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rakuen2011-01-14 02:17 pm
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Math time shenanigans
Characters: EveryoneIt's a bright and sunny weekday morning. The sort of morning one should be spending sleeping in, or failing that, outside playing with friends.
Format: Whatever
This log is: open
Location: Math class
Sadly for all of you, you're in this classroom studying logarithms. (Well, except for those of you who are cutting class. Good luck when finals roll around!) Right now, you've been split up into groups of three and four and should be quizzing each other on the questions from the end of the chapter in your textbook. If you're anything like ordinary high school students, though, you're probably discussing something completely different.
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"But-- differently? I thought everyone would learn math the same way. Where are you from?"
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"I... think it's the translation that's, um, being troublesome." For all that Grenn knew, that may partly have been in, except she could actually tell that her math book was in Standard Common Chinese, which all her schoolbooks ever had been in. So, no, it was simply the time difference.
"The book's probably written in the wrong language, and, er, attemtping to translate it for someone who isn't good at math..." Grenn paused and shrugged.
"You're not having any trouble?" When in doubt, reflect!
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There were those times when, suddenly, someone who'd lagged behind badly had shot up in the simulation results, but that wasn't the same... and that had nothing to do with getting someone to cheat the results for you, she knew this. No, it was something else. Something that was a big gaping hole in her head. Damn those memories.
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Anyway. "I could try to help you out if you're having trouble with it."
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Giving a sigh, Grenn put the book flat down on the table and waved at the open pages.
"That'd be nice..." And it was, but it would probably involve trying to unlearn changed formulas and whatnot. "But will that work? I mean," she pointed to a certain problem on the page. "I recognize this, but to me, there's something missing." In fact, to her, a whole step seemed to have been lost, the problem not yet finished as it was, even with the solution at the back of the book.
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"But even if they took away my memories of how to do math properly, the textbooks would still be right. Wouldn't they?" She put a hand to her chin in thought.
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Still. Frowning, Grenn looked at the book again. Whether it was true or not, it could work... "Maybe they just took away how you learn math, not my knowledge of it..?" Talking of memories, though...
"I wonder what sort of... logic they follow when memories are taken..."
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"That must be frustrating," Grenn said with a sympathetic smile, but at the same time that resparked her thoughts about memories. Some things they had forgotten were undeniably important, to who they were, or their present wherever that was, but other things...
"I noticed this morning I've forgotten the taste of oranges." That seemed completely random to her, and, while a bit annoying, technically not something she'd probably miss, in the long run. She hadn't even had that many oranges in her life.
Leaning forward, Grenn drew distractedly drew nonsenical shapes on the table.
"What if what's missing is both 'integral' and 'not integral' to us as persons? We don't know what memory we're getting back with each charm... we can't choose." Because, well, if she could, she'd get that big empty thing, Lyra's missing kisses and that stuff about flying back, cut her losses and demand to be taken home. Maybe the others weren't that important.
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"If we could choose, it would be too easy. Some of us might remember how to stop this game..."
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"Others might even just take the memories they know are important, and ignore the rest. That would also stop people playing." Because really... You forgot things every day, had been forgetting things since you were born. The difference here was that the brain hadn't chosen, and some of the things were undeniably important.