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Morelitea

Kimimela

As soon as she could walk, Kimimela was asking questions. Simple questions at first; how did the flowers bloom, why was the sky quite so blue? What made the stream flow one way and not the other? All of these and many, many more were patiently answered by the adults around her, but like many curious children, answers only led to more questions. And soon enough, those questions weren't quite so simple anymore; how do I choose who to share my extra snacks with? If I hurt someone how do I make them feel better? Answers became longer, and more complex, but they were still always there, the adults around the young bison able to bring some perspective, advice, or response together.

'Mimi' recalls the day she asked something that had no answer. She had been playing with a butterfly in the prairie, dancing and leaping between the wildflowers, when a passing flycatcher swooped down on the wing, fluttered his wings in greeting, and shot back into the sky... but not without snagging a small snack on the wing. Shocked, Mimi had retreated to her mother and related the whole tale. Distraught, she tried to understand what had happened, why one animal might eat another, and at last when her mother answered that it was how nature was, that sometimes one thing needed to eat another to survive, Mimi sniffled and asked why butterflies were okay, and why fish were okay, but other animals weren't, and what made a butterfly so different from a bird, or a bison? At which, all her mother could do is to shake her head, murmuring that maybe she'd understand better when she was older.

Mimi isn't sure that she understands any better these days. Really, it seems to her that growing up has only led to more and more questions with difficult answers, or simply no answers at all. And yet she cannot help but to keep asking them, thinking about what it means to make others happy or to do 'what's right'. Fortunately for the young bison, it was questions like these that caught the attention of another bison, revered and respected across all the bands of creatures who lived and traveled the great plains at the heart of the Mycorzhan Isles. And so it was that one day while sitting atop a small rise in the grass, under the shade of a small burr oak, Kimimela was joined by another. Elder Tanaka, one of the most well spoken and respected leaders of her band, casually sat down beside her and asked her about her day, leaving her to stumble and stammer something, rising to cede the space to him. He only smiled gently, patted the ground, and asked her if she wouldn't stay and provide an old creature some company while the sun settled towards the horizon.

The following few years have left Mimi's head truly spinning at all of the changes that have occurred in her life. Brought into the Elder's shade, she was brought to meeting fires, met other leaders amongst the prairie bands, and found that her questions were not foolish or misdirected, but the stuff of hours-long conversation by those who the bands all looked to for guidance. As she sat and listened long into the nights she found her timidity slowly peeling away under the gentle support of Tanaka, until she felt sure enough to raise a hoof and ask questions of her own. The notice this has brought down upon her sent her spiraling into anxiety at first, but she righted her mind and continued to wade back into the thick of the conversations, until now she speaks with a confidence that, in her own mind, is only sometimes feigned.

Stepping into adulthood and the responsibilities of being a leader has had its downsides as well. Mimi finds her relationships drifting, fading, re-settling into new shapes and ties. Her friend group is full of other young adults from across the Isles, brought together by messages, moot-visits, and a common conversation of what it means to listen and learn from the elders at the fires. There is less time for family, and old friendships and acquaintances fade or fray and leave aches and hurts behind, and questions which Mimi ponders late at night, gazing up into the stars. Still, even if she does feel lost more often than not, she remains certain that this is her calling, and that her hooves are on the path she wants to tread.

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I ask a lot of questions, but eventually the only answer I got back was that I would have to figure things out myself. Which is hard enough, but figuring things out for others is something else entirely. I just hope that I can manage it!

Emotional Ties

Creatures & places of the Isles which hold personal meaning for this character

Old Chief Tanaka

I'm just... it is such an honor to be taught by Elder Tanaka, and I have to make sure that I give it my all. To impress him! I'm sure you understand; it's not like I asked for him to teach me, and it's really, really important to me. Because... because it isn't anything like what I expected, if that makes sense? He's Elder Tanaka, but the more we talk, the more I realize that... he's just Tanaka, a Mycorzhan, just like any of us. And the only difference is that, when other creatures had questions that needed answers, well, he was willing to try to answer them? Even if he got it wrong, or had to try a bunch of times. And that's who I want to be, I think.

Dakota

Oh, 'Kota... I just got so busy with lessons with Elder Tanaka, and then there was travel and meeting other young creatures who were trying to take on more responsibilities, and there were meetings and... but it's my fault, really, that we don't talk as much anymore. I mean, Dakota took it pretty hard, especially when I disagreed with her at the open council fire. There were... words, after, and she's not speaking to me. But she'll come around, right? We were best friends as kids! And I don't even think she's wrong in her ideas per se, it's that most Mycorzhans need time, to get used to new ideas I mean. 'Kota's always played fast and loose with things, and that's just not who I can be anymore, and I know that hurts her. But I have to think of the group first! Meet Dakota

Plains of Greater Mycorzha

It's the smell that I always think of first, when I think of home. The different smells really, because there are so many: juniper, the sweet grasses, the smell before the rains and the smell after. Smoke on the wind, and pollen in the springtime. Sometimes creatures look at the plains and they think it all looks the same, and I don't understand, because it's all so different! Day to day, season to season, place to place - different flowers, different smells, different soil. It's always changing... just like us! Learn about the Greater Plains of Mycorzha

Mycorzha

I'm only just starting to get to know the Isles, it feels like. I still haven't been to the City, although I've met some creatures at the great meet at Arda. But I've been to the desert, and Hazelmoss of course, and once to Fern Leaf - although I was only a calf then, so I'm not sure it counts. Some day, I hope to go to every corner of our islands; how else am I supposed to understand who everyone that lives here is? The land shapes us and who we are, how we think, and so if I want to make sure that I'm helping everyone, I need to know where they're all coming from - and where they're from in the first place! Learn about Mycorzha