Jack is six months old in 13x14 Good Intentions.
MARY: You should be six months old. JACK: I am...sorta.
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Jack is six months old in 13x14 Good Intentions.
MARY: You should be six months old. JACK: I am...sorta.

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anima, animusphere
Just a quick note. I don’t remember making it clear in tumblr, but I’m sure I talked about it in my plurk or discord. When Kirschtaria uses Sirius Light against U-Olgamarie to save Chaldea, he chants the spell we know since First Order buuuut chant meaning changes. In the original family chant, it’s “Anima, Animusphere” meaning: “In the Void, there’s God.” When Kirschtaria uses it against Beast VII, it’s “In the Void, there’s the Star/Celestial Body/Planet” (singular or plural):
It could have a deeper meaning, or simply showing he’s not aligned with the God but the planet. Or it may hint God, Animusphere, and celestial body are synonymous.
Notes toward Protagonist: a novel
Being the story of the warrior Protagonist and his eventual quest to kill Antagonist, aided and abetted by the Narrator and burdened by the Author who is trying to fix their story into a plot that stretches across the Three Kingdoms. Desperate to avoid the trope-trap burdens of a heroes journey, Protagonist grows more and more desperate in a war against both the Antagonist and the fate that the Author has in mind for them.
The attempt to break the story seeks Protagonist and Antagonist switch roles and positions, though the ex-Protagonist is unaware of their eventual fall from both grace and eminence in the plot. As the Antagonist is almost always more interesting than the Protagonist, the once Protagonist falls into the trap of thinking they have achieved character growth rather than plot progression.
Meanwhile, the Author is hiding from the Editor and trying to get the story into some semblance of sanity, considering changing genres entirely but worried both Protagonist and Antagonist might notice. Not that they ever did before.