FunDay Friday

My Top 5 Heroic Influences (Starfleet Edition)

A vibrant comic book-style digital illustration featuring SuperMell in her signature black Nightwing-inspired suit with a purple stylized “M” on the chest, standing confidently alongside five Star Trek characters: Captain Janeway, Seven of Nine, Data, Worf, and Lt. Barclay. Each character is depicted in their recognizable Starfleet uniforms, with a starry galaxy background behind them, symbolizing heroic influence and inspiration.

The Heroes Who Charted My Course

Some heroes wear capes. Mine wear combadges.

Over the years, Star Trek has provided me with more than entertainment—it’s offered a constellation of characters who’ve guided, challenged, and inspired me. Today, I’m spotlighting five Star Trek heroic influences who’ve shaped how I define strength, resilience, and purpose. These characters didn’t just save the galaxy; they helped me navigate my own.


Captain Janeway: The Brave and Balanced Leader

No one embodies steady leadership and moral fortitude like Captain Kathryn Janeway. Faced with impossible choices in the Delta Quadrant, she always led with equal parts intellect and empathy. Her blend of science-minded pragmatism and compassion taught me that great leadership isn’t just about confidence—it’s about caring. I think of Janeway every time I need to lead myself forward, especially through unfamiliar territory.


Seven of Nine: My Neurodivergent North Star

Seven’s journey from Borg drone to individual hit me hard in the best way. She was awkward, intense, and often misunderstood—but she was also brilliant, brave, and evolving. Seven didn’t mask her uniqueness; she learned to navigate a human world without compromising the logic of her own wiring. Watching her gave me permission to honour my own neurodivergent path instead of fighting it.


Data: The Seeker of Humanity

Data’s quest to understand what it means to be human was more than just a plotline—it was a mirror. I’ve spent so much of my life trying to decode emotion, connection, and identity in a world that doesn’t always make sense to me. Like Data, I’ve often felt a step out of sync, and yet endlessly curious about how to belong. He reminded me that questioning isn’t a flaw—it’s the very definition of growth.


Worf: The Stoic Who Spoke Truth

Worf often stood apart, bound by honour and tradition—but he never wavered when it came to doing what was right. His fierce loyalty and principled strength resonated deeply with me, especially during times when I’ve felt out of step with those around me. He was often dismissed or overruled, yet he never stopped fighting for what mattered. Sometimes, being “always right” just means you’re seeing what others aren’t ready to.


Lt. Reginald Barclay: The One Who Was Like Me

I’ve saved the most personal one for last. Barclay wasn’t the most polished or confident member of the crew—but he was real. Anxious, brilliant, awkward, deeply imaginative… and often underestimated. I’ve rarely seen myself represented so accurately on screen. Barclay reminded me that even in a future of warp drives and replicators, there’s still room for someone who stumbles, doubts, and daydreams—and still finds their place.


All these characters appear across various Star Trek series—most of which you can stream on Paramount+.


Diana’s Corner: The Purring Presence That Grounds Me

If there’s one constant in my universe of shifting emotions and starry aspirations, it’s Diana.

In some ways, she reminds me of Barclay—quiet, cautious, slow to trust, but deeply loyal once a connection is formed. When I feel like I’ve been floating in space too long without a starbase to dock at, she’s the one who brings me back to the present. The soft rhythm of her purring, the gentle weight of her curled body against my side… that’s my holodeck of calm.

She doesn’t need to lead a starship or question the nature of humanity—she just is. A black-furred reminder that I’m safe, I’m seen, and I’m already enough.


Final Thought: Finding the Hero Within

These Star Trek heroic influences weren’t just characters on a screen. They were mentors, mirrors, and motivators. Each helped me accept different facets of myself—and reminded me that heroism isn’t always loud. Sometimes it’s thoughtful. Sometimes it’s misunderstood. But it’s always brave.

✨ Who are your unexpected or unconventional heroes? Leave a comment—I’d love to hear which fictional (or real) figures have helped shape you.

Throwback & Fandom Thursday

🚀 Why Back to the Future Still Speaks to Me (And Always Will)

A vibrant, cartoon-style digital illustration inspired by Back to the Future. SuperMell stands confidently in front of a glowing sci-fi car with a retro-futuristic skyline in the background. Neon light trails streak across the sky, evoking a time-traveling energy, while lightning crackles overhead in a dramatic nod to iconic cinematic moments.

Like a lot of ‘80s kids, I grew up watching Back to the Future—but for me, it wasn’t just a fun sci-fi romp with time travel and hoverboards. It was the movie trilogy that cracked my imagination wide open.

And now, decades later, I’m about to do something I never dreamed I’d get to do: meet Michael J. Fox and Christopher Lloyd—Marty McFly and Doc Brown themselves—at Calgary Fan Expo.

Yes, I’m screaming inside. And yes, this moment means a lot more to me than just a cool photo op.


💘 A Childhood Crush… and Something Deeper

When I was 8 years old, I developed a serious crush on Michael J. Fox—but not because he was a Hollywood heartthrob. It was because of Alex P. Keaton on Family Ties.

He was nerdy. He was sharp. He had ideas and opinions and intensity—and that really did it for me. Intelligence was, and still is, something I admire deeply in others. I didn’t care that he was a Republican (though trust me, I do now 😬). What stuck with me was how he owned who he was.

That early admiration made Marty McFly even more compelling. He wasn’t just cool—he was smart, loyal, emotional, a little impulsive, and just trying to do the right thing. I related to that more than I realized at the time.


⏳ A Story About Regret, Courage, and Changing the Narrative

As I’ve grown older and taken on the task of rewriting parts of my life—through blogging, studying, and reworking my career—the Back to the Future trilogy has taken on new meaning.

It’s not really about changing the past. It’s about understanding it. Learning from it. And realizing that who we are today is shaped by those experiences—but not defined by them.

I can’t hop in a DeLorean and fix every wrong turn. But I can show up today with more clarity, more strength, and more purpose. And that’s kind of its own time travel, isn’t it?


⚡ A Fandom That Feels Like Home

I love the creativity that surrounds Back to the Future—the cosplay, the DeLoreans, the fan art, the clever nods in pop culture. But even more than that, I love the feeling it gives me.

That feeling of possibility. Of adventure. Of being able to look ahead without forgetting where I’ve come from.

And as I get ready to step into the Fan Expo halls this weekend dressed as Meg Griffin (because, balance 😂), I’ll be carrying that feeling with me.


Final Thought:

If you’d told 9-year-old me that one day she’d get to stand beside Marty and Doc for a photo, she’d probably have exploded into sparkles.

And maybe that’s the real magic of fandom—keeping those little pieces of wonder alive, even when time keeps moving forward.

Mell