strategic_guile: (Yeah; and so he was like...)
Blaine Thorps ([personal profile] strategic_guile) wrote in [community profile] exsilium2012-10-16 12:40 pm

Second | Video --> Action

[The video starts up and you get a blonde with an upticked mouth looking at you.]

So everyone got these new tablets, but teaching us how to use them was just one step they weren't willing to take. I figure I could step in here and offer to teach the basics to anyone who was having a problem using theirs.

I'll be at the *insert random place here idk* for most of today, so if anyone wants to stop by for a lesson, I'll be there. [Grins a little wiser] I hope ya'll are good, attentive students so I don't regret this later.

[/feed ends]

[personal profile] getwrenched 2012-10-30 05:03 am (UTC)(link)
( Winry listens, nodding her head and -- wishing she had any of her works in progress around to demonstrate how connections were modified back home. )

The fine tuning can take years, if a patient manages to pull through surgery for the initial installation of the connective plates. It's the hardest with kids, since the adjustments have to happen so often to compensate for growth, but once the brain and body's figured out how to respond to the wiring and the differences in synapse response time, you never lose the responsiveness.

[personal profile] getwrenched 2012-11-01 07:23 am (UTC)(link)
Modulation is an important part of the recovery process. Peeling oranges, handling easily bruised fruits, people need help retraining themselves to compensate for what pressure used to tell us about our limitations and sensitivities.

( By extension of being an automail mechanic, she had to be good with adaptive physical therapy and retraining programs. )

[personal profile] getwrenched 2012-11-04 05:58 am (UTC)(link)
You're thinking of putting actual skin over a mechanical support structure?