

Greetings weary traveler.
​So in terms of an 'about page' I suppose it should lead someone to the hub of resources to get situated in this little... wow I really do keep changing the metaphor... blanket fort, sunflower patch, the moss-covered hollow beneath a magnolia's canopy (highly recommend finding a magnolia tree and sitting beside it for a while, staring at the sunlight blots between leaves.)
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Essentially, I write stories in hopes to unravel parts of experience, whether that be science or the internal world. In terms of 'unravel', I do mean 'make it overcomplicated for exploration's sake' at times. I wish I could simply topics like sciences and make it more accessible; that would be the goal; and I'll try my best... but I think the best way I could describe my purpose with this is this - I wish to invoke interest.
I can't promise perfectly simplified explanations, but I do promise to make sciences interesting, to make the human condition something to poke and prod and weave into something more comfortable. If I present something in a story and can't/forget to explain everything, then I hope it leads you, dear reader, to embark on your own research journey, and have all the fun in that. 'Teaching others to fish for themselves' and such.
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Overall - make your own meanings then cast them to the wind, feel free to discard my words and revel in the source material. Go cloud gazing for a while. It's quite nice.
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Now! Here's a quick explanation of the work-in-progress stories thus far!
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The Land of the Fallen Fairies - A houseplant dryad tries to regain faer broken, idyllic past through awakening ancient fungal pixies... who were shunned for a reason. This one's worldbuilding derives from mycorrhizal systems and tree relations, and the themes cover societal expectations, the pain of trying to keep an emotion as fickle as happiness, and the machoistic terror of dryads trying to rid of 'bad' fairies, habits, and parts of themselves. (I use machoistic to mean 'pleasure as a result of harming one's self'. None of the stories here have sexual content.)
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Teddy the Nightmare Warrior - A soul, unsatisfied after a paranormal disease took their life, fights paranormal nightmares in the body of a stuffed teddy bear. This one's worldbuilding derives from quantum physics, and the themes cover the pursuit of truth in a world where there is none.
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The biology story - A caspase-3, meant to cause the destruction of their cell, finds themself lost in the prospect of ending everything, and repeats their decisions over and over and over again to find the sense of satisfaction they crave. The worldbuilding comes from... biology, obviously. The themes deal with a sense of purpose and satisfaction, and the fear of taking the wrong path and ending up realizing you're dissatisfied, too late to do anything about it.