Jono Starsmore (
furnaceface) wrote in
fandomhigh2015-04-17 08:36 am
Entry tags:
Powers, Identity, and The World; Embracing the Real You - Friday, Period One
//Right. So... We don't have much of a discussion prepared for today,// Jono admitted, looking a touch sheepish. //This semester apparently hasn't been much good for that. But we haven't cashed in our 'movie day' get out of jail free card yet, either, so I found an old episode of the Y-People cartoon to show, and then we can discuss it afterward. How you felt about the situation of the young girl, your opinion on the animation, whatever you wish. It's topical, at least.//
He shrugged his shoulders, and then slid a Y-People VHS into an old VCR, because that was just how the 90s rolled, okay?
[Open!]
He shrugged his shoulders, and then slid a Y-People VHS into an old VCR, because that was just how the 90s rolled, okay?
[Open!]

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//That you have so much bloody potential, Kathy, and you needed to sell your soul for a cursed mirror in order to even begin to believe that.//
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That wasn't what she expected him to say. She wasn't sure what she expected, really, but it wasn't that. Maybe for him to take her to task for needed two weeks to do the right thing?
But not this. Not for him to be disappointed for her as well as at her.
"I know I have potential, sir." Sorry Jono. The more unsettled she felt in front of authority, the more formal she got. "I've been trying to live up to it my whole life?"
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//I'm not talking about whatever potential it is that the world around you has defined for you. That potential isn't worth the breath that was used to speak about it,// he said, simply. //I mean actual, real potential. The sort that you define. Those glimpses that you caught of yourself in that fantasy trinket are nothing compared to whatever it is that you could someday make of yourself.//
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He just liked leaving her at a loss for words. That was the only thing Kathy could really figure. He just liked saying things that were full of so much compassion and understanding that, even when delivered as a lecture and meant as one, she was just left staring at him, mouth open, like an idiot.
"You mean if I don't screw it up?" she asked, trying to put this conversation back onto a script that she knew the lines for.
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"That's not how I'm used to thinking about it," she confessed.
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That didn't mean he was always smart about it, but at least he was somewhat more at peace with it.
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They'd all seen how well that had gone.
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There was a pause, and then he gestured for the seat at the desk.
//If you'd like to talk about it, luv, I might have some idea of what it is you're aiming for.//
He'd spent plenty of time in tights. He liked to think he knew that sort of look about a person, by now.
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He was very careful to not say it was his job. While it technically was, that wasn't why he was here every week, after all. He hardly needed to draw a paycheque to get by, after all.
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"Okay," she said, still looking like she wasn't entirely sure whether to believe him, but willing to extend the benefit of the doubt. "Looking back, though, it all seems pretty stupid. Petty. Like when you were little and you were convinced that the one thing you wanted in all the world was that year's huge media-tie-in toy."
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A beat.
//Never again.//
Helpful, Jono.
//Still, it was what I wanted to be. Petty though it was. I can look back now and realize how ridiculous it was, but that doesn't change the fact that it was a large part of my identity.//
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Look Kathy, Jono knew how this game was played. He'd been playing it for a long, long time.
//Peers of yours in your extracurricular hobbies?//
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And then pulled out his phone.
And turned it on.
And flicked through the photos.
And then handed it over to her.
//I maintain that if it works for you, fine. Dress however the hell you like. It's the work you do as a hero that matters in the eyes of the heroes around you, let them judge you by your merits. And if they won't, then they're not worth the time it takes to worry about it.//
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"Uhhh...Why--?"
Hopefully that encompassed all of them.
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That answered at least two of those questions, anyway.
//They still looked to me as de facto leader when a handful of us were separated from the one who actually was in charge and left for dead, though.//
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Ah, there.
//Jubilee.//
It had been the nineties. For the record.
//Smallest, youngest. Not the only girl, granted, but her powerset involved making cute little fireworks. And after we all lost our powers, she was the one who stepped up to lead a team of superheroes. Just think about that for a moment. She never had the most impressive ability to start with. And then, without her powers at all, she was leading superheroes. Kicking ass and chewing bubblegum, half the size of everyone on her team, and saving bloody lives in yellow and pink.//
So, go on and tell him some more about how you have no potential because you're a tiny girl with a cute costume and bouncing powers, Kathy. Because Jono was going to call bullshit.
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Maybe one of the reasons Jubilee stepped up with no one else did was because she was already used to not relying on her powers, so she wasn't as lost without them.
"And...it's not so much that I'm denying my potential? It was the mirror showing me everyone else recognizing it, too."
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Sigh.
At least he was good at tamping things like that down so far nobody could see them.
//Alright, let's say for argument's sake that you're right. That your fellow heroes look down on you for whatever reason. You're short, you're cute, you bounce, you're a girl, fine.// He shrugged. //How long have you been at this? Have you worked with them often? Are they heroes in Baltimore that you're concerned about?//
He tilted his head.
//Or do you work solo?//
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