ext_82219 ([identity profile] shahni.livejournal.com) wrote in [community profile] fandomsecrets2007-05-18 02:53 pm

[ SECRET POST #133 ]


⌈ Secret Post #133 ⌋

Warning: Some secrets are NOT worksafe and may contain SPOILERS.

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Notes:

- Posting for Sonny-Boy! Last day to submit secrets for next week!

Secrets Left to Post: 00 pages, 00 secrets from Secret Submission Post #019.
Secrets Not Posted: 0 broken links, [1] not!secrets, 0 not!fandom.
Next Secret Post: Tomorrow, Saturday, May 19th, 2007.
Current Secret Submission Post: Here.
Suggestions, comments, and concerns should go here.

(Anonymous) 2007-05-19 03:57 am (UTC)(link)
I don't think most of them actually hear the voices. It's like having imaginary friends; you like pretending that they exist, that you can see and hear them because they're real people, but deep down you know it's only a game. Some people take it way too far, but it's not schizophrenia until the person is actually incapable of distinguishing fact from fiction.

It's just really fucking weird.

[identity profile] climbatize.livejournal.com 2007-05-19 03:41 pm (UTC)(link)
Do you mean soulbonders or people with schizophrenia? Because if you're talking about soulbonders, you've really got the definition off.

(Anonymous) 2007-05-19 08:14 pm (UTC)(link)
Sorry if I wasn't clear or if I misunderstood or something. Er, I'll try explaining myself, and you can tell me if I'm still wrong.

Truth is I don't know much about soulbonding, so maybe the line isn't as clear as I'd have thought. Maybe I don't even have the right definition... the ones who explained the concept of it to me haven't had an experience like that, so I guess they wouldn't know what it's really like.

You don't see or hear characters like you would a real person, do you? You know that they're fictional; you just feel a very strong connection with them, as if they were more than just words and images, as if they were living, breathing, thinking people that just didn't happen to be on the same plane of existance. And eventually they sink in and become a part of you, so they're not so much characters anymore but another piece of your personality. Is that right? It's not quite the way it was explained, but I get that sort of thing sometimes (not so extreme though). Most writers do, I think. It starts getting a bit weird when the person stops refering to herself as one person because then it sounds like DID... but whatever.

Schizophrenia would actually be seeing them and hearing them and not being able to tell if the character was a real person or a hallucination. Really, the point of that post was that soulbonding =/= schizophrenia. :D;;

[identity profile] climbatize.livejournal.com 2007-05-19 10:06 pm (UTC)(link)
Ooh, that was a really, really wonderful explanation. ♥

Soulbonding is something different for everyone, I think. I know someone who just experiences it as feeling the character's presence, but then for me, it is like DID. My soulbonds have always been separate people, so while it maybe starts with some deep bond with a fictional character, after that, it's more like I just meet all these people who happen to have fictional origins. So the initial empathy comes from them having similar pasts. If that made any sense... I'm terrible at explaining things, so, um, sorry. ^^;; And normally they're not too much like the characters at all, and don't like to be compared to them. (Sometimes I don't even like the original character. XD)

I think your definition is what it's like for most people, though, except for the referring to yourself as one person thing, because while I am one person, all my bonds are definitely separate people too. I think all soulbonders would agree on that.

But, yeah, I know they're not actual outside people. Soulbonders don't actually see or hear anything, and it's not at all like schizophrenia. So, best comment ever. :D You rock.