Does the thing preventing Amanda from being hot all the time have to be attached to her hair? If you could have it maybe made as a locket, then when you forget to draw it it could be underneath her shirt. 😀
Not a bad question but pain can be relative. Doing physical training can cause pain in the muscles, but that doesn’t mean that it is always bad. It would be a good idea for the parents to find out what are signs of over exertion relating to the echo abilities, if they haven’t already. It probably would have been a good idea to have a fully trained echo go over everything with tthe grandparents before the conversation with the kids. Going over what is normal vs what isn’t and what to expect. I wouldn’t trust the kids to have a very good idea of what is normal yet, especially with the inhibitor that Selkie’s mom made involved with the whole process. Even an expert might not know fully what to expect due to that. Still, not a bad idea to check in on how the kids are mentally and physically doing (even if they do have to push through the fear and/or pain in order to make sure that they can control it). You don’t really want to normalize pain even if some pain is a part of the process.
Pain can also be relative in sometimes you got so much going on physically you miss some pains. When the truck hit me I could feel the broken hip as pain in my upper femur, but I couldn’t feel the other break in my femur, the tib-fib fractures, or the gigantic hole opposite of where the truck hit my lower leg, or the road rash on my forearms from sliding down the street after I stopped flipping on all three axis and flying through the air.
Does the thing preventing Amanda from being hot all the time have to be attached to her hair? If you could have it maybe made as a locket, then when you forget to draw it it could be underneath her shirt. 😀
If a double negative is a positive, what’s a quadruple negative?
Double positive?
Good on Grandma for trying to learn, though. <3
Right, because kids LOVE doing things for fun that hurt. Grandma logic activated.
Not a bad question but pain can be relative. Doing physical training can cause pain in the muscles, but that doesn’t mean that it is always bad. It would be a good idea for the parents to find out what are signs of over exertion relating to the echo abilities, if they haven’t already. It probably would have been a good idea to have a fully trained echo go over everything with tthe grandparents before the conversation with the kids. Going over what is normal vs what isn’t and what to expect. I wouldn’t trust the kids to have a very good idea of what is normal yet, especially with the inhibitor that Selkie’s mom made involved with the whole process. Even an expert might not know fully what to expect due to that. Still, not a bad idea to check in on how the kids are mentally and physically doing (even if they do have to push through the fear and/or pain in order to make sure that they can control it). You don’t really want to normalize pain even if some pain is a part of the process.
Grandma being a good role model right there. Concerned but open minded
Pain can also be relative in sometimes you got so much going on physically you miss some pains. When the truck hit me I could feel the broken hip as pain in my upper femur, but I couldn’t feel the other break in my femur, the tib-fib fractures, or the gigantic hole opposite of where the truck hit my lower leg, or the road rash on my forearms from sliding down the street after I stopped flipping on all three axis and flying through the air.