Padmé Amidala (
aggressive_negotiations) wrote in
tramitem_net2020-06-07 10:01 pm
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Entry tags:
video; introductions
[The video opens up into a small but well decorated home office. Behind Smith is a bookshelf with titles ranging from "To Kill and Mockingbird" and Sun Tzu's "The Art of War." There are photos of Smith with prominent local leaders, and several awards issued to her for services to the community.
There's a space right behind her, in full view of the camera, where someone who didn't build their career on social media optics might hang their degree. Smith regularly uses this home office to live stream town hall meetings and council Q&A's. People want evidence that you're smart, but they don't want you being too obvious about it.
Instead, there's a piece of artwork with her favorite quote on it: "I have loved the stars too fondly to be fearful of the night." It's from a poem called The Old Astronomer by Sarah Williams. Her parents gave it to Smith when she first decided to run for local office.
The entire background paints a picture before Smith has to say a word: Competent, but not arrogant. Approachable. Ready to listen, and with resources to offer.]
Hello. [A smile.] My name is Leia Smith -- please feel free to call me Smith. All my friends do. Some of you may have seen me at the support group, or at the wonderful event at Rockaway Beach. Or you may recognize me from my work as District 7's city councilperson. I apologize for not formally introducing myself sooner. As I am sure you are all aware, when one's world view is turned upside down...[She looks off camera for a moment, considering her words.]
It takes you a moment to regroup, doesn't it? [She looks back at the camera. Relaxed, but full of purpose.]
I've had my moment. Now, I'd like to help. Most immediately, I'd like to connect members of this community with additional resources to help navigate the challenges that come with being...[There's a clear measure of distaste, as she echos The Bureau's words.] "Different."
What's happening to us isn't normal. And yet, we live in a society that demands we go on as if it is. There's rent, holding down a job, trying to maintain one's mental health -- many of the daily demands of life become that much more difficult when you're processing a trauma. So if these events have impacted your ability to do any of those things -- please let me know. I will do my best to help.
There's a space right behind her, in full view of the camera, where someone who didn't build their career on social media optics might hang their degree. Smith regularly uses this home office to live stream town hall meetings and council Q&A's. People want evidence that you're smart, but they don't want you being too obvious about it.
Instead, there's a piece of artwork with her favorite quote on it: "I have loved the stars too fondly to be fearful of the night." It's from a poem called The Old Astronomer by Sarah Williams. Her parents gave it to Smith when she first decided to run for local office.
The entire background paints a picture before Smith has to say a word: Competent, but not arrogant. Approachable. Ready to listen, and with resources to offer.]
Hello. [A smile.] My name is Leia Smith -- please feel free to call me Smith. All my friends do. Some of you may have seen me at the support group, or at the wonderful event at Rockaway Beach. Or you may recognize me from my work as District 7's city councilperson. I apologize for not formally introducing myself sooner. As I am sure you are all aware, when one's world view is turned upside down...[She looks off camera for a moment, considering her words.]
It takes you a moment to regroup, doesn't it? [She looks back at the camera. Relaxed, but full of purpose.]
I've had my moment. Now, I'd like to help. Most immediately, I'd like to connect members of this community with additional resources to help navigate the challenges that come with being...[There's a clear measure of distaste, as she echos The Bureau's words.] "Different."
What's happening to us isn't normal. And yet, we live in a society that demands we go on as if it is. There's rent, holding down a job, trying to maintain one's mental health -- many of the daily demands of life become that much more difficult when you're processing a trauma. So if these events have impacted your ability to do any of those things -- please let me know. I will do my best to help.
video;
Hey! Saw you at the party! I meant to say hi and thank you for coming. Sorry about that.
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Hi. I apologize, I didn't get the change to thank you for throwing such a great event.
no subject
I'm glad everyone enjoyed it. Hopefully we can have more meet-ups like that in the future. I think it did a lot of good.
I'm Elliott, by the way. It's nice to meet you.
no subject
Very nice to meet you properly, Elliott.
video;
Hey, there. I'm Garrett York, but everyone calls me York. I guess right off the bat that gives us something in common.
no subject
[Okay -- this isn't so different from any other virtual town hall. Maybe even a little better -- no one's co-opted the feed to try and plug vitamin supplements or Lularoe.]
Did someone give you a nickname, or are you just not a fan of your first name?
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What about for you?
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[She shrugs.]
After that, it just kinda stuck.
[It wasn't anything that was hard for her to give up. She's never quite felt like her first name suites her. Abstractly, she likes Leia. It's a pretty name. But it's never felt like a fit.]
no subject
So how's it going since you found out you were one of us? You keeping it together?
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[She shrugs.]
That, or curl into balls and never leave our beds.
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[She looks at a picture of her parents, sitting on her desk.]
I think the important thing to remember is that our lives here aren't any less real.
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video;
It's strange, isn't it? How crazy everything goes, and then how normal it goes back to being. I've had days where I don't want to leave my room, and then days where I feel like I can do anything, and I can trace a lot of it back to all this. I just want... well, no. I don't want things to go back to normal. Not anymore. There are too many things I don't want to lose. But I want to feel comfortable again. That seems to come and go for me, and I'm tired of it. [Lisa suddenly realizes nothing stops this woman from going back and reading the network's post history, and abruptly has. A small fear.]
The beach helped a lot, the other day. That was me playing music that evening, in fact.
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She listens to Lisa, not judging. The girl seems authentic, and that goes a long way in Smith's eyes.]
That's how I recognize you. The music was wonderful. Have you played long?
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[She shrugs, and gestures to one of the awards positioned behind her.]
Eager gets things done. I think women are punished for wanting things in a way men aren't. We're called eager, shallow, anything in between. Personally, I'm over it. You like music and you put on a great show. That's something to be proud of.
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But that's not why you're here, honestly. Welcome to our little corner of reality, where everything's topsy-turvy and nobody knows what's going on. I'm happy with my own memories, but I'm not confident anyone else is, most days. I'm a little behind on my usual round of visits to the support meetings - are you holding up all right? I know it took me a bit to adjust. Or, well. I say adjust like I am adjusting well. It's a work in progress.
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[She thinks on that, for a moment.]
Although I guess that's a good thing.
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First, hello again.
But, uh, how? And how are you going to find psychologists who won't, you know, lock us up? The Bureau doesn't exist outside of our collective knowledge of them.
no subject
[She does not blush, and anyone who thinks she might be blushing should maybe mind their own business. She clears her throat before answering his question.]
Lock us up? You have had some really crappy therapists.
no subject
How many therapists do you know would believe in the possibility of 'other lives'? Or, what I think are memories implanted by the government?
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[She repeats, with air quotes.]
At least according to my therapist.
[Smith's a chronic overachiever; of course she has a therapist. She says it without any hint of embarrassment - she wouldn't be embarrassed about seeing a chiropractor; she doesn't view mental health as any different.]
I've just been talking around the thing. Using it as a metaphor.
no subject