Difference between revisions of "Logs:Key-Glyph"

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I was surprised that I didn’t feel afraid.  Maybe when the baggage of your own identity is gone, all that’s left is pure reaction to the moment.  So, while the snow continued falling around my cozy ship -– the Yakomaku S79, my display informs me –- my first instinct was to spend time reading through every documentation file available in its databanks.  It’s comforting to know I ingrained those sorts of practical behaviors in my previous life, considering the circumstances.
 
I was surprised that I didn’t feel afraid.  Maybe when the baggage of your own identity is gone, all that’s left is pure reaction to the moment.  So, while the snow continued falling around my cozy ship -– the Yakomaku S79, my display informs me –- my first instinct was to spend time reading through every documentation file available in its databanks.  It’s comforting to know I ingrained those sorts of practical behaviors in my previous life, considering the circumstances.
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[[File:Key-Logs-000.jpg|center|400px|caption]]
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The planet appears to know its own name, however.  Pabackyermi.  Or, maybe this is just gibberish ascribed by my scanner.  Either way, I like.  If it has its own name, then perhaps there are inhabitants here, and there’s a chance I’ll be found.  If not, then the planet got its designation the same way I did -- random, contextless chance -- and we’re already partners in our confusion.
 
The planet appears to know its own name, however.  Pabackyermi.  Or, maybe this is just gibberish ascribed by my scanner.  Either way, I like.  If it has its own name, then perhaps there are inhabitants here, and there’s a chance I’ll be found.  If not, then the planet got its designation the same way I did -- random, contextless chance -- and we’re already partners in our confusion.
  
 
And maybe it’s another symptom of the loss of self, to be overwhelmed with awe at your surroundings while they spell your own death, but this planet is breathtaking.  Even before I understood the workings of my suit’s thermal shield I was stopping in the frost, lost in observance of the three or four large, low-hanging planets in the sky, one with its own distinct and easily visible moon.  Was I an explorer out here?  The way I feel when I look out at those planets makes me wonder.
 
And maybe it’s another symptom of the loss of self, to be overwhelmed with awe at your surroundings while they spell your own death, but this planet is breathtaking.  Even before I understood the workings of my suit’s thermal shield I was stopping in the frost, lost in observance of the three or four large, low-hanging planets in the sky, one with its own distinct and easily visible moon.  Was I an explorer out here?  The way I feel when I look out at those planets makes me wonder.
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[[File:Key-Logs-001.jpg|center|400px|caption]]
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Survival did not come easy.  With nothing but basic documentation, built-in notification systems, one small blaster, and a tiny heated cockpit, I lived.  I realized too late that I should have been tracking the days, but ultimately it doesn't matter.  I will label these journal entries by installment instead, and this will be Survival 00.
 
Survival did not come easy.  With nothing but basic documentation, built-in notification systems, one small blaster, and a tiny heated cockpit, I lived.  I realized too late that I should have been tracking the days, but ultimately it doesn't matter.  I will label these journal entries by installment instead, and this will be Survival 00.

Revision as of 20:10, 18 November 2019

These are the recovered personal logs of the Lost Traveller Key-Glyph, which were posthumously accessed by the Beacon-Entity.

They are categorically defined by Key-Glyph's distinct emotional phases.

Innocence

Grief

Foreboding

Determination

Courage

Conviction

Doubt

Despair

Recovery

Anticipation

Rememberance