greater_than_zero: (Default)
Subzero ([personal profile] greater_than_zero) wrote in [community profile] kismet_loop2015-10-02 09:05 pm

[Audio | Locked to Sam]

[Have an audio ping, Sam.  Sorry it's almost 4a.m.  Zero's concept of "organics need a lot of sleep" is still lacking.]

Sam?  You there?  It's Subzero.

Sorry to bother you, but I had a request.
10_20_15_5_50: (neutralish)

[personal profile] 10_20_15_5_50 2016-02-23 03:28 am (UTC)(link)
At least I'm used to it now. The first few weeks I'd just say screw it, but to be fair, the first few weeks were all sorts of weird.

I think if you ever get the chance to see Earth, it's going to seem very, very busy with the seasonal stuff. A lot of the same sorta stuff you'll be able to observe at the farm here, but it's not quite the same as a chunk of wilderness with all its assorted stuff doing its own thing.

That said, where did we even leave off last night? Before breaking into another tangent.
10_20_15_5_50: (lookin over my shades at u sir)

[personal profile] 10_20_15_5_50 2016-03-13 05:09 am (UTC)(link)
Right. That. [pft.] I mostly remember. You're actually better off asking around for blood samples than, ah, stool samples, because it's not going to seem as weird---blood tests are pretty common for medical screening stuff, and I'd mentioned blood donations? You're going to have to ask someone else, though. Ditto if you decide you want hair, too.
10_20_15_5_50: (Default)

[personal profile] 10_20_15_5_50 2016-03-13 11:10 pm (UTC)(link)
Yep. And yeah. [Zero will feel Sam shift her weight as she considers elaborating.] It's kind of personal, though.
10_20_15_5_50: (Default)

[personal profile] 10_20_15_5_50 2016-03-22 06:10 am (UTC)(link)
Well...

[Well, what? She weighs it. On one hand, her 'witch' status is no big secret, and if it is, it's Haven's worst-kept, but on the other? Some vulnerabilities can't be corrected, only obscured.]

This is just between you and me, yeah?
10_20_15_5_50: (Default)

[personal profile] 10_20_15_5_50 2016-03-23 02:14 am (UTC)(link)
Well, my secrets I'm gonna sit on a while yet. It's not you so much as anything said's kinda comprimised---we got telepaths and god only knows what else around.

[Since she's exploited the hell out of this, that someone else might also is, really, a reasonable concern.]
10_20_15_5_50: (neutralish)

[personal profile] 10_20_15_5_50 2016-03-30 02:09 am (UTC)(link)
We'll get into it one of these days. Meanwhile, I can offer you scab samples if you would want 'em. Most of them would contain some foreign pigments, but 'most' is better than 'all,' yeah?

[Compared to blood and hair, scabs are a low-risk substance---and that's lucky for Sam, because even if scabs were easily exploited, her healing tattoos have left scab flakes all over Haven. If someone really wanted some, they'd find some with time, patience, and a piece of scotch tape.]
10_20_15_5_50: (hmn)

[personal profile] 10_20_15_5_50 2016-04-26 04:39 am (UTC)(link)
['Arguably gross, but probably of interest.' Having spent several years brushing bits of scab off everything in her immediate environment (clothes, furniture, flatmates) Sam's absolutely inured to the 'arguably gross' aspect.]

I should probably cover scabbing so you have some kind of context. It's part of the process of an injury healing, provided the injury is something like a cut or a scrape. The brutally abridged version? The blood flow at a wound site triggers a chain of events for forming a kinda combination shield-and-plug to close up the injury as quickly as possible. The faster it's closed, the better, because that means blood loss is minimized, and there's less of a window for germs to enter the body since that's kind of a big thing with organics---infections are a talk of their own, I tell you. But! Just being closed, a scabbed-over wound isn't healed; the scab stays where it formed to protect the wound as it does heal, since the tissue forming for it will take some time. Once it's far enough along, the scab dries out and eventually falls off.

Scabs can be picked off, too, but it sometimes hurts to do that, and if you try too soon you might just reopen the partway healed wound. You're also likely to get a scar if you pick a scab---or so I was always warned.
10_20_15_5_50: (hmn)

[personal profile] 10_20_15_5_50 2016-08-11 12:07 am (UTC)(link)
[As soon as Zero clarifies, Sam's nodding.]

All, though the ability of organic bodies to mend varies significantly. Like... Okay, I don't know if you've heard of starfish, but they are these smallish multi-limbed animals which live in salt water. Some are like this big...?

[She holds her hands apart to indicate.]

They're well-known for their ability to regrow entire limbs if one gets cut off. Most other organics can't do that, though there are lizards which can regrow their tails and some other animals which can jettison frankly alarming amounts of their internal organs to distract predators for the sake of escape. Humans can't manage anything quite so dramatic, but for almost any injury it's 'just wait for it to heal up.' Especially bad cuts can call for stitches, stuff like that, but... body systems do the brunt of it.
10_20_15_5_50: (hmn)

[personal profile] 10_20_15_5_50 2016-08-17 02:30 am (UTC)(link)
I've got to admit, it's pretty cool. How much self-repair is a Cybertronian body capable of? Self-repairs excluded.

[As cool as organic healing processes are, Cybertronians' ARS sound just as interesting.]

Stitches are used to hold the sides of large or deep cuts together so that they can heal closed quicker, and without quite so much scarring. The sides of the wound are pressed against each other and then sewn together, using... well, whatever threadlike material is deemed to be best for the job. They have this stuff for stitches which will eventually dissolve within the body because removing stitches can be---so far as I understand---an uncomfortable hassle, but I don't know what it's made of. I never actually needed stitches myself.

And yeah. Yeah. Like... minor wounds not so much, but moderate and severe wounds will heal up with some scar tissue remaining at the site. Scar tissue is fast-forming, and strong, and great for connecting stuff what's severed, but it doesn't act the same way undamaged tissue does, and so scarring on organs can interfere with their efficiency and create some serious long-term problems. Nerve damage is really problematic, too.

I hope this is a half-decent explanation. There's a LOT organic bodies can heal, but there's also a fair bit beyond the capacity of an organic body to heal, and a lot of stuff that's conditional, too.
10_20_15_5_50: (neutralish)

[personal profile] 10_20_15_5_50 2016-08-29 05:09 am (UTC)(link)
How's that work? You got like little nanobots along your fluid lines, or what? I probably shouldn't bother asking since I know very, very little about how you guys function physically, but I'm curious.

[And Zero's gotta be the last person on Cybertron who'd fault her for that.]

Pretty much, unless the hurt is pretty minor. There are treatments to minimize the visibility of scar tissue at the surface of the skin, but success'll vary, and some scar tissue is going to be present because you've got that fibrous tissue joining whatever tissues were parted.
10_20_15_5_50: (neutralish)

[personal profile] 10_20_15_5_50 2016-09-11 12:52 am (UTC)(link)
Oh. That's cool.

Sort of. Most of the time it's like "oh, that's probably going to leave a mark," or "ohhh, that's gonna leave a mark for sure," but every once in a while something heals up a lot nicer than anyone expected, or a small thing heals up with more of a scar than it seems it should have.
10_20_15_5_50: All illustrations by Daranon@plurk (all in fun)

[personal profile] 10_20_15_5_50 2016-09-11 02:42 am (UTC)(link)
Well, sometimes there's an injury you see and you know there's going to be scarring, but you gotta wait and see just how bad it's going to be. Wound care can contribute, cause scarring will be more pronounced if... [give her just a split-second, here, to get her mental checklist in order] If it's allowed to dry out, if aftercare products are more alkaline than acidic, and if the area is subject to regular stretching. I can rattle this off cause scarification is a thing, though I haven't any examples on me.

[Sam grins.]

See, while a lot of the time people want their scars to be inconspicuous, some like to show 'em off for the story or because they just like the look, and some get professionally cultivated decorative scars. I should have some pictures, if you'd like to see? It's a really interesting branch of body art.
10_20_15_5_50: (neutralish)

[personal profile] 10_20_15_5_50 2016-09-25 11:59 pm (UTC)(link)
Well, the way it's done for scarification the cuts hurt---the way any are gonna---but there's no harm done beyond the strictly superficial stuff.

Y'know what, just gimme a sec.

[She'll fuss with her drone for a moment, bringing up the files transferred from her phone.]

They're here somewhere.... Ah, okay. Here's a good example.

[Rather than have Zero squint at the comparatively tiny screen, she sends the image and a couple others to his drone.]
Edited 2016-09-26 04:28 (UTC)

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[personal profile] 10_20_15_5_50 - 2016-10-08 18:43 (UTC) - Expand