fish I guess
happy first post to me
Hear me out, i promise it's not as weird as it sounds lol. But in the Book of Bill there is an image where we can see Ford without a shirt looking like this:
Meanwhile in Journal 3 he writes this:
"I've spent the last 30 years keeping up and extensive exercise and diet regimen."
However when we compare his physique in the Book of Bill vs. The Show, we can see that his body seemingly hasn't changed. As you can see he even fits in the same jacket (which is impressive in it's own right after 30 years)
And yeah, in Journal 3 he wrote about the past 30 years, which means that picture was taken before he began his diet. For all we know he could hide a sixpack under that turtleneck lol. But I personally chose to believe that THIS (aka the first photo where hes shirtless) is his form of extensive exercise and diet.
And this is very personal to me because I basically have this exact same body type. I look rather skinny with clothes on, but without them there is quite a bit of fat. And no matter what I do (for example dieting or exercising like Ford) it stays that way. The only way to get rid of it is to literally not eat at all and we can all agree that this is neither healthy, nor sustainable. And it's nice to see that a healthy body doesn't have to mean that you're skinny, you can still have a bit of body fat and be in good shape!
I just find it nice to have my body type represented in a character that means very much to me, especially since I struggled a lot with it in the past.
I thought I'd share my thoughts because maybe other people can relate:)
:P I actually have no word to say about it except the tragic life of Stanley Pines so,,,yea. Bc to me, i think he was forced to do it either out if desperation for drugs(it was his escape)or money, or someone forced him to do it bc he caused them pretty moneyđ§đťââď¸đ§đťââď¸
Also, i accidentally deleted the second part of the clip n needed to redraw the whole thing again....
Theoretically, if i have a nickle every time this happens, i'll have 2 nickle, which ain't a lot, but it weird that it happened TWICE in TWO days.
Hereâs a meta I consider long overdue; the title says it all. Iâve analyzed Ford and why he resonates with me for over three years and casually lived in his head close to that magic number, six, but Iâve never addressed this fundamental reason. Iâm not the only one who reads Ford as autistic, so I figured we deserve a lengthy manifesto. Now more than ever, we need stories of unconditional acceptance instead of voyeuristic awareness; April is the cruelest month.
Normally this is where Iâd disclaim Iâm no medical professional, but I donât feel like enforcing normalcy. Autistic people are foremost experts on our own experience, and we donât need analyses this extensive for permission to see ourselves in fictional characters. This analysis is also not concerned with authorial intent; in fiction as in reality, weâre here whether you want us or not.
Iâve divided this meta between various criteria Ford meets. Overly long post incoming, press j to pay respects.
Motor control issues
Letâs start tenuously before getting into weightier evidence - why suggest that a character who runs and jumps well into his sixties may have motor control issues? Because they can improve with practice, and Ford is markedly unathletic early in life. Heâs introduced stumbling from trying to un-board the cave and insisting âI can keep up!â (dogear that). Factor in his D- in gym and the way he reads during boxing lessons intended to protect both boys from bullies, and it seems that Ford only became physically adept when forced to fend for himself without Stan.
Eye contact
Ford frequently averts eye contact during tense moments, which admittedly could indicate typical fraught emotions as much as a breakdown of performance. His deathglare toward Stan and intense gaze talking to Dipper could more strongly indicate that he makes eye contact consciously and counterintuitively, because he sees it as an assertion of power (hence his discomfort under Billâs gaze). Fordâs shifty eyes post-betrayal, signature surprised owlface, thousand-yard stare thinking of âthe dark weird road [he travels]â, and unchanging expression as he hugs Fiddleford and doesnât register Stan are additional animation tics implying he breaks eye contact easily.
Physical contact
Ford seems to have a complicated relationship with touch like many autistic people. He easily startles at Stan unexpectedly touching his shoulder (as kids, first reunion) or grabbing him (Fearamid fight, end credits). Touch aversion may explain his visceral reaction to Bill violating his personal space with mock affection.
Ford appears more comfortable initiating than receiving touch, especially armsâ-length nudges and shoulder touches; the kidsâ surprise at his adorable tackle-hug suggests itâs uncharacteristic. He also expects a handshake when Fiddleford goes in for a hug, misreading his body language and cue to âcome here.â
Stimming
The animation emphasizes Fordâs hands in all their six-fingered glory, giving him unique repetitive mannerisms that can be interpreted as stimming. These include rapping his fingers nervously over the journal (âThe Last Mabelcornâ), rolling the DD&MD die, twirling his gun, and wiggling his fingers (narrating DD&MD, taunting Bill).
