any of the standard whump events that have prompts every single day, and how hard it can be to stick to a schedule sometimes.

So what is the No Pressure Year of Whump?

I'm glad you asked! As the name implies, it's an event designed to come with no pressure, no worry about consistent uploading. Prompts will be by month rather than by day, with one theme and five prompts per month, though if we're honest, I won't be expecting you to even follow those if you don't want to. I'd be just as happy to see you using a prompts list from a past month or year that you wanted to do but missed. The goal is to simply have fun and create and be part of something fun!

As for rules, there aren't really many, just make sure you tag everything appropriately, that means having the event tag (as seen below) on any pieces made for it, make sure your content warnings are properly in order, and if you use another prompts list, be sure to tag that as well. This is intended to be a fun event anyone can partake in!

With all that said, the prompts list won't come out until January 1, so keep an eye out for that!

Hope to see you all joining!

-Peat, the creator and (as of current) singular moderator for this event

I should probably reblog this over here too, but we're in business! I'll be updating things as I prepare, but I'm excited to see this idea of mine up and running!

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So I missed the start of another month of whump event by over a week again (as per the usual) and that led to an idea.

The tight deadlines and many prompts (the whole one prompt a day thing) makes things quite difficult for me and I'm sure I'm not the only one, but I'd still love to be involved in events.

Which brings me to my idea.

I have thought up, what I am currently calling the No Pressure Year of Whump. There will be monthly prompt sets that you can use how you wish at your own leisure, or heck, you could even use the list from another event you missed, just so long as you tag it as such as well. The point is loose deadlines, plenty of time to work on each thing, and I'd hope the prompts and themes are broad enough to allow for a lot of creativity.

This is my first time using a poll, so we come to my question;

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defire

Living weapon whump stuff I love

  • When they're really fucking good at fighting and they don't even flinch at major injuries...
  • Until they get back and they cry like a kid as caretaker patches them up
  • Plus this same tough living weapon can handle the effects of fighting, but every time their handler punishes them it feels like a betrayal. Like "I fought for you and this is what you do?"
  • When they're not just loyal because they're afraid or trained but maybe they just care that much
  • When they're forced to kill people inside their own organization
  • Watching them go from a fighting killing machine and then turn, see their owner, and immediately drop to a knee in total submission
  • Whumpee gradually getting more and more reckless as they hate themselves for killing, hate their life for its misery, and just want to be a casualty
  • When they get caught. And the enemy... Is the fucking good guys.
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Horror Villains as Vessels of Untended Pain: An Essay

Okay I know I made a joke post about the haunted house last night, but I have more serious, writing-inspiration-oriented thoughts as well.

A theme throughout the haunted house, and a lot of horror in general, is the concept of a person who is desperately in pain being inherently frightening. We had creatures who were begging us not to leave because they were lonely, clowns who were crying, people who were in cages or tied up and being electrocuted screaming for us to let them out. Villains in horror tend to be people who have literally died, or lost a child, or witnessed mind-breaking amounts of violence.

There is some notion that when a person is desperate enough to relieve their pain, they become dangerous. At that point, ethics are forgotten - suffering must be relieved by any means necessary. There is the notion of "hurt people hurt people" and it's true. In that state of total desperation, there IS an inherent danger. This is how cycles of violence form, too. A person is hurt and becomes desperate to relieve their pain by any means necessary...including inflicting pain on others.

But I can't say this is the whole story, because what about the character from the haunted house who was just laying on the ground, bleeding out, calling for a medic? He wasn't trying to hurt anyone, he didn't threaten us in any way, and he couldn't have done so even if he wanted to. Yet he was supposed to be horrifying and to most people, he was. Why? Because he demonstrates the suffering that it is possible for the human body to undergo. His presence inflicts pain via empathy. It's secondhand pain. We can't bear to look at him because we imagine ourselves in his position, and it's devastating.

So what do we do, in either case? We run. We fight. We kill it. That is the premise of horror - the villain is too hurt to be saved, and often too powerful to be overcome. But if the exact same situation were presented in a non-horror context (in whump, for example), there would be a conversation about how to help this character. It's so easy. They're desperate enough to do anything to get help, so just...help them? Even if there is some risk involved in getting close enough to do so? It breaks the premise of horror entirely.

I was going to say that it requires a willingness to face that secondhand pain, that we have to love ourselves as well and take that risk and bla bla bla. But actually, it doesn't even require that. No, you don't even have to feel empathy for the suffering figure, and it's probably easier to get things done if you don't. You just see a problem, a person crying out for help, and you fix it. It's so simple. I solved horror, ya'll, I promise. Just tend to the villain's pain, and the entire genre shifts. Break the narrative. There's always a way.

Thinking about this, because I've been a scare actor before, in more of an asylum setting (yay, medical malpractice!) and what my scene was all about, and how easily the vibe could have changed if things had been handled just a bit differently.

See, my role was a patient by the name of Chester Murphy, and he was harmless as could be. Basically, he has somewhat of a delusion that he is married to the queen of the faeries, and he escapes his room to go looking for a bumblebee, whom he believes will deliver him a message from her. But how does the doctor's assistant react to this by all means friendly and harmless guy?

By chasing him down and dragging him, screaming, into the surgical theatre for a lobotomy, of course!

Now, Chester is not one of the patients that reacts frighteningly or violently toward the guests. He's just an unfortunate man who experiences delusions and is ultimately unsuccessfully lobotomized. And by that, I mean I was to lay spasming and jolting on the table for a full minute before ultimately going still and covered up with a bloodstained tarp.

However, the other patients are a different story. There were a pair of twins who both received lobotomies, and were admitted for life when it resulted in uncontrollable bouts of crying. There was Augustus, a man who sunk so deeply into religious fanaticism he would scream at anyone who passed that they had to repent or they would be damned to hellfire, and the head doctor's advice was to simply ignore him. There were two girls who had come from a convent, dealing with the trauma of facing horrific punishments such as one of them having their tongue cut out for talking back, and the doctor's advice was for the guests to keep their distance. And there was a patient who worked with the pharmacist in the gardens, who had a deep hatred of all medical professionals, and I could hardly blame him as he has spent years watching the one who was supposed to help him keep active and busy in his treatment, getting constantly high off their own supply, as it were.

The way I see it, there is a common thread between all these individuals. They were scary as they were because of the suffering they had been through, and at the hands of the people who were supposed to care for them no less.

I wonder how the story would differ if these people hadn't been treated this way. If the twins hadn't been lobotomized. If someone stopped to chat with Augustus once in a while. If those two girls hadn't been punished so harshly. If the pharmacist wasn't so hopelessly addicted to the prescription drugs. It wouldn't be horror, now would it?

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