I said flirty, not nerdy.: iampizzalocked: What if the Doctor was actually a patient in a...
What if the Doctor was actually a patient in a psychiatric ward.
His real name is actually John Smith. He’s called the Doctor because he’s constantly hearing things about doctors. The whole ‘last of the time lords, i’m so alone’ = his family was killed as he watched, which…
Source: iampizzalocked
“You’re an alien?” Connor asked, as he simply stared at the man standing in front of him. The Doctor simply nodded, watching the young man’s reactions. “As in a real alien, a real life alien?”
“Yeah, a real alien,” The Doctor smiled, waiting to drop the final bombshell, “And I also travel in time.” He said, but he didn’t quite receive the reaction he was hoping for.
“Who hasn’t?” Connor smiled, “Regular occurance for me at work…sometimes, not on purpose…not always on purpose.”
“Well….I travel in style….a Police Box to be exact.” He replied, watching the grin on Connor’s face grow, “And it’s bigger on the inside.”
For literallyraptors
lol Im just imagining Connor getting supper excited like a little kid and wanting to see the TARDIS
Source: isaidrosetyler
“are you sure we haven’t met before? you seem to know me”
“you just remind me of someone”
“someone good?”
“my best friend”
“well then, allons-y!”
(via thetardis)
Source: originaltessa
Source: comealongpond7258
At eight years old, every Time Lord is forced to stare into the Untempered Schism as a rite of passage — the Untempered Schism being a gap in reality from which the whole of the Time Vortex can be seen. Witnessing the Time Vortex was a highly traumatic event for the Doctor - in The Sound of Drums he says it was one of the reasons he chose to run away from Gallifrey, and he’d never stopped running since. Seeing the Schism played a part in driving the Master insane, as well. Suffice to say it was a highly unpleasant, deeply scarring experience for every little Time Lord.
In this moment of becoming the Bad Wolf, Rose has been infused with vortex energy. The same stuff that fills the Untempered Schism, the same stuff that terrified the Doctor as a child, that traumatized him and caused him to run away.
I wonder how deep the Doctor’s panic and terror went, in those brief moments when he cowered on the floor in front of BadWolf!Rose. Was he having flashbacks to the primal horror of his childhood and that life-changing moment in front of the Untempered Schism? How much of that repressed fear and that instinct to run did he have to overcome, in order to save Rose?
I think it’s remarkable that for her, he did face whatever primal childhood terror still lurked in the depths of his memory. Not by physically removing her from harm’s way or flipping a switch or making a speech, but by literally taking into himself the thing that had traumatized him as a child and defined him as an adult. Knowing it would kill the man he was and make him into someone new.
The Doctor embraced death at the hands of something that terrified him deeply. That’s how much the he loved Rose Tyler.
(via deadlyrainbows)
Source: ghostpoetry
#Awww look at him #he’s so afraid to show his feelings #but it’s so clear that this means a lot to him #because the Doctor hates himself so much #that even though it’s been proven time and time again that there are so many people who love him #he still doesn’t quite get it #and acknowledgement like this just means so much to him #but he doesn’t know how to show it. #I think this is one of Eleven’s most vulnerable moments tbh.
Source: losemydignity







