I first saw this meme on Twitter via Geoge Takei, but here's the image:

And I had to stop and think: would I actually want to LIVE in any of these places?
Let's start with places I definitely don't want to go to:
* Westeros: are you INSANE? It'd be like moving to medieval England during the War of the Roses. No. Hell no. Why is this even on here?
* Camelot: Okay, now it's medieval England just BEFORE the War of Roses, which will ruin everything forever. Still hell no.
* Wonderland: I think mixing LSD and mescaline would be safer and less terrifying. Pass.
* Neverland: The fairies only liked little kids, and I am not one. So I probably wouldn't get to fly. This setting was at best rustic and primitive for adults, assuming the pirates don't get you. Pass.
* Middle Earth: Elves get to be immortal or nearly so, which is cool if you're an elf. But the general society is still rustic and primitive and I'm still going to be a human. I don't think women even get to be wizards in this world. Also, is this before or after Sauron trashes everything just prior to his defeat? Either way ... I think I have to pass.
That leaves:
* Narnia: It's been about thirty years since I read the Narnia books. The biggest plus here was the talking animals, and IIRC magic usage was not confined to a tiny number of people. I think I need a refresher course before I can decide if I'd want to live here or not. Do I get to go to perfected version of Narnia that exists after the last book or do I have to survive the war in it first? I am not sure I like my odds.
* Hogwarts: am I going to be a Muggle? Then pass. If I can learn magic -- is this before or after the final confrontation with Voldemort? If it's before, maybe I can warn Harry et al before various disasters hit. Well, Harry probably wouldn't listen. Dumbledore might, though. Anyway, this setting is slightly suckier than the real world if you can't use magic (because you will randomly get killed by Death Eaters and whatnot), and perhaps slightly better if you can, assuming you don't get tortured by Death Eaters or those happiness-devouring jailers or killed during a brutal wizard war that decimates the population. Umm.
I have the bad feeling that I'd be happier staying home. The modern world is surprisingly awesome. I think I'd probably take the Hogwarts option, though. I'd never forgive myself if I wimped out on seeing magic at ALL, just because it was dangerous and I might be horribly tortured or possessed or compelled to kill my friends or ... yeah. I don't think those were *normal* fates in the setting. Maybