Art Therapy [Oriel]
Feb 12, 2014 5:31:00 GMT -5
Post by Oth Gillis on Feb 12, 2014 5:31:00 GMT -5
As even-tempered as Oth was, no one would blame him in the least for being grumpy. He'd moved more than halfway across the country, away from his extended family and friends and the only life he'd ever known, to a tiny state in the middle of freaking nowhere in the middle of a winter that was clearly trying to prove something, living in a dorm with a bunch of barnyard animal, and of course there was the whole turning into a bear thing. God he hated that. Ninety-nine percent of the time, Oth dealt with things he didn't like by ignoring them. Not giving them any attention. Brushing them off.
There was no way in the world to use those techniques on going from a reedy 90 pound boy to a 750 pound grizzly bear. It was itchy and hot and smelled bad and hurt. Not being a bear, but getting that way, and going back to being a boy too. It was sucking all around, being a bear, the becoming, the switching back, and the stupid aches he had as a human. It was like he'd just been run over by a semi but all the time. And the 'training'? Going from person to bear over and over and over. Like they wanted to see how long he could last before he couldn't get up anymore.
Yeah, enough to make anyone grumpy.
The art teacher here was a little hyper and kind of goofy, but Oth didn't mind him. He was okay. Case in point, he was letting Oth do some watercolors while he was off in another room. The art room looked more like Fort Knox with all the padlocks on drawers and closets, but he figured any school with a bunch of super-powered kids was going to not just have goofs but goofs.
The paper he painted wasn't watercolor paper, but that was okay too. Watercolor paper was expensive, and he was just relaxing. Not doing anything serious. It was printer paper, which meant it warped a bit when it got wet. He was used to that. In the short time he'd been in the room, three papers were drying. One just had designs on it, but the other two had various experiments with the paints. Like whether he could make tree branches by just letting the brown make little rivers into the green (no), whether detailed leaves or just patches of green looked better (a toss up), and experimenting with different shades of green in the same leaf patch (not entirely terrible but he was still learning). And yes, he was painting trees. Aspens, mostly. There were some in Vermont, but they were nothing compared to the ones in Denver. Aspens were pretty trees, even if they weren't good for climbing.
Okay, this was making him homesick. Oth took a fresh sheet of paper and began painting. And frowned, disgusted, when he discovered the shape he'd blobbed onto the paper most resembled... a bear.
Oh well. He started filling it out. Not that he knew what he looked like beared-out, but he could take a good guess.
There was no way in the world to use those techniques on going from a reedy 90 pound boy to a 750 pound grizzly bear. It was itchy and hot and smelled bad and hurt. Not being a bear, but getting that way, and going back to being a boy too. It was sucking all around, being a bear, the becoming, the switching back, and the stupid aches he had as a human. It was like he'd just been run over by a semi but all the time. And the 'training'? Going from person to bear over and over and over. Like they wanted to see how long he could last before he couldn't get up anymore.
Yeah, enough to make anyone grumpy.
The art teacher here was a little hyper and kind of goofy, but Oth didn't mind him. He was okay. Case in point, he was letting Oth do some watercolors while he was off in another room. The art room looked more like Fort Knox with all the padlocks on drawers and closets, but he figured any school with a bunch of super-powered kids was going to not just have goofs but goofs.
The paper he painted wasn't watercolor paper, but that was okay too. Watercolor paper was expensive, and he was just relaxing. Not doing anything serious. It was printer paper, which meant it warped a bit when it got wet. He was used to that. In the short time he'd been in the room, three papers were drying. One just had designs on it, but the other two had various experiments with the paints. Like whether he could make tree branches by just letting the brown make little rivers into the green (no), whether detailed leaves or just patches of green looked better (a toss up), and experimenting with different shades of green in the same leaf patch (not entirely terrible but he was still learning). And yes, he was painting trees. Aspens, mostly. There were some in Vermont, but they were nothing compared to the ones in Denver. Aspens were pretty trees, even if they weren't good for climbing.
Okay, this was making him homesick. Oth took a fresh sheet of paper and began painting. And frowned, disgusted, when he discovered the shape he'd blobbed onto the paper most resembled... a bear.
Oh well. He started filling it out. Not that he knew what he looked like beared-out, but he could take a good guess.