Sansa Stark (
theladyofwinterfell) wrote in
revivalproject2020-04-28 07:13 pm
of cloudless climes and starry nights
WHO: Sansa Stark
WHERE: Her home in the residential section of Blue 21 on the map (if you've met her, feel free to assume you know where she lives), at the Agriculture Center, anywhere between the two points.
WHAT: This is Sansa's last post because she HAS THIS CHILD SHE HAS BEEN PREGNANT WITH FOR 1000 YEARS. So she is very large, trying to still be in a good mood, and really wants to not be pregnant anymore.
WHEN: 28 April - 4 May
WARNINGS: TBD
Sansa spends most of her time walking now. She walks from home to the city center, from the city center to home, and to each and every place in between. She tries not to go anywhere dangerous or with rough terrain; she is nowhere near as nimble as she once was and she fears falling and hurting herself or the child. Still, there's plenty of places she can go without pushing into anything remotely dangerous and that's what she does.
Her back only eases when she moves. It's contrary to what she's always believed as women typically took to their beds before birthing but perhaps women in Westeros are not correct about birthing. She's willing to believe that considering the number of women who die in childbirth - including her own mother by law. She doesn't worry so much about dying, though, not with Altair, and Wanda has said she will help with the birth. She's still afraid of pain but she's borne pain before and can do it once again.
In the agricultural center, she tries to tend plants as best she can without actually bending down or picking up anything heavy. It's a difficult task, actually, and Sansa is grateful for her height and ends up only tending those that hang in baskets in the air or those potted and settled on tables in front of her. It's good to have work to focus on, at any rate, and she's grown tired of sewing for this very moment.
By the time she trundles home in the evening, she settles in her chair with feet propped and works on sewing. Sometimes it's mending and sometimes it's some of the last baby things she can make before the child comes and she won't have the time to sew or do much of anything but be a mother. She believes whole-heartedly that Tyrion will help her with their son much more than most fathers in Westeros do and her friends seem to be gleeful at the prospect of a child but all the same, she will shoulder much of the burden alone.
WHERE: Her home in the residential section of Blue 21 on the map (if you've met her, feel free to assume you know where she lives), at the Agriculture Center, anywhere between the two points.
WHAT: This is Sansa's last post because she HAS THIS CHILD SHE HAS BEEN PREGNANT WITH FOR 1000 YEARS. So she is very large, trying to still be in a good mood, and really wants to not be pregnant anymore.
WHEN: 28 April - 4 May
WARNINGS: TBD
Sansa spends most of her time walking now. She walks from home to the city center, from the city center to home, and to each and every place in between. She tries not to go anywhere dangerous or with rough terrain; she is nowhere near as nimble as she once was and she fears falling and hurting herself or the child. Still, there's plenty of places she can go without pushing into anything remotely dangerous and that's what she does.
Her back only eases when she moves. It's contrary to what she's always believed as women typically took to their beds before birthing but perhaps women in Westeros are not correct about birthing. She's willing to believe that considering the number of women who die in childbirth - including her own mother by law. She doesn't worry so much about dying, though, not with Altair, and Wanda has said she will help with the birth. She's still afraid of pain but she's borne pain before and can do it once again.
In the agricultural center, she tries to tend plants as best she can without actually bending down or picking up anything heavy. It's a difficult task, actually, and Sansa is grateful for her height and ends up only tending those that hang in baskets in the air or those potted and settled on tables in front of her. It's good to have work to focus on, at any rate, and she's grown tired of sewing for this very moment.
By the time she trundles home in the evening, she settles in her chair with feet propped and works on sewing. Sometimes it's mending and sometimes it's some of the last baby things she can make before the child comes and she won't have the time to sew or do much of anything but be a mother. She believes whole-heartedly that Tyrion will help her with their son much more than most fathers in Westeros do and her friends seem to be gleeful at the prospect of a child but all the same, she will shoulder much of the burden alone.

no subject
"I can tell how much you two must love each other. It's not boring at all. I'm glad you're both able to be here together." This place seems hardly one to suddenly find yourself in the situation of expecting a child and having to care for it as well as yourself, but from what he can tell of Sansa and Tyrion, it doesn't seem like they're the least bit worried.
