[shale is out here in his garden, trying to prune a hedge. there may be a small tear kind of poking out from the middle of this hedge, and he's trying to prune around it, cutting off gray leaves.]
vax is on his way over, coming to stand by shale's side to look at this tear, and then over at shale, making a face that can only be described as "yikes" ]
Hey, Shale. You doing alright? [ .... "alright" as alright can be, maybe ]
Sure. You're marine. I don't know all the colors you've had this whole time. But I'm sure even if other colors were louder, there were times you felt anger, too. Or times you laughed or felt creative or had pride in yourself or wanted to work through something.
Think about the colors and what they mean. Here, we tend to have the one that the prism sees us through most, the one that doesn't really change. And then we have two that change slowly, based on what we're feeling most strongly at the time. But those feelings aren't all you've felt.
week 7; monday
Oh, hey, Vax. Come on in.
no subject
vax is on his way over, coming to stand by shale's side to look at this tear, and then over at shale, making a face that can only be described as "yikes" ]
Hey, Shale. You doing alright? [ .... "alright" as alright can be, maybe ]
no subject
Yeah, I'm alright. It is what it is.
no subject
[ he
yeah. you know what? yeah. that's fine. ]
... You're the big feelings guy. What's up with the tasks this week?
no subject
It's pretty straightforward. Think about the different things you've felt. It's usually a pretty useful exercise.
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Gimme an example?
no subject
Think about the colors and what they mean. Here, we tend to have the one that the prism sees us through most, the one that doesn't really change. And then we have two that change slowly, based on what we're feeling most strongly at the time. But those feelings aren't all you've felt.
Just think about it.