About the Author
When a mommy and daddy love each other very much, or drink very much, the stork comes and brings a parasite into their ecosystem. This parasite often has traits similar to the mommy and daddy called genes. These genes are traits dealing in many areas. Physical, mental, sociological, pathological, whatever.
The parasite then selfishly immerses itself in the surrounding environment, adapting to various clauses, finally adding further traits to its gene pool. This is often broken down as nature versus nurture. But the source doesn't matter. What matters is that the parasite is here, infesting and pillaging our resources. But the parasite can't help it. The parasite needs to survive. To thrive, it develops. By developing, it grows. By growing, it becomes independent.
The traits all add up until complications occur. After that, they continue multiplying until all that's left are new parasites to continue the cycle. People call this the way of life, I call it regurgitation. A constant recycling of traits.
A parasite lasts as long as it lasts, but its can leave lasting effects. Literature is not different. An author can die, but their published works can continue to survive.
Metempsychosis is the transfer of soul after passing, to human or animal. Palingenesis is essentially the same thing. Two different terms denoting the same principals through different channels and different roots. A perfect representation of the theme of my profile: a regurgitation of tropes and commonalities.
However, while I may be fine with plainly written copies of existing works for the purpose of roleplaying, I enjoy playing with perspectives and hypothetical deviations. This is just a fancy way of saying I like to write stories.
It doesn't matter how original I try to make it, doesn't matter how similar it is to something. If it's on my mind, I can put it to words. If I put it to words, I can play with the techniques of how to use them. If my concepts survive, I can make them thrive. If they thrive. they can develop. If they develop, they can grow. If they grow, they can become independent. Once concepts become nurtured to that degree, there's plenty more potential for higher levels of interaction. Collaboration, inspiration, representation, whatever. This is just a redundant example of how I can regurgitate old information and mold it into different information.
Preferred Writing Format
Any
Author's Genres
High Fantasy, Urban Fantasy, Fandom/Crossover, Magical Realism, Slice of Life, Comedy, Action, Adventure, Drama, Alternate Universe (AU), Dystopian, Horror, Romance, Paranormal Romance, Supernatural, Modern Fiction, Historical Fiction, Post-Apocalyptic, Cyberpunk, Science Fiction, Dark Fantasy, Fantasy