Pressure stimming could explain why Ford wears heavy clothes throughout his life. This comes to represent his guardedness, as he wears the fewest layers while content with Stan and Gravity Falls and the most while trusting no one, but it may have literally resulted from PTSD compounding his stimming so that he only feels safe weighted down. In the end he keeps the sweater, unburdened but still holding to that feeling of security. Likewise, Fordâs pattern of puffing his chest (especially in danger) may be a pressure stim to anchor himself, holding back the fear and weightlessness he feels inside.
Comfort objects
Ford has saved his coat and childhood photo of himself and Stan for over 30 years, suggesting a grounding attachment to them. He clearly shows a more-than-professional attachment to his journals, embracing his hands -his identity- through them even literally as he sleeps holding one to his heart (just as Bill starts toying with it). Writing in the journals is Fordâs coping mechanism when âIâm not sure I am who I amâ and âI JUST DONâT KNOW ANYMOREâ. That panicked âyou donât understand!â is putting it lightly.
Sensory issues
Ford has a pattern of shielding his ears in stressful situations: Bill whispering in his mind, his pre-fight argument with Stan, his nightmares, and his confrontation with Dipper. (âEveryone, plug your ears!â he demonstrates despite knowing the memory gun wonât affect him.) In addition to blocking noise under stress, his hands apparently ground him by clutching his coat, journal, and (during Stanâs amnesia) his neck and wrists stigmatized by the chains.
Contrast Ford fnord playing Bavarian Fire Drill with the agents and his dumbfounded response to the kids crowding him, and itâs clear he gets overwhelmed under pressure; Stan may have steered attention away from him for Fordâs comfort as much as his own. At the kidsâ birthday we see that Ford has practice slipping out of crowds, literally relying on Stan for support when all eyes are on him.
Conversely, Ford shares many autistic peopleâs unusual tolerances or otherwise has difficulty communicating discomfort. Based on âcycloptopus rollâ in the journal, Ford has no problem eating something Stan says âsmells like if death could barfâ. He tolerates heat when shaving with fire and wearing heavy clothes all the time (possibly to prevent sensory overload, as itâs always the same sweater unlike Mabel). Ford also shows only momentary discomfort being shot, knocked unconscious, crushed under rubble, chained, and electrocuted, which⌠same? âStop thinkingâ and âfocus on your intellect and control your fearâ are exactly the self-regulation measures we develop to tolerate sensory overload.
Executive dysfunction
Autistic people often experience executive dysfunction due to our singlemindedness toward goals, which Ford exhibits in spades. He jumps into major decisions (sending Stan away both times, apprenticeship, quantum destabilizer) without thinking of setbacks or long-term consequences and resists changing plans (frustration at research roadblocks, inability to adjust opinions of Stan). His aggrieved âwe just need to lay low and think of a planâ reflects a conscious difficulty with planning that negates his mental health.
Ford evidently subordinates his needs in pursuing goals, his rooms a mess in 1982 and 2012 as he wears out and sleeps in clothes desperately projecting his academic identity. Lighting his face on fire because âitâs much faster than shavingâ resembles flawed shortcuts we use to maintain hygiene against executive dysfunction.
Meltdowns
Fordâs paranoid breakdown shows signs of involving meltdowns. In addition to his defensive body language, when Stan applies pressure Ford suddenly loses all patience, filter, and ability to articulate what âyou donât understandâ (his suffering, what the journal means to him). Meltdowns stem from pain, and heâs âup against [and has] been throughâ more than enough.
Iâve seen Fordâs confrontation of Dipper interpreted as a panic attack before, and I think it can also read as a meltdown. First we see Fordâs spiraling mile-a-minute thoughts (while asleep), then heâs urgently demanding the rift and yelling defensively (âI was gonna say please, kid!â) -exactly how it feels when the walls close in and our words fall away. In appealing to Dipperâs rationality, Ford talks them both down.
Ford has also hurt himself under stress, punching the blackboard and his head (while cursing his metal plate in the finale).
