if the airlock (or just any of this) looks inaccurate, excuse me, I’m an idiot
warning: blood, and Grace frying the ever-loving heck out of his arm
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if the airlock (or just any of this) looks inaccurate, excuse me, I’m an idiot
warning: blood, and Grace frying the ever-loving heck out of his arm

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Glasses!!
Something I enjoy about Martha Wells writing and the Murderbot books is how often she plays with the way very close 1st Person narration can hide the physical reality of the character. Murderbot just spent three pages telling me about its very level headed ideas and then it cuts to and anyway the whole time I've been thinking about that I've been silently curled up on the floor like a dog while everyone politely waited for me to be done.
It's interesting to think about how Three differs from SecUnit in certain ways. And also the reactions of those around it:D
*Please scroll down instead of flipping pages.
Three and humans:
Doing a slower reread of the Murderbot books and I'm really paying closer attention to how much of an unreliable narrator MB is. And it's fascinating, the way that it is unreliable.
Murderbot repeatedly states that, outside of some specific as shit contexts, it really has a very limited understanding of the universe. That its education modules are crap and frankly far from comprehensive either. And yet? It generally fails to recognise or account for the fact it that it has these massive blind-spots and unfounded biases.
Like, we spend the majority of the books being told again and again just how insanely dangerous rogue SecUnits are. How dangerous they will always be. We are told this by a rogue unit that is, generally, only slightly dangerous to its clients through negligence.
More importantly, Murderbot rarely seems to question some core assumptions even in light of new information. In Artificial Condition we find out that MB has always had a niggling concern that it killed all those people because it disabled its governor modules/disabled the GM in order to kill them all. And what does it find out? That, no, that's not what happened, and that it's probably right that it did hack its GM to ensure that it never happened again.
MB knows that it hacked its GM and then continued protecting clients and doing its job because, well, why not? It fundamentally likes its job, in the sense of it feels a deep and abiding desire to protect humans, to keep them safe. Which makes sense! It's a SecUnit! Of course they're built with not just a shock-collar to keep them in line, but an innate drive to Provide Security. The bits of its job it fundamentally doesn't like are a: when it's made to hurt people who aren't threatening its clients and b: when it's forced to let clients endanger themselves against its judgement.
So what does it do? Does MB reassess its assumption that Rogue Units are of course going to immediately go on a killing spree? Nope! No, it just keeps assuming that it's the likely outcome. It recoils at the very idea of freeing other SecUnits because of that. Because it doesn't seem to understand that it's basing its assumptions on trauma, ironically on trauma that relates to the fact that it fundamentally finds the idea of going on a killing spree horrifying.
And sure, it probably is a minor risk. SecUnits are clearly individuals and there's always going to be some arseholes out there who get free will and immediately go "sweet! Murder Time! gun-arms go pew-pew-pew lol". But, uh, I think it's wildly overestimating the risk factor there.
Which, we see more of how fucking wrong MB is in Network Effect and Platform Decay.
In Network Effect, MB-2.0 frees Three, and what does Three do? We hear its internal thought process and its main driving factor, its default behaviour is "I want to help. I don't know what's going on but I want to Help Protect People". Three does not start blasting every soft, squishy human in range. It tries to get everyone to safety and then volunteers to help rescue someone else. Because it's a SecUnit! That's what SecUnits are made for.
And then we get to Platform Decay, where Three has decided to go on a sightseeing/chaos tour of the Awful Fucking Torus, handing out freedom-code to other SecUnits. And what do we see, from out admittedly limited perspective on events? There are reports of Rogue SecUnits about, panic and fear. But what's missing are reports of Rogue SecUnits actually killing anyone. Not saying that didn't happen, just that uh, the one rogue unit we see isn't hurting anyone, it's just running about (presumably going "oh shit oh shit ohshitohshit what the fuck am I supposed to do now???") and trying to hand out the code to others it meets.

