Reassessment always hurts a little.
Monday, January 14th, 2008 23:52![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I periodically poke at Auriel, looking for things that need to be reworked. And while this usually winds up being a good thing - I always come out the other end with a more plausible and cohesive universe - it is always a massive pain in the ass while it’s going on.
And it’s never small changes. It’s always redrawing the map (at least I never got much of it done this time around), rearranging character relationships, etc. I move closer to and then further from our world in terms of technology and culture; this happens to be an away cycle, in the direction of clockwork infrastructure and art nouveau.
The things I drag in and take out have everything to do with what’s up in my life at the time. My impression of the sights and sounds changes - cambia, that’s Italian; I like it better. The taste of it, the sense of rolling over naturally, the way the seasons do (or should).
The constants (the subway, the river, the arrangement of the districts) might say something about me. But why things underground or public transit or urban planning matter so much… yeah, I don’t know either. We could ascribe the river to the Mississippi, if we must. (I’ve never named that river. If we break this project down and take it as far back as it goes, those are really the only constants: a city with a name, and a river without one.)
Originally published at Auriel. You can comment here or there.
Names
Date: 2008-01-15 22:35 (UTC)Cities are made by people. People name the things they create and these names tend to stick. Even if the city is destroyed and a new one built, someone will find its previous name(s).
A river is a force of nature. People try to change it; they even name it. But the river re-asserts itself, becomes its own creature again eventually and what it is called is more likely to be forgotten.
Maybe that doesn't make sense; its hard to express feelings about elemental forces using words. At least, I find it so.
Love you - Mum
no subject
Date: 2008-01-16 20:03 (UTC)... and here I just thought I was being lazy; there's only one river, they can all call it "the river."