Entry tags:
- tlv: !ic,
- tlv: abel,
- tlv: alexander hilbert,
- tlv: angeal hewley,
- tlv: avalon,
- tlv: dimitri alexander blaiddyd,
- tlv: doug eiffel,
- tlv: elim rawne,
- tlv: francesca "franky" cook,
- tlv: iris wildthyme,
- tlv: james "bucky" barnes,
- tlv: jonathan reid,
- tlv: kirei kotomine,
- tlv: lark tennant,
- tlv: lestat de lioncourt,
- tlv: lester sheehan,
- tlv: mad sweeney,
- tlv: maggie garcia,
- tlv: malcolm bright,
- tlv: natalie scatorccio,
- tlv: neal caffrey,
- tlv: nita callahan,
- tlv: oscar,
- tlv: paul "jesus" rovia,
- tlv: raylan givens,
- tlv: root,
- tlv: rosita espinosa,
- tlv: steve rogers [captain america],
- tlv: will graham,
- tlv: xie lian,
- tlv: zack fair
IC contact for
lastvoyages
[If I don't have an active post up, feel free to use this post to have your character call, videochat, text, or knock on Shaw's door.]
no subject
She hesitates, aware of how much this undercuts her grumbling. She doesn't want to lie to them, though.
"I want to try to figure out what the colors mean myself. But words are still a hell of a lot more straight-forward than colors - it's the principle of the thing."
She holds the bracelet in both hands, though she doesn't put it on just yet. Instead, her focus is also on her own orb, which is slowly shifting to a deep, dark blue, the cloudiness solidifying into a more uniform hue.
"What the-- why's it doing that?" Shaw demands. After all, as far as she can tell, nothing has happened to make it change. "You think it's defective?"
no subject
When they get theirs back, they want to try to figure the colors out themself, too.
“That makes sense. I like that the colors can show more complexity, though. The bracelet only tells me about one emotion at a time.” Their orb had showed them more about the quality of their emotional state, rather than being limited to the content.
They watch as the gray on Shaw’s orb blends into the blue. “I wanted to see what would happen if I thought about how I felt after the shipwreck. Mine never changed when I was thinking about a feeling without experiencing it.”
Now that their focus is back on her, the orb might start shifting back to the way it was before. “Has the gray ever blended with another color like that before?”
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She tilts her head, studying the orb.
"So what do you think? Empathy for your past self? You ask me, that's not too far off from empathy for other people."
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“It could be empathy for my past self, or it could be that I have more familiarity with my emotions now. The last time someone asked me to imagine how I would feel in a particular situation, I was wrong.” They had felt more than they thought they would.
“Do you know what blue and black mean?”
no subject
She's clearly not sure about that one, but she does think that it's a pretty solid guess, based on her own experiences.
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“Sadness makes sense.” It sometimes feels empty, coming from other people. “I have no idea what anger would feel like to me.”
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It seems like something stronger than what they can feel, but so had grief. “Do you know why it comes easily to you?”
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She pauses, thinks - and then asks them a question that she very likely wouldn't ask anyone else.
"You got any theories?"
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They study her orb for a few more seconds, then hand it back to her. “Curiosity always came easily to me. It used to feel like a state of being rather than an emotion, but it helped me feel like I had a purpose.” It was part of what drove them to want a purpose at all. “I had trouble wanting to connect with people, so I wanted to know things about them instead. Curiosity was my mind’s way of replacing connection. Anger could be your mind’s way of replacing another emotion.”
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“Does your cheat sheet have passion on it?” They have no idea if the cheat sheets are meant to be a representation of what they can feel, but Shaw seemed to think of it that way.
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“Maybe,” they say. “The cheat sheet might not be a representation of everything you can feel, though. When mine changed, I think it was to add nuance, not because I was able to feel new emotions. Yours could be missing some nuance.” They might have never seen hers, but that was what theirs had done.