David made a smart move with sending Cinderella and Velvy away from the fight.
I mean Cindy can be simple minded when it comes to her Fairy Godmother.
However, this entry does bring up a question I have been having lately:
Given that the Shards are broken into pieces and that each piece messed up the stories and characters respectively. Does the same thing apply to the magic in certain Stories like Cinderella or Pinocchio ?
What I mean is that the powers of the magical beings in those stories are more messed up than the characters given their magic is torn apart bit by bit thanks to the shards ?
That’s a good question. It actually depends on who and what the invading shard is influencing, and any influencing shard dust as well. If you are asking how the story of Pinocchio and Cinderella are doing, that has not yet been address. It may be that the story is on “freeze” without their main characters but, as you will see in an upcoming Journal set which I can’t name yet because it gives too much away, there is a big effect on the characters left in the story. Some feel it, some don’t. Depends on if there is any shard dust left over, or if more than one shard fell into a story:) But, rest assured, the matter will be addressed.
Currently, I would say that Geppetto willingly left his own story, just as Goldie willingly left hers (All the heroes actually did. Makes you wonder about Velveteen being in the Gypsy forest when he is first spotted. Did he share the same story as they or did he enter a brand new story? Gets ya thinking, for sure ;)
I have heard that phrase all my life. At least the “For whom the bell tolls” part. I thought I knew the meaning. I assumed it was the bell tolling the death of someone in particular. I did not know the full of the partial poem, nor the full meaning.
Now, having looked it up, I am curious why you used it. Is it the reference to Hemingway’s book about a soldier in that particular South American? … Or to the original poem about caring who dies because we are all connected and it diminishes mankind to lose any of us?
… Duh. I am too existential. Obviously, you were referring to the tolling of the bell every hour which brings the visit of a new ghost. Gotcha. (<— feeling dumb)
David made a smart move with sending Cinderella and Velvy away from the fight.
I mean Cindy can be simple minded when it comes to her Fairy Godmother.
However, this entry does bring up a question I have been having lately:
Given that the Shards are broken into pieces and that each piece messed up the stories and characters respectively. Does the same thing apply to the magic in certain Stories like Cinderella or Pinocchio ?
What I mean is that the powers of the magical beings in those stories are more messed up than the characters given their magic is torn apart bit by bit thanks to the shards ?
That’s a good question. It actually depends on who and what the invading shard is influencing, and any influencing shard dust as well. If you are asking how the story of Pinocchio and Cinderella are doing, that has not yet been address. It may be that the story is on “freeze” without their main characters but, as you will see in an upcoming Journal set which I can’t name yet because it gives too much away, there is a big effect on the characters left in the story. Some feel it, some don’t. Depends on if there is any shard dust left over, or if more than one shard fell into a story:) But, rest assured, the matter will be addressed.
Currently, I would say that Geppetto willingly left his own story, just as Goldie willingly left hers (All the heroes actually did. Makes you wonder about Velveteen being in the Gypsy forest when he is first spotted. Did he share the same story as they or did he enter a brand new story? Gets ya thinking, for sure ;)
“Ask not for whom the bell tolls…”? :P
I have heard that phrase all my life. At least the “For whom the bell tolls” part. I thought I knew the meaning. I assumed it was the bell tolling the death of someone in particular. I did not know the full of the partial poem, nor the full meaning.
Now, having looked it up, I am curious why you used it. Is it the reference to Hemingway’s book about a soldier in that particular South American? … Or to the original poem about caring who dies because we are all connected and it diminishes mankind to lose any of us?
… Duh. I am too existential. Obviously, you were referring to the tolling of the bell every hour which brings the visit of a new ghost. Gotcha. (<— feeling dumb)