sophie. 17. INTJ. she/her.
i don't know where to begin explaining what you'll find here.
  1. Steve: [in a crowd and can't find bucky] 'this calls for drastic measures'
  2. Steve: [uses his hands as a microphone] "STEVE ROGERS SUCKS!"
  3. Bucky: [from across the room] "what the FUCK DID YOU JUST SAY"
  4. Steve: "there he is"

c8h9no250mg:

Steve is very flexible about his workspaces

Bucky gives zero fucks

starrr-prince:

onethingconstant:

agentnicdown:

  • Steve, Bucky, and Thor chilling after a battle, sharing some of Thor’s special brew because they’re the only ones who can handle it.
  • Thor setting the hammer on a table and grinning at Steve, Care for another try?
  • Steve shrugging good-naturedly and taking hold of the handle. Sure, why not.
  • Thor watching nervously while pretending not to be nervous.
  • Steve budging the hammer.
  • Thor LOLing.
  • It would seem that you are still simply unworthy, Captain.
  • Bucky snorting, tossing back the rest of his drink, and stepping up next to Steve. Are you kidding me? Move aside, Rogers.
  • Bucky grabbing the handle with his metal arm and pulling and pulling and glaring and looking to Steve.
  • Give me a hand.
  • That’s not how it works, Buck.
  • Just get over here, ya punk.
  • Steve grabbing hold just above Bucky’s clenched fist.
  • Thor LOLing in the background.
  • Bucky and Steve getting ready, Steve beginning with On the count of 3. 1, 2, 3–
  • And the hammer lifts off the table so easily that the two stumble back, shocked, hands still clasped one above the other.
  • Silence.
  • Bucky and Steve hold the hammer in the air and look at Thor in unison.
  • Thor stares wide-eyed.
  • Well, he begins after a few more moments, … if there are no pictures, it never happened.
  • Bucky yelling for Nat or Sam to get their butts in the room to take a photo before Thor can call the hammer back to him and growling Don’t let go Steve for fuck’s sake DON’T LET GO–

ACCEPTED SO HARD.

NEITHER of them thinks that they are worthy, but they both believe that the other is so their faith in one another balances it out

sayurikoori:
“ mechinaries:
“ the next song on their playlist is Anaconda and you bet your ass they know every single lyric
”
HELLO ==>http://8tracks.com/dwarrows/steve-and-bucky-s-totally-awesome-and-completely-serious-workout-mix
”

sayurikoori:

mechinaries:

the next song on their playlist is Anaconda and you bet your ass they know every single lyric

HELLO  ==>http://8tracks.com/dwarrows/steve-and-bucky-s-totally-awesome-and-completely-serious-workout-mix

“Much has been made of the fact that Bucky Barnes is one of the few people to recognize the greatness in Steve Rogers before his transformation into Captain America. Much has also been made of the fact that, in The First Avenger, Bucky demonstrably feels conflicted about that transformation. Less noted, however, is how Bucky’s sense of conflict and resentment—and the way he dealt with those feelings—reveals the kind of person he truly is. The narrative motif of the man who can recognize greatness in another but not attain it himself, and who is therefore corrupted by his resentment, is a classic trope. It appears in such literary masterpieces as Dumas’ The Count of Monte Cristo, Melville’s Billy Budd, and Schaefer’s Amadeus. However, the story of Bucky Barnes is one of a man who recognizes a greatness he cannot himself achieve and is not corrupted by that recognition. Unlike the villains of the above-mentioned tales, Bucky Barnes comes to terms with the situation, choosing friendship over envy—and heroism over villainy—something that suggests a greatness within Bucky Barnes that Bucky himself is not aware of. But Steve Rogers, of course, is. Just as Bucky is one of the few people to recognize Steve’s greatness; Steve is one of the few people to recognize Bucky’s. Both of them know each other better than they know themselves, and it is that parallel knowledge that ultimately saves them both.”