Difficulty reading social cues
âI havenât been in this dimension for a really long timeâ = Fordâs A+ excuse for not knowing if itâs âstillâ normal for kids to say âgreetingsâ or have weapons, when ironically it never was. He also thinks mind control can be used âresponsiblyâ, presumably with consent as Bill normalized to him before.
For all of Fordâs insecurities about how people perceive him, heâs often oblivious to it. He doesnât register Dipperâs unease at him shaving with fire, being unsure the aliens are dead, or jumping with the magnet gun. He brushes off Stan saying âheâs lost his mindâ, then meets his demands for thanks with a blunt âwhat?â -for once more confused than angry. Based on his awkward laughter before a girl throws punch on him at prom, it seems Fordâs lack of social skills contributed to his difficulty making friends growing up.
Empathy
Autistic people often experience unusually high or low empathy, even fluctuating between both; Ford evidently lacks and/or suppresses empathy in his fight with Stan, the person closest to him. Without intending harm he jumps to conclusions and wonât hear Stanâs side, thinks tactlessly appealing to their sailing dream or giving Stan until the end of the summer will incentivize him leaving, and does not realize Stan is homeless until called on it. Ford often displays the autistic tendency to speak without a filter - heâs right that codependency stifles individuality, but calling it âsuffocatingâ? Blunt as a left-hook. Perhaps Bill ensnared him promising a relationship of shared interests where heâd sooner decode ciphers than emotions.
Thereâs a case for Ford being hyperempathetic with difficulty expressing it. He makes half-steps toward reconciliation that only anger Stan more: offering to share his fun with DD&MD, fixing the lightbulb, giving Dipper the mind control tie to help Stan win the election. One standout response is his sincere laughter at Stanâs âmy brain isnât good for anythingâ: he knows the feeling, but it sounds absurd coming from a socially adept person he values, so he affirms Stanâs worth by intuitively treating this statement like the joke it is.
Whether sympathy or empathy, Fordâs care for others shines through his concerted effort to seem aloof and cut them off. He repeats âIâm sorry Fiddlefordâ in his mind nonstop, his tale recounting the insensitive things he said but not how he desperately held Fiddleford in the unfiltered later flashback. He relates to Dipperâs interests, insecurities, and drive enough to hastily propose âa dream come trueâ. He knows exactly how to reassure Mabel without even knowing how the unicorns affected her, thinking sheâll be fine alone because her âmagnetic personalityâ ranges beyond his weirdness magnetism.
Above all, Ford shows uncommon agape toward anomalies and all mankind. Even after their falling-out, Fiddleford affirms that Ford only wanted to help a world so often unkind to him.
Language
Ford displays many autistic speech patterns, such as declarative statements and an odd mix of formal and colloquial speech (ânot with a bang but with a⌠boop-boopâ, âthe symbols neednât all be literal, Dipper. It just has to be someone cool in the face of dangerâ). We often suspend the point of sentences with context for fear of misunderstanding, sometimes creating more (âwhen fighting a Gremloblin, use waterâ, anyone?) Ford shares our related tendency to get overly precise, second-guessing the correctness of everything he says (âor you could just roll an eightâ, âfloppy disks, and 8-tracks⌠right?â, âsometimes the strangest things in the world are right under our noses⌠and our feet, in this particular instanceâ). In the last example, Ford mixes his metaphor by understanding it better literally.
Ford has a sense of humor familiar to many autistic people, which includes indulging humor to himself (in the journals) instead of strictly sharing it. He shares our penchant for puns (âheâs gourd-geous!â, âone giant headache!â) and double meanings (âsomeone coolâ, âthe most peculiar dreamâ). Ford characteristically makes deadpan remarks (âjust going to ignore thatâ, âso this is an emergencyâ, âI did mention that the fate of the universe is at stake, didnât I?â, âNLOO PH SOHDVHâ) but draws the line at mockery (âhe doesnât make fun of me all the time the way you and Grunkle Stan doâ) - many of us concur, for hyperempathy or knowing how it feels.
He also invents his own secret languages⌠nuff said.
Infodumping
Does a whole book of exposition count? âLost prehistoric life forms!â and âMesoamerican gold!â and âPirate ghosts!â are the words of a child with no filter about sharing everything interesting heâs read, and the journals are punctuated with equal enthusiasm. Then thereâs his âcutting-edge programs and multi-dimensional paradigm theory!â ramble, DD&MD and magnet gun facts, and hostile takeover of Stanâs role as exposition fairy; Mabelâs unicorn hair quest only happens because Ford goes on a tangent about it.
Infodumping is also the only sensible explanation for why Ford mentions the barrier equation. Besides self-endangerment. Bill got under Fordâs skin not by promising power, but regression to a friendship where he felt safe sharing what he loved.
Literal/logical thinking
Ford emphatically takes things at face value. He feels compelled to defensively answer absurd questions like âIs there an owl in this bag?â and âThe worldâs most confusing game of hopscotch?â Ford is earnest to a fault, walking into Stanâs conversational traps by nerding out about what he loves; like many autistic people, he instinctively says what he means and assumes everyone else works the same way. This makes him terrible at subterfuge: barely tricking the agents under amnesia, blurting out acknowledgment of the kids and barrier equation to Bill, and delivering a stilted âdonât do it, Ford, itâll destroy the universe!â as âStanâ (who plays him much more convincingly after 30 yearsâ practice). Correcting Stanâs grammar to get back at him, Ford cannot tolerate incorrectness in language or behavior.
Logical thinking leads Ford to black-and-white views of people and situations - most self-destructively, âTRUST NO ONEâ. He assumes malice due to difficulty factoring in othersâ emotions or miscommunication. âYou did this because you couldnât handle me going to college on my own!âł is a logical statement based on true premises, but assumes that Stan acted rationally to sabotage Ford. Stan tactlessly making it about their sailing dream instead of apologizing only solidifies it. Growing up with someone who means well but canât say what he means, and no frame of reference for friendship outside codependency, itâs no wonder âa being with answersâ worms his way into Fordâs mind and poisons it.
If youâve followed these autistic heuristics thus far, that brings us toâŚ
Special interests (or, why Fordâs autistic narrative matters)
First, honorable mention to Dungeons, Dungeons, & More Dungeons: after 30 years away he drops world-saving work to play it, quotes it from memory, and shares encyclopedic knowledge (âPrime-statistical anomalies over 37 but not exceeding 51!â, âThe Impossibeast! Hey, I thought they banned this character!â)
And of course, mocking its fantastical monetary system!!! is a hatecrime unto his soul. (âAt least Iâm not all keyed up to watch a kidsâ showâ, he says with no qualms enjoying âGiggle Time Bouncy Bootsâ and other âchildishâ things; the threat of infantilization is real so he projects it back.)
Now, the big one: Fordâs singular, intense interest in anomalies drives the development of his career, art, and very identity.
âAs if his abnormally high IQ wasnât enough, he also had a rare birth defect: six fingers on each hand. Which might have explained his obsession with sci-fi mystery weirdness.â I have argued that Fordâs ostracism cannot solely explain his patterns of abnormal behavior; now I propose that Fordâs autism and polydactyly are twin anomalies defining his central arc of alienation and belonging. Both constitute an experience unrelatable beyond reference to his peers, beyond words except those heâs internalized as their self-narrating zoo exhibit: âI am a freak.â But when Fordâs mirroring of Stan breaks down, when he accepts he canât be normal and embraces it, finding a place âwhere weirdos like me fit inâ lights up his eyes and world.
His light only falters knowing that indeed, âhis abnormally high IQ wasnât enoughâ for most of the world. Like many autistic people, Ford is labeled âgiftedâ: a state where his passion becomes âour ticket out of this dumpâ, âI worked so hard!â a basis for worth. âIn a place like that, I had to work twice as hardâ hits different for all of us whoâve had to be the perfect savant to justify our existence. We get to thinking that we have to save the world, that if people mistreat us itâs because we didnât perform enough exceptionalism to deserve better. But if someone is dedicated to dehumanizing you, trying to prove them wrong means absorbing the idea they could be right.
Itâs in this state that Ford absorbs Bill and vice versa. Bill repeats what everyone says about Fordâs intelligence, but without making him âearnâ it until enough frog-boiling that âsmart guyâ or âIQâ become his identity - for Bill to give as easily as take away. Bill exploits Fordâs need for companionship he shouldnât have to âearnâ, then insidiously reinforces the idea he does. And Bill betrays Ford, Bill abuses Ford, Bill others Ford through the interests he pretended to support, Bill causes Ford to trust no one because Ford can see him in everyone. Autistic people know this demon well, whether itâs a person or our internalizing voice or both, but itâs as inexplicable to the allistic world as the quiet violence we endure every day - voiceless yet present as the journalâs disappearing ink.
Fordâs consuming need for people to be what they seem and say what they mean culminates in the dramatic irony that he doesnât hear Stan (never what he seems) say âI didnât mean it!â Instead he only hears âitâ, one of the worst things an autistic person can hear: heâs not the brother Stan wanted him to be and his âdumb mysteriesâ -his identity- prevent him from loving his family correctly. For him and so many of us, these are the last words before abjection into nothing.
âŚuntil they arenât. Until Ford returns, driven underground but emerging when Dipper shares his light. Until the dramatic irony that Ford blaming himself for Billâs abuse and lamenting how âeasyâ it was absolves him to both characters and audience, who see it for the injustice it is. Until his abuserâs final threat is to violate his mind and weirdness magnetism with it (sound familiar?) and Ford heroically guards both. Until Ford and Stan can finally step into each otherâs shoes, finally validate unacknowledged experiences of abuse. Thatâs when Ford regains trust - when Stanâs actions speak louder than words (from him or his dark mirror, Bill) and Ford finally hears heâs worthy of love without having to give any part of himself in return.
Most importantly: Ford only embraces his special interest, only advocates acceptance of his difference with more dignity as he asks Stan for a second chance they both know he deserves. Ford doesnât have to change who he is and the narrative rewards him for it. He doesnât have to be âgratefulâ as if his lifeâs worth is a debt; any notion that he âowesâ his gifts to anyone burns with the journals. He doesnât have to fight back even when it seems impossible and do those things the world said he never could (but damn he delivers anyway). He only has to realize he canât and doesnât have to expect perfection from anyone, most of all himself, to find belonging.
The Mystery in the Mystery Shack is not a puzzle to be solved. Heâs a complexity of infinite sides and infinite outcomes. This reading of his story matters because we matter; his narrative speaks to an unspoken desperation and self-actualization we know ineffably. Like any marginalized group, autistic people deserve better than abjection or exploitation or conditional acceptance based on ârespectabilityâ or what we can do for others. We deserve to reclaim the stories where we see the patterns of our lives - whether in the textâs words or 3k of our own. Until the rest of the world does its part in changing for us, weâll carve out our own belonging wherever weirdness magnetism draws us; weâll find our own Gravity Falls.
very good, now make them lesbians
uncensored version and closeups under cut. I just don't know how tumblr would react on a lil bit of nudity. cw: bare tits (just in case)
click for better quality :3
god bless women
I wanted to draw fish more than ford lol
it shows, bro's kinda crooked don't mind him
look at him with fish. so happy to have the fish. let the old man have the fish
original pic under the cut
quick sketch to cheer our favorite old man victory
An animated comic based on the end scene from âNot What He Seemsâ
This is only the first page! See the rest   HERE  !!
So Gravity Falls has quickly become one of, if not my favorite, shows on television right now. Like most, the latest episode had a huge impact on me. I loved everything about it, the writing, the animation, the visuals, the voice acting, characterization, etc. There was so much love and thought and talent that had gone into every aspect that it really inspired me to make an homage to my favorite scene. So I hope you enjoy! And join me in pensive agony as we wait for the next episode this summer.Â
10/16/2024 EDIT:
So Iâm updating this post! Iâve been seeing enough people re-discovering it that I figured Iâd take out the broken link and put the rest of the pages up. Hope yâall enjoy =]
Hc that Ford gets a job at a local community college as a physics prof after he and Stan are done sailing around the world and fulfills his destiny as the eccentric professor he was always meant to be
And he quickly gains a reputation amongst the stem students as That Professor
I bet his ratemyprof reviews would be insane:
âHe didnât grade any of our homework until the end of the semester, but he brought something called a âplaidypusâ to class and let us pet it. Her name was Dorothy. 5/5â
âHe constantly ranted about how âtriangles are the most untrustworthy shapeâ whatever that means. Also he doesnât know how to use the internet. I hated his class. 5/5â
And many more iterations of âthis guy is terrible. 5 starsâ
sup, call me koya | she/her, autistic, 8teen | arts, reblogs, everything about my hyperfixation (current is gf) | fandoms: gravity falls, toh, su, forsaken (roblox) | !!DNI: proship, zoo, pedo!!! | ru/eng
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