Throwback & Fandom Thursday

šŸ›”ļø Favourite Heroes & Resilience

A digital illustration of a woman in a black superhero costume with a purple "M" emblem standing confidently against a purple-toned backdrop. Behind her are faded images of Samwise Gamgee with a backpack, Atreyu in motion, Nightwing crouching, and Wonder Woman in her armor. In the foreground, a black cat with golden eyes and a white heart-shaped chest patch playfully pounces on a toy mouse. The composition blends inspiration and playfulness, symbolizing resilience and companionship.

šŸ’„ Resilience in the Face of the Impossible

When I think of the heroes who shaped me, it’s not the strongest or the most powerful that come to mind first — it’s the ones who kept going when everything felt hopeless.
They didn’t give up. And that gave me permission not to give up, either.

In hard moments — emotionally, physically, or even just getting through a tough day — I carry their stories with me. Not as escapism, but as a blueprint for resilience.


🌱 Samwise the Stubborn

No moment in The Lord of the Rings hits me harder than Sam saying:

ā€œThere’s some good in this world, Mr. Frodo, and it’s worth fighting for.ā€

He didn’t carry the ring. He carried Frodo. He carried the mission. He carried the whole story, really — through loyalty, stubbornness, and love. Sam reminds me thatĀ small people with huge hearts can save the world.


šŸ‰ Atreyu in the Swamp of Sadness

TheĀ NeverEnding StoryĀ offered one of the most profound metaphors I’ve ever seen:
Atreyu trudging forward through theĀ Swamp of Sadness, even as he watches Artax — his beloved horse — succumb to despair.

That scene broke me as a kid. It breaks me still. But Atreyu didn’t stop.

He kept going because someone had to. And that, to me, is resilience.


šŸ¦‡ Nightwing: Chosen Family, Chosen Path

Dick Grayson could’ve become bitter. He had every reason to. But instead, he became Nightwing — a hero who balancesĀ grit with heart, and who leads not through fear, but through compassion.

He made his own path.

He reminds me that it’s possible to break cycles, stand tall, andĀ redefine yourself on your own terms.


šŸ›”ļø Wonder Woman 2017: ā€œIt’s Not About Deserveā€

That No Man’s Land scene? Chills. Every. Time. But even more powerful is this moment:

ā€œIt’s not about deserve. It’s about what you believe. And I believe in love.ā€

That line shook something loose in me. It made me reevaluate what it means toĀ stand for something bigger than yourself — and to keep believing, even when the world says not to. And it made me realize that love is more powerful than hate.


🐾 Diana: The Quietest Kind of Strength

And then there’s my Diana.

I got her shortly after seeing Wonder Woman, which inspired her name — but her story is one of real-life resilience.

Diana had been abandoned by her previous owners and was deeply scared when I met her at the shelter. I didn’t push. I sat quietly and played gently with a ball in a track toy nearby. She watched. And in that moment, something small but powerful began.

When I brought her home, it took time — a lot of time. She kept her distance. She wouldn’t come near me, let alone sleep close. But I stayed patient.

Eventually, she began to curl up beside me. Then she started sleeping pressed up against me. Now, she’s my lap cat — and more recently, she jumps right onto my chest and starts to purr.

Her trust is something I earned. Her love is something that grew. And every time she chooses closeness, it reminds me that healing is real — and so is hope.


šŸ’¬ Final Thought

Resilience isn’t about being invincible — it’s about showing up again and again, even when it’s hard, even when you’re scared, even when the outcome isn’t guaranteed.

Sometimes, all it takes is remembering that someone — real or fictional — once faced something impossible… and kept going.

And sometimes, resilience curls up beside you, purrs softly, and reminds you thatĀ love is more powerful than hate.

Mell

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What Keeps Me Going: Heroes, Strength, and Showing Up Anyway

When I think about the kind of professional I strive to be—resilient, thoughtful, creatively grounded—it’s hard not to think about the people and characters who helped shape that vision.

Like many of us, I grew up inspired by stories and the people who told them. But not all heroes wear capes—some wear armor, some lead rebellions, and some just keep showing up, writing openly about their lives, hoping to make someone else feel less alone.

Here are a few of mine:

šŸ’­ Wil Wheaton: For Honesty and Humanity

I’ve followed Wil Wheaton’s blog for years—not just as a fan of his acting, but as someone who deeply respects how open he’s been about his own struggles with mental health.

His writing has been a reminder that vulnerability can coexist with strength, and that sharing your story is sometimes the most courageous thing you can do. He helped me understand that it’s okay to be open about your experiences—even in professional spaces. Especially in professional spaces.

In fact, it’s part of why I started writing this blog. Because navigating a creative career with neurodivergence, anxiety, or any kind of internal battle deserves to be part of the conversation. It doesn’t disqualify us—it informs us.

šŸ›”ļø Princess Leia and Wonder Woman: For Leadership and Strength

When I was a kid, I didn’t have many real-life role models who looked like me or felt like me. But I had two characters who showed me something powerful.

Princess Leia wasn’t just a ā€œdamselā€ā€”she took charge of her own rescue. She was smart, strategic, and decisive. She didn’t wait to be saved; she led.

And Wonder Woman! She was strength and compassion rolled into one. She didn’t just fight—she believed in something. That stuck with me.

Those two figures told little-kid-me: You can be strong. You can take up space. You can lead.

That message never really left me.

✨ And Then—There’s Me

I wasn’t always someone who believed I could lead anything.

Like a lot of creative kids, I was bullied. I was called ugly. I was too quiet. Too weird. Too sensitive. I spent years hearing I wasn’t good enough—and somehow still pushed forward.

I’ve built a career from scratch, changed directions more than once, and kept learning even when the path wasn’t clear. I’ve made mistakes. I’ve started over. I’m still here. Still trying.

That, to me, is a kind of heroism too. I can be the hero of my own story… That is very empowering to me.

šŸš€ Why This Matters in a Career

This blog isn’t about idolizing celebrities or fictional characters—it’s about understanding where your own perseverance comes from.

It’s about taking the values they represented—honesty, leadership, strength—and applying them to your own messy, evolving path.

We don’t talk enough about the emotional side of career growth: about what keeps us going when motivation is low, rejection is high, or self-doubt creeps in. For me, my heroes—real, imagined, and internal—remind me that resilience is a muscle, and showing up is its daily workout.

So I keep showing up. I keep learning. I keep building.

And if you’re reading this? I hope you do too.

āœļø Call to Action:

Have you thought about who your own professional heroes are? What do they remind you of when you need it most?

I’d love to hear about them—leave a comment or connect with me.

—

Mell