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Sansa looks down and laughs a little. "I'm not certain I'm happy about it right now. I have reached the miserable state of this pregnancy, I believe, and I want to carry my son in my arms and not in my belly."
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It makes him wonder how difficult it was for his parents to be persuaded to part with him, wherever the Jedi had brought him from. There's so little he really knows about any potential family he might have had. It's probably too late to have any thoughts or regrets on that matter, not with what's going on in the galaxy now.
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She's so much more comfortable with giving birth with someone like Altair around than she'd be in Westeros. In Westeros, giving birth is a toss of the coin as to whether or not you live or you die.
"Do you know him?"
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"Altair? Yes, I've met him. I haven't seen what he can do, but I doubt he'd be offering so much of his time at the hospital if he wasn't capable."
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Sansa tips her head a bit. "Were you here for that? When some of us ended up quite a bit younger than usual?"
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"Younger..? How does that work?"
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Sansa smiles a little with the memory. "He was a proper little boy, too. Good manners, sweet disposition. He was anything a mother could have ever wanted in a son. I knew a man that was that darling as a child would be a good man and I was right."
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"Sounds like it was interesting time," he muses, and with Sansa describing Altair, the padawan tries to picture the Sith Lord in such a state. "Did they remember being children, once they'd turned back?" He's assuming everyone had gone back to normal, having seen no children around the city otherwise.
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Sansa thinks for a moment. "I don't know if anyone else remembers their time as a child but Altair certainly does."
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"It's good that you two were able to hold onto that friendship." And make the best out of the unusual situation.
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Sansa smiles a bit wider. "People like you are much more familiar with travelling through the stars than I am. We cannot even reach the stars in the sky where I am from."
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Being here is kind of a welcome break. With having learned that those who've since been returned or have come back again aren't gone long enough to be missed from their places of origin, it makes it a little easier to not worry too much about the things he's left behind.
"You have no starships, where you're from?"
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Westeros is so backward in comparison and it was part of the reason Sansa felt so separate from everyone else once she returned. She'd still become a queen, yes, but her life and her outlook had been much different than before.
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"There are worlds like that, back in our galaxy. Being able to travel between other worlds is amazing, and I guess it's easy to take it for granted if one has the ability to do so. ...but I don't think it's a bad thing that a world might just be contained in itself. Especially not with how the galaxy is now."
People can learn to thrive with what they have. Maybe some things might be beneficial, by way of modern technology and imported goods, but it also invited a whole new aspect of potential trouble that previously would have been unheard of.
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Sansa thinks it makes her a better queen, all told.
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"I'm sorry to hear that," he says, frowning. "There's always another way. It just takes someone to realize it, and be willing to do something about it."
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It's heavy conversation but Sansa seeks advice from people about this problem because it's important to her. If she returns to Westeros, she needs to know how to make it better than it is now.
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He doesn't know that he's in such a position to offer any good advice. The galaxy won't change overnight, and he's not even sure what he's decided to undertake will do anything, much less now, given how his trip to Dathomir had left him shaken.
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She tips her head a bit. "What specialty do you have?"
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The droid beeps almost sulkily at that, but cheers with the slight bounce the padawan gives him on his shoulder. "Not to say we haven't both gotten into our fair share of trouble," Cal laughs.
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It's interesting to Sansa, how they've changed and adapted, and she thinks it's for the better.
"How does one go about learning such a thing? You take them apart and figure out how to put them back together?"
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Cal nods at her questions. "Part of it is that, yeah. You need to know where parts of the ship are if you want to dismantle it properly. How to disconnect power connections, what sections can be broken down easiest, where things go and what part goes with what. We use machinery to do a lot of things too, and when there's no one else on hand to fix them, we have to learn how to at least try, just so we won't end up behind schedule. It was a hassle."
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She smiles a bit. “I never would have survived this place had I not lived in the Fleet first. It prepared me for this place.”
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"You're a strong person," Cal says, grinning back at her. "Not many people would look at such things in such a positive light."
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