Entry tags:
☤3
[The same question was still plaguing Muraki even weeks after his arrival. It was clear enough that it was the person who had tried to kill him was his loss. And while he remembered nothing - no detail or memory at all of that person directly - there was the rest of it to lead him there. Notably the boy. Which meant that whoever it was had to be a shinigami.
But of course, as much as he might try, it was unlikely that the Ministry of Hades had a manifest of it's personnel in Paradisa's library.
Nor could ask about that directly. Most humble doctors didn't know intimate details about the workings of the afterlife.]
It occurs to me that even with all the difference between the people here there is at least one thing that is common to most of us.
Death.
Doctors fight it every day in some form. But in the end it's fighting a symptom of an inevitable end, no matter the cause. But mortality isn't a physical enemy you can face down and win.
So it interests me that for some the manifestation of death can be a real thing. There's various kinds of death mythology I've run across - the Grim Reaper in the West, shinigami in the East, angels of death in Christianity, Thanatos in the Greek pantheon. All entities that can be evaded or outsmarted by more cunning mortals.
Considering the nature of some of the residents here, I thought it might be possible that for some of you, such things are more than myth.
So, tell me, friends, about death in your world. How does it work? Have you had any direct contact with such beings? Have you fought it in your own way?
I am, as they say, all ears.
[He'll be ensconced in some corner of the library as he awaits answers, continuing his search in vain, a table stacks with all manner of references to manifestations of death]
But of course, as much as he might try, it was unlikely that the Ministry of Hades had a manifest of it's personnel in Paradisa's library.
Nor could ask about that directly. Most humble doctors didn't know intimate details about the workings of the afterlife.]
It occurs to me that even with all the difference between the people here there is at least one thing that is common to most of us.
Death.
Doctors fight it every day in some form. But in the end it's fighting a symptom of an inevitable end, no matter the cause. But mortality isn't a physical enemy you can face down and win.
So it interests me that for some the manifestation of death can be a real thing. There's various kinds of death mythology I've run across - the Grim Reaper in the West, shinigami in the East, angels of death in Christianity, Thanatos in the Greek pantheon. All entities that can be evaded or outsmarted by more cunning mortals.
Considering the nature of some of the residents here, I thought it might be possible that for some of you, such things are more than myth.
So, tell me, friends, about death in your world. How does it work? Have you had any direct contact with such beings? Have you fought it in your own way?
I am, as they say, all ears.
[He'll be ensconced in some corner of the library as he awaits answers, continuing his search in vain, a table stacks with all manner of references to manifestations of death]

no subject
I fought it, in the beginning. In time, though, I began to believe the opposite of being doomed to die was far worse.
no subject
no subject
Or a trillion? Everything is gone... but you still exist.
no subject
I wonder how the gods manage it.
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
...Speaking from experience?
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
Did he know how the castle does it?
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
I didn't. It came to me in an accident.
no subject
Though I imagine that means you wouldn't know how to replicate the results?
no subject
And what about your world, hm?
no subject
Personally, coming from Tokyo, the shinigami myth [lol] is one of the more common beliefs.
no subject
Why, looking to live a few more decades?
no subject
no subject
no subject