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do you ever think about... murderbot... and its love of children... and how children naturally welcome it in a way older humans don't? the way teenagers are slower than children but far faster than adults to see it fully as a person and warm to it as soon as they realize how much safer they are in its presence?
do you think about how amena, sofi, and the others will someday be full adults? and mensah and the rest of team presaux will be gone? and murderbot will be surrounded by humans who have loved and cherished it seemingly their whole lives? how it'll be surrounded by humans, both in mensah's family and across preservation and the university in general, who don't remember what life was like before their first encounter with a secunit?
do you think about how someday some of these adults who love it will have their own children? and it will see that first gross little bundle of human offspring and be shocked by the size and frailty? it'll resist offers to hold the baby for fear of hurting something so small and frail (and also some other fear it can't name) (and also: gross). but eventually... something will happen and it will oblige and hold a baby for the first time in its whole existence while the parents run around dealing with whatever emergency. and it'll be absolutely rooted to the spot, thinking about how the baby is actually a bit heavier than it had guessed, thinking about how there isn't even any ROOM for bones in such a small body, thinking about how the baby looks doubtful and a little scared of it. until one of the human adults sweeps by and recommends that it smile and coo at the baby. well, it's not sure about "cooing" but it does get woken from its fearful stupor and hurriedly ups its body temperature, softly bounces the baby like it had seen humans do, and smiles — nervously, but it counts. and the baby... melts. the small little mouth and brows and eyes all slip into a delighted chubby-cheeked smile, still looking up into its eyes. and murderbot thinks, okay, maybe i'll try cooing. do you think about that?
do you think about how someday amena and sofi and the others will be known as nannas and grandpersons themselves, and murderbot will still be beset by children who want to watch shows with it and curl up against its chest when they're sad or hurt? and how sofi can still be found napping on its shoulder, though now she has more wrinkles on her face than naja ever had? and how amena's still bothering it for details about its relationships, anxious to see it loved and cared for after she and her siblings are gone?
do you think about how someday murderbot and its creaky old joints and worn ports are only still functioning because of a dedicated team of university researchers who'd put in thousands of hours into determining how to not let living construct consciousnesses become trapped in failing bodies and developed a protocol for training future researchers in proper construct geriatric care? and can you picture how it will have a few dozen children gathered around it at a cultural festival — their families camping in and around the ancestral home, together once again for the holiday — all those tiny voices clamoring to once more hear the story of how it and their great great great great greatnan amena defeated the aliens and saved the colonists, and could they pretty pretty please meet ART the next time it docks at preservation station?
do you think about how the children it loves growing up to become adults would never take away how safe and comfortable it feels around them?
As a free being, Murderbot is struggling with personhood, with how being a free person means your personhood comes before function. That it might even be able to rewrite its function. But! it’s at the veeery beginning of this after experiencing a lifetime of trauma. And the lifetime of trauma has left some deeply damaging coping mechanisms.
Canonically, according to MB, it gleans self-esteem from the following: when people recognize it’s there to help them, when it solves something in a clever way (bonus if a human sees), and when it successfully saves its people. These have to do with people recognizing it’s a smart, independent entity who is good at its function. But I would counter that the majority of Murderbot’s self-esteem actually comes from its easy ability to be a martyr. To destroy itself for others, maybe even as a sort of final proof that it’s “good” and “safe.”
Murderbot’s got a lot of anxiety around people perceiving it as dangerous. It often talks at great length about how frequently it was shot with friendly fire on past contracts, how the reason it’s awkward around humans is that humans are afraid of it. And then there’s that scene at the end of Network Effect, where Murderbot says that ART had told its crew about it, but that it had made MB sound safe and not like a terrifying Murder Machine. being described neutrally, let alone positively, feels off to it.
I mean! Murderbot’s got complicated feelings about itself! There’s the SecUnit fights, people misusing SecUnits as CombatSecBots, combat overrides, and even code attacks/glitches like Ganaka Pit. All of this not even touching on the thorough propaganda.
We don’t have to look further than its chosen name: “Murderbot” is a pejorative like “sexbot,” which reduces constructs—these incredibly complicated machine/organic hybrids—to a crass understanding of their function. That MB calls itself this is a little tongue-in-cheek and a little genuine self-abasement.
But despite the name, the propaganda, and its experiences, SecUnits were not created to murder, they were created to protect. And the way Murderbot has interpreted that function is via self-destruction. To sacrifice itself for humans. Even if it wasn’t literally coded into it, MB was definitely shaped this way via a “social development” that ensured it experienced dehumanization and alienation.
This dehumanization and alienation it endured at the hands of the company made it associate bodily harm with good things (or positive things, at least). Let’s start by looking at when it was still with the company: getting injured meant time in a cubicle, where it could have some uninterrupted time for itself. it could watch media in an enclosed space where it didn’t have to worry about anything but itself for a bit.
