Jolyne Cujoh (
strings_theory) wrote in
irisnetwork2020-02-07 07:57 pm
UN: GreenDolphin
Real talk:
Does anyone here not have some kind of fucking childhood trauma bullshit? Goddamn, this is fucking pathetic to watch.
[YOU ARE LITERALLY ONE OF THEM, JOLYNE...]
Also, anyone that's got some anatomy knowledge, I have a quick question: how long does it generally take for someone to bleed out from a minor wound? Enough to need stitches but not enough to require surgery otherwise. Asking for my own curious brain, I swear to fuck I haven't done anything to warrant this question. Just idle weird thoughts.
Okay, actually, one more question. Skin grows back, doesn't it??????
Does anyone here not have some kind of fucking childhood trauma bullshit? Goddamn, this is fucking pathetic to watch.
[YOU ARE LITERALLY ONE OF THEM, JOLYNE...]
Also, anyone that's got some anatomy knowledge, I have a quick question: how long does it generally take for someone to bleed out from a minor wound? Enough to need stitches but not enough to require surgery otherwise. Asking for my own curious brain, I swear to fuck I haven't done anything to warrant this question. Just idle weird thoughts.
Okay, actually, one more question. Skin grows back, doesn't it??????

no subject
[Help him here Jolyne???]
Yes. Potentially days, if the last time I tried it is correct.
[
uhhhhhhhhh]
Hm, well - the body will always attempt to regrow some sort of covering, thankfully. Though again, it does depend on how much of the epidermal layer was taken away.
no subject
Can someone literally just be a human blob of flesh with no skin, that's what I really need to know. What is the answer.
no subject
[Mrs. Moriarty was SOMETHING, alright.]
And...Yes, if it was done over time. Of course, it's more than possible to reduce a human to little more than a torso with no way to see or hear the outside world as long as the brain is still functioning - such things genuinely happened during the world wars, after all.
[OH BOY IS IT MORBID FACT CORNER TIME.]
no subject
Wait.
Waitwaitwait.
That actually fucking happened?
[Unfortunately this is Jolyne so of course she's not all that bothered and more intrigued than anything else.]
no subject
However, that sort of condition is an extreme one. More common is the loss of being able to make involuntary muscle movements - the so called 'locked-in' syndrome.
[He's always up for teaching, man!]
no subject
Locked-in syndrome? See, this is the kinda shit they don't teach in schools. Or at least not the ones I went to. This shit is far more interesting than what they were going on about.
[Like history. History's dumb.]
no subject
[He's grinning as he stares down at his phone at that last bit.]
A little self-study never hurt anyone - there are all sorts of interesting conditions, like being unable to register your hand as your own - Alien Hand Syndrome. Or seeing someone who is a loved one as a stranger or imposter - Capgras syndrome, though that goes much more in hand with Dementia. However, both syndromes can be developed with the 'right' kind of brain trauma, you see.
no subject
[She's far too curious about shit for her own good, obviously. And is absolutely writing down these things to read about later.]
That's... because the human brain is really kinda fragile, right? Like, it's pretty much a ductape monstrosity that somehow works until something comes along to jostle it?
no subject
And yes - it is quite fragile. Speaking from experience, it's quite easy to have trauma fracture the conscious mind into an utterly destroyed state.