riverviewmod: (Default)
Riverview Moderator ([personal profile] riverviewmod) wrote in [community profile] riverviewlogs2017-05-01 07:22 pm
Entry tags:

introductory mingle: MEMORIA

who: everyone in Riverview!
what: Introductory Log and Memoria Commemoration
when: May 1st - May 8th
where: Anywhere around the city.
warnings: please put any necessary warnings in the subject lines

memoria


In the days leading up to May 1st, residents new and old will notice preparations beginning, a flurry of activity getting the city ready for the upcoming celebration: Memoria. A more solemn celebration than Sampremi or the Flower Festival, Memoria is a week-long time of remembrance for those lost in the Great War and the epidemic that decimated Riverview Quarantine's population 10 years ago. Memoria traditions include lighting lanterns for the dead, telling stories about lost loved ones or lost homes, eating meals with loved ones, and a special gathering to send floating lanterns down the river in honor of those lost.

a solemn commemoration of those lost



While the main city-wide event associated with Memoria is the floating of lanterns down the river on the evening of May 8th, the holiday is generally seen as a time of reflection on and appreciation of things that have been lost - people, homes, cultures, and planets. It is also a celebration of the things that remain. Many locally-owned shops will host displays of culturally-significant food, and will hand out informational flyers sharing the unique customs of their own homeworlds. There is a heavy emphasis on sharing time with family, friends, and lovers, and anyone who is able to will cook meals or treats for loved ones, or at least purchase them something good to eat.


i. hanging lanterns


Throughout the entire week of Memoria, residents will be hanging lanterns around the city. Lanterns are generally placed in greater number in places of passage - streets, bridges, and all alongside the train lines are particularly well-decorated, as are any trees alongside paths, and most homes and businesses have a profusion of lanterns around their doors and windows. This tradition is twofold; some people believe that the lanterns are hung in these places in order to guide the spirits of the dead back to those who still love them, other people believe that the lanterns are to give light for living loved ones to find their doors in times of darkness...many people believe both.

No matter what your character might believe, you can be sure they will find themselves offered a lantern for free from various businesses or friendly citizens passing by, and invited to hang it before the sun sets, or they may be handed a bundle of lanterns and asked to help share them with others.


ii. sharing life


Throughout the city, characters will find groups of people gathering to share hot drinks and talk about their loved ones lost, their homes and planets, or their experiences during the Great War and the epidemic. Anyone who has lost someone, who has fought to survive, who is feeling cut off and homesick, is welcome to sit and share their story. If your character chooses to sit and to share their story, they will find that people will gather to listen, will generally be respectful of the telling, and may share their own similar experiences in return. This is an excellent time to air grief in an environment where most people understand and respect grief, and a good time to deepen the connections to others around you, to understand them better.

There is also a very large focus on cooking or purchasing meals or treats for loved ones during Memoria, with many people taking meals with everyone they care about during the week of the holiday. Some go the extra mile and will hand out baked goods (usually chocolate or cinnamon), packets of candy, or other little treats to acquaintances, especially if they would like to form a closer bond with them. This is a great time for characters to reach out to someone they would like to get to know better with a surprise treat!


iii. floating of the lanterns


On the evening of May 8th, just before sundown, many of the city's residents will head toward the banks of the river, where they will light lanterns in a wide variety of shapes, sizes, and colors, in honor of their dead loved ones. The types of lanterns vary wildly, based on personality (either of the person floating it or the person they are honoring), culture, and many other factors. Some lanterns are very simple, others are incredibly complex, but the one common feature they all have is that people write on the shades of them - they write about their feelings for their loved ones, their wishes for their relationships and friendships, a memory from childhood or home, or even just lines of poetry or lyrics from songs that express something they miss, or something that hurts them.

Once those emotions are written on the lanterns, the lanterns are set free, floating down the river in the darkening evening, in a cathartic gesture shared by most residents of the city. Waves of lantern floating will start around 7 pm and continue until the sun rises on the morning of May 9th.


iv. roommates or wildcard


Feel free to use this prompt to set up headers for a communal floor, or threads open to roommates for the purpose of getting to know each other. Or if you have an idea for a prompt that isn't in this list, set during Memoria, feel free to write it up!



visual inspiration


click on thumbnails for larger view


Credit: image i: glowconcepts, image ii: by trenchmaker, image iv: cherryorange; image iii: found uncredited on Pinterest - please let the mod know if you find credit!

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dust_of_life: (Annoyed)

[personal profile] dust_of_life 2017-05-07 03:10 pm (UTC)(link)
Dunno.

[Fatima sighs, biting down on the inside of her cheek.]

Right now, I'm trying to focus mainly on finding a way to get home at all. Answers aren't really falling into my lap.
livingsymbol: ([S] But sometimes I like it too much.)

[personal profile] livingsymbol 2017-05-09 02:34 pm (UTC)(link)
I doubt answers are going to be that easy to find. It'll be hard work to figure out how things work, and we can't expect the people here to do it all for us. That's our responsibility.

[That said, Steve's voice softens slightly.]

We'll get home. It may take time, but we'll manage. In the meantime, we can do some good here.
dust_of_life: (Tired)

[personal profile] dust_of_life 2017-05-09 03:16 pm (UTC)(link)
Auntie Diana used to say "Nothing worth doing is ever easy."

[The problem is, Fatima feels like everyone is fighting her. It's almost like no one else actually wants to go home. Like they're happy being prisoners here. And maybe that's justified, in some cases. But not for her. No. A prisoner's first prerogative is escape.]

But as for doing good here, I think the appropriate cliche is "no good deed goes unpunished."
livingsymbol: ([Cap] Honestly I've seen bigger.)

[personal profile] livingsymbol 2017-05-16 04:32 pm (UTC)(link)
You haven't seen your aunt in a while?

[Since Fatima said she's still living, it sounds a lot like she just doesn't pay visits to her aunt. The past tense sounds wrong to Steve. The estranged kind of reference that reminds him of the distance between himself and many of his old friends. Except her aunt isn't gone, and he wonders how they grew apart like that. Or if she'll try to find her again when they go home.]

That's a shame. She sounds like a smart woman. And so far it doesn't seem like anyone is ungrateful for a genuine offer of help. There might be a few, but it's a big city. You just have to give them a chance. They'll come around.