Then once it’s with the PresAux crew (or ART), it gets tangibly *physically* cared for when it is injured. People show it care and regard and help put it back together.
It’s worth mentioning that when MB is hurt, its cognition is often down. This means it can’t be as guarded. It’s vulnerable, and in this state it is treated with care. It is finally getting some direct emotional support in these moments. It’s also tangible proof that people are considering it, that they have not abandoned it like the survey instruments at the beginning of ASR. Getting rescued is something we know really melts it. It’s almost like a really painful test: if Murderbot proves it’s not evil by destroying itself, its reward is people going back for it… but the test is still predicated on usefulness.
So we have all of these examples of how Murderbot’s self-esteem is tied to its own physical harm, and that it gets positive feedback in certain key ways when it’s injured, but i think it goes further than that. There are actually at least three examples of deliberate self-harm in System Collapse:
When it is having a mild freak-out about the shuttle landing when they’re first looking for the separatists, Murderbot says to let it jump out of the shuttle at like 20+ meters (+66 feet), which everyone obviously gets upset over.
After Leonide torpedoes their diplomatic approach with the separatists, Murderbot is so distressed it thinks about how it wishes it could smash something, especially itself.
Later, MB observes Iris almost throw her interface, and it says: “Been there. Threw my whole body at a wall once.” This is more frustration than straight up distress, but the impulse to harm itself to combat negative feelings still holds.
Its body is a thing. The company owned it. There are logos on it that it can’t remove, and any record of its self-sacrifice is erased. Swiped clean. Its physicality is that of an appliance it has no control over, but maybe its physical destruction can redeem it in the eyes of others. So, harm is evidence of a good job, it is a means of proving itself, it’s a release valve, and a means of receiving care.
But all of this disregard for its body goes deeper into really upsetting existential territory that I will get into in another post.
Loved that moment in System Collapse where there’s a little philosophical debate about whether the colonist’s system (can't remember what it's called atm) is trying to get them to trust it: Iris asks ART about it, and ART responds with being skeptical about ascribing human motivations to machine intelligences (MIs). and Ratthi is sooo down to debate about what qualifies as “human” motivation.
Like it’s such a great example of why Ratthi is so knowledgeable about constructs. He’s thinking about MIs in really interesting ways, which, coupled with how intuitive and empathetic he is, makes him such a great ally. Ratthi respects Murderbot so much 😭 and their relationship is very charming.
And I find it sooooo interesting how Murderbot doesn’t chime in at all… I mean, it’s in character for it (and it is Going Through It™️), but MB absolutely treats every MI or system it comes across with some level of respect or regard. It wants to foster trust and be kind… I think this has something to do with SecUnits being social beings whose only outlet for that (especially with an intact governor module) are systems and then bots.
That post (via @iridescent-glitter-dragon) about ART being better with humans but not knowing how to talk with other MIs, and Murderbot being so much better with MIs than humans, makes so much sense for both of them. Like, ART was raised alongside a human and mostly works with other humans (and it has NO PATIENCE <3). MB, on the other hand, was dehumanized and completely alienated from people, with systems and other bots as its only means of socializing. of course it would have a great deal of empathy for them <3
It kills me how SecUnit is this big, scary thing with literal weapons in it’s arms, capable of insane feats of physical strength, nigh on impossible to stop or kill, capable of hacking it’s way into most systems, can lose most of it’s body mass and vital fluids and keep going, can remove its own limbs, records and analyzes everything, eyes and ears in a thousand places at once, smarter, faster, stronger, and more capable than a human could ever be, utterly disgusted with most human things and
It loves a trashy soap opera. It’s so soft and gentle with an injured Volescu. It’s favorite human is a middle aged mom who drives carefully and mom friends at her friends and coworkers. It’s so delicate and considerate with Mensah’s kids. It lets Tapan sleep touching it and turns up it's body heat for extra comfort. It likes plays and musical theatre. It's best human friend is a sunshine nerd from Planet Hippy. It keeps a diary. It doesn’t understand the appeal of human adolescents but it’s so good with Amena. It likes decidedly unrealistic media. It cares so much about humans that it’s never met and wants to keep them safe and happy. It gently frets over Three just minutes after meeting it. It gets flustered and confused when complimented or treated with care. It offers to free other constructs, even while actively fighting them. It has criticisms and strong opinions on media. It’s shy. It “hacks” its way into things by asking the relevant bots to be friends and share media. It only ever really scares Amena when she witnesses it's wild grief over losing ART. It stops, gets back in control, and explains immediately when it realizes it’s causing her distress. It lets ART make media requests, pauses to let it process its own emotions, and re-watches certain scenes over and over again until it’s happy, mere moments after ART scares it so badly it goes nearly catatonic, simply because ART asked. It grieves Miki even though it never really liked the bot in the first place. It’s uncomfortable with physical touch but offers to let Mensah hug it and lets her grab its arm when she’s in distress.
It was created for destruction and violence and pain. It’s the epitome of unstoppable, unkillable, inescapable, inhumane force in every horrific dystopia ever. It is not human and does not want to be. It’s got the abilities of an overpowered superhero. It's a living deux ex machina. It’s actually so soft and gentle and filled to bursting with love for small, soft, silly things and people
I'm so normal about this movie that I did this in 3 days with a total of 10 hours of sleep. If you know this song you know it s time to bring out the tissues.
Song is The Cave by Mumford and Sons

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Insane again. Do people understand just how crazy the Adrian Rocky love story is??? They were separated for like half a decade, human years, CENTURIES in Eridian years. Adrian probably was told by the people around then at every turn that Rocky was dead, that they should start grieving, hell, maybe a particularly rude Eridian told them they should give up and look for a new mate. But they didn't. Decades past when the mission was meant to return, they didn't. They knew somehow, even as every other family of the 22 scientists, engineers, commanders and doctors on that ship started to grieve, that their Rocky was alive and they just had to wait one day more for them to come back.
There's help by governments for people who lost their partners at war, isn't there? I imagine Adrian starkly refusing it. Their family tries to subtly help them instead when it gets too hard. They watch Adrian sleep and Adrian watches them sleep, but everyone knows they would've slept better if it was Rocky.
"Adrian just won't accept it"
"Grief affects people in different ways, we just need to give them time"
Imagine people not telling Adrian that the government was starting talks for sending another ship. Imagine the reaction. Adrian probably could've been very helpful with the new mission, but they just broke down whenever they thought of working on it because that meant they had given up on Rocky, Rocky who they had been with for nearly 150 years. Rocky who they should've been with for another 400 more.
Imagine how they felt when they got that weird radio signal from that weird ship up in orbit. At first no one would've told them, wanting to wait for confirmation for Rocky before getting that poor, heartbroken widow's hopes up. But Adrian found out anyways and they are so goddamn hopeful. Sure it's not an eridian ship. Sure the radio signal is this weird, garbled, non-eridian thing. But what if Rocky is on there.
AND HE FUCKING IS AS WELL
Can you even imagine?? How Adrian must've felt hearing their soulmates voice over the radio once more, once it's been translated to frequencies they can receive? They are dropping everything. They're gone. They're going to the space elevator site. They are demanding to be let up. Rocky is alive and Rocky is home. Nothing else matters. In that moment Adrian doesn't even give a damn if the astrophage problem has been solved. Rocky is safely home.
The microsecond that Rocky has been medically cleared off the ship, he's gone to the room where Adrian waits patiently alone, he's getting tackled. He's getting hugged harder than he ever has before. Doesn't matter is Adrian is taller or shorter than Rocky, they have half a decade of pent up sadness and love and yearning behind them. They tap his carapace, his legs, everything just to confirm it's him he's real he's here he's safe. Words fly out of their mouth, words of relief and love and joy so fast it sounds like someone playing rush e badly. Rocky is shell shocked at first and then starts replying in turn, fast and loud because Adrian is here! Adrian still loves him, still wants him! He saved Erid, he saved Adrian, they're safe again!
Can you fucking imagine? They're the eridian Romeo and Juliet. They're getting books, they're getting (Eridian equivalent) movies, they're getting referenced in every love song from now until forever. Star crossed lovers and they LIVE
rocky introducing grace to adrian
I somehow never noticed Rocky banging his carapace on the xenonite ball before I can't breathe
memorial diamond
hey bro can i ask you a question that will reveal a deep and fundamental gap in my knowledge of the world
of course bro opening up about your lack of knowledge and asking questions is the only way to fill in that fundamental gap

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I might be being weird here, but it bothers me a bit that a lot of people seem to agree that Ryland was a coward when he didn't want to leave Earth.
I don't think so. He had just lost two friends after he had been the one teaching them about astrophage and it hadn't saved them. He had never been to space before. He continually showed that he didn't see himself as either Stratt's second in command or as remotely qualified for the Hail Mary mission. He didn't even actually want to get his blood tested for the coma resistance gene, and thought he was only doing so to help set an example.
He had a handful of hours to come to terms with a group of his friends and colleagues saying he should go on a mission guaranteed to kill him, just after two people who he had taught had been killed despite arguably a lot more astronaut training. He had three hours to decide if he was going to space.
There's two reasons why I don't think he's a coward for the choice he makes. (Three if you include my disagreement with the word "coward" at all lol).
One: He genuinely does not think he is the most qualified. He does not recognise himself as any different than any other scientist on the project. The most he ever send to have faith in his abilities is when he argues with Stratt that he should be allowed to continue working on the project in the first place, which he does in a haze of emotion. When he sits in that room and his colleagues agree he should go to space, it had clearly never occurred to him. He is not an astronaut. He only knows the science side, and he doesn't recognise his own contribution there as significant. He was surprised to be asked to teach DuBois and Shapiro in the first place. I don't think that what he says to Stratt about being able to do more to help on earth is a lie. I think he genuinely believes this. If you genuinely believe you're the only person who can save the Earth and you refuse, maybe you're being a bit selfish, maybe it's even because of fear. But Ryland very clearly does not believe that. Even more, he's right! He would not have been able to find Taumoeba or solve the problems along the way without Rocky. Of course, no one knew that Ilyukhina and Yao would die, but there was never a guarantee for any of them. They should have all been training together to be able to assist one another and replace one another, but that's another issue.
Two: look. I have an anxiety disorder. If you gave me three hours to make a decision like that, I wouldn't have been able to even think. It's too big. Life or death, not just for you but for everyone. Three hours is nothing. Even for someone without an anxiety disorder! Making a decision like that in three hours is huge. Ability to make those kinds of decisions quickly is a huge part of why Stratt is given the power she has. It's not something everyone can do, and making life or death decisions is not something Ryland is trained for!
I know not as many people spend so long trapped by fear that they'd need weeks to make this kind of decision. But Ryland doesn't even have a day! Three hours? I don't even know if I'd be coherent in that time frame! That doesn't mean he's a coward, it means he's human. All the other potential candidates had a long time to make those decisions and believed in their abilities to start with.
We don't know what he'd have decided if he'd had a reasonable amount of time, or if he hadn't been grieving and dealing with the shock of the whole situation. He doesn't either. Nobody does.
Eva calls him a coward. I don't even know if she means it. She's trying to convince him and often, calling someone a coward is a tactic to convince them to do something like that. It's a risky one, sure, but it's something people do.
He's not a coward. He throws his whole life into the project hail Mary project, even with how dangerous even working with astrophage is! From the start!
He pushes himself to do what he thinks he can do to help.
Once he wakes up, he works out what is happening. He's alone in space with a problem to solve that he doesn't fully understand. He still does it. He didn't have to, before or either he remembered his lack of choice. He risks his life over and over for the project, worth every decision he makes. Meeting Rocky, going to Adrian, saving Rocky after Rocky saves him. The repeated EVAs that he's not trained for and has no support with. It all leads to to his final decision to save Rocky, thinking he is dooming himself. It's character growth to be able to make that decision but it's a path he's been on from the start, and it's not something that was ever as far from his character as he might have thought.
Anyway. Rant over. Ryland Grace is not a coward and in fact shows consistent courage throughout. We all want to think we'd give up our lives in his position, but would we make the choice to throw away our lives for a job we're not qualified for, completely unexpectedly, within three hours?
No, I don't think very many of us would.
The key difference between Ryland Grace in the book vs the movie is that book Grace goes back to being a biologist and movie Grace remains a teacher.
Book Grace immediately readapts to working in a highly scientific field with other highly specialized people. He drops most of his teacherly quirks and accepts his role as a biologist. (He does teach at the end of the book, but it's more so him becoming a teacher again.)
Movie Grace never accepts that role as a full fledged biologist. At his core he is still a school teacher. Even Rocky addresses him as such. He interacts with Rocky in a much more teacherly way (albeit a very chill teacher) and his role as a teacher always feels much more natural to him.
Book Grace was more biologist than teacher, Movie Grace was more teacher than biologist