Dating me is wild;
You get a sage, a geek, a fellow traveler, a teller of tall tails, a friend, but mostly a guy comfortable with solitude.
Oh, I love this game!
Dating me is wild:
You get a chameleon who can probably match your interests with ease, and is good giving and game elsewhere, too; but whose warmth does not translate to love with ease, and probably won't ever, because that lil' ol' box of a heart is locked up something fierce, and carried around in a body perfectly comfortable being left the hell alone.
(😬 Part cat, part Grimm's Fairy Tale?)
Hmmmm, the first part reminded me of Kamala (not that one, lol), the empathic metamorph from ST:TNG. 🤓 🖖
You know me perfectly. :) That is secretly the episode of TNG that haunts me to my core.
Does she secretly want to be left the hell alone, though, like the likes of us??? 🤔
(That is secretly/now-not-so-secretly my favourite episode. The question of Self and Choice that it presents is, to my mind, one of the biggest in all of Trek.)
There were three on this year's Le Guin Award list that explore this question: Orbital, It Lasts Forever and Then It's Over, & Sift. The first uses the ISS to contemplate where we begin and end; the second is philosophical zombie fic; the third eradicates ego in a post-climate-change world.
Also, I think I mentioned The Employees to you (on the Arthur C. Clarke list some years back). That one is fantastic at meditating on the Self outside of Work. It's a great theme!
Thanks.
@MLClark @LiseL @Susandoyle
The idea of "self", what it is, how it is formed. Does it exist at all. What happens to it under stress. Is a slightly uncommon theme is SF. Yet there are a few books and stories that plunge right into the meat of this. I am horrible with titles and authors, but I can think of a half a dozen plots that evolve around this.
Not enough though, we need more.