
And this is *why& you ought to think before you take up Saara's suggestions. The difference between her and Tangel' is that Saara is damn near indestructable, and Tangel' is like you and me... all too human.
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I would love to read something about Saraa and her species some time. Unless I have missed it in your journal, I would like to learn more about your signature character and what she is about. Aside from being rather comely, I should like to know how a creature can survive without some breathable gas, extraordinary heat and cold, and total submersion in deep mud. That would be an interesting read I guarantee!
I've written bits and pieces about Saara (and Tangel' among the uplaods to my gallery. It would be a bit much to expect you to have read them all. Yet explaining Saara is quite an undertaking. I might be ableto assemble some previous texts for a future journal though.
I'd love to share my thoughts on her at length in the future perhaps. I have read some but not all. I tend to take a heavily realistic approach to How and Why. Evolutionarily speaking, she couldn't really exist. Either that or perhaps she comes from a parallel universe with entirely different physics at it's disposal. Either way, I hope not to take up too much space here. She's definitely intriguing enough to warrant deeper study...especially with the subject matter she appears in most often ;)
Kjola tech & Teh Langgi physiology aside, but I'm reminded of a story my Grandmother told from her life on a farm in the Rockies - one of the farm hands got both of his feet frost-bitten one winter and he wound up sitting in the kitchen with his feet in a big bucket of _snow_, reading magazines while they slowly thawed. A somewhat different tableau from this, but perhaps not unconnected .
Ooo... lucky he had feet after that. People have long believed that you should thaw frost-bitten limbs quickly. but they believed wrong. It might prevent a sudden rush of blood to the affected member, which can be very painful. But delaying the return of warm blood also increases the risk of permanent damage. Luke warm water would probably have been best, followed with warmer water.
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