Jonathan Crane (
restingstitchface) wrote in
abraxaslogs2023-06-02 12:36 am
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
Now you're calling me up on the phone
Who: Jonathan Crane
When: June and July
Where: Cadens + Horizon
What: Closed prompts and open logs
Warnings: Possible discussions of trauma

Hello! If you want a prompt message me on
safekeeping or Discord.
When: June and July
Where: Cadens + Horizon
What: Closed prompts and open logs
Warnings: Possible discussions of trauma

Hello! If you want a prompt message me on
no subject
His hands collect in his lap.]
Ah, then feel free to ask questions. I do enjoy talking shop.
[Better that she asks professional questions than personal ones, right?]
no subject
[ What Crane will find should he manage to see, is that most of Claire's writing is in English. But there are times, when she knows the word for it, she's written in Scot's Gaelic. For no other reason than she misses her husband and it somehow helps; she doesn't want to forget what Jamie's taught her.
Her notes are about salve ratios, plant-needs, and what she's found in her observations of the woods and Fey Wilds. ]
no subject
[He eyes that book but keeps his patience. He will see its contents soon enough.]
Psychiatric medication mimics these chemical messengers by altering the receptor of a particular neuron, changing both shape and condition. Does this make sense to you?
no subject
It does, actually. With enough exposure, could the shape and condition be changed permanently?
[ Picking up her pen, she begins to take a few notes on a fresh page of her book. ]
I hope you don't mind if I take a few notes.
no subject
It's possible.
[For her to take notes and him to explain.]
Though I would not claim such a change is dependent on exposure. Such a development would be more related to potency and the absence of treatment.
[In other words,
an antidotemedicine that treats side-effects.]no subject
I understand. How soon did this become a standard method of treatment after the 1960s?
[ Obviously there are pharmaceuticals in her time, but mental health (for women especially) is still electroshock therapy and institutionalization. ]
no subject
[He tilts his head upright and repositions his hands upon his lap.]
Well, it's applications for treating psychosis were discovered by accident. New treatments - the second generation - emerged in the 70s. It is not so much this became the method overnight, but the psychopharmacological revolution beginning in the 50s enabled them to become so over a period of time.
no subject
[ Claire recrosses her legs, putting her pen down. ]
That's the correct move I think, there needs to be as much research put into this as possible. Has there been? What is the situation like in the year you're from?
no subject
[Crane leans back in his chair. One ankle crosses behind the other, eyes dipping to admire her journal.]
Do you mind?
no subject
[ She's nothing to hide; this is not her personal journal. Although Crane will find (along with the obvious) that like a lovesick and much younger woman, she has written Jamie's name a few times in the margins, always taking care with her script compared to other hastily written things. ]
I've no idea when I'll wind up living out the rest of my life, but it would be nice to see large advancements in my lifetime.
[ And not any that she already knows are coming, either. She wants true, 20th century advancement. ]
no subject
Keep hoping like that and all you'll do is make yourself ill.
[His attention remains in her notes and handwriting. He doesn't seem to pay her notice.]
no subject
I have to admit, it's a bit exciting knowing someone is reading what I've thought with interest. My husband always listens, but he's...well, he's from the 18th century. I've had to start with explaining the concept of germs.
[ She's sure if he didn't believe her then, he doesn't believe her now, but that doesn't make it any less true, and so she doesn't mind. ]
Is there anything there you'd like elaboration on?
no subject
[It is a mild affront - to imagine he might ask questions like he were back in his professor's lectures. But he keeps his pleasant tone and mild manner.]
Besides, your writing is no worse than mine.
[That spidery scrawl that he clings to out of spite as much as habit. His grandmother never had liked it.]
no subject
I appreciate that, thank you. Do you mind if I explore while you read?
no subject
[His voice is barely audible - a mere murmur as his attention is focused elsewhere.
There are all manner of unlabelled bottles and vials sitting on nearby shelves, a compound microscope holding a slide of nervous tissue. The nearby blackboard is scrawled top to bottom in equations and chemical compounds of formula ahead of her time. There is nothing else to find other than a collection of journals related to his laboratory work. His private notes are unavailable for public perusal.]
no subject
The equations aren't at all her forte, but at times she thinks she recognizes an element. Picking a journal at random once she gets to them, she opens it to the middle and begins to read while standing. He was correct: her handwriting isn't any worse than his. ]
no subject
But his interest in people draws him back to reality. He closes the book and deposits it on her chair before treading silently across the floor to where she is reading.]
Fascinating, isn't it? How flora with no relation to each other produce the same chemical formula.
[Opium makes morphine. This desert flora makes morphine.]
no subject
I think that's what always fascinated me, it's why I found myself interested in botany initially. The way something in its natural form can be transformed and do something incredible.
no subject
But he masks himself with solemnity.]
Flowers can become the most fantastic medicines. Or the most destructive weapons.
no subject
[ She turns toward her journal, nodding at it. ]
I would be interested to know what you were most curious about, truth be told. I always thought my own notes came across dry, so I hope they weren't a bore, at least.
[ She says what needs to be said and moves on, for the most part, unless something completely wild catches her eye—nothing of note there, not in that journal. ]
no subject
[He speaks thoughtfully, glancing back at her journal, his mind wandering to other things even as part of it focuses on his guest in the present.]
Your notes on medicinal plants caught my eye. Not too surprising when one considers my background, really.
[Not to mention his, err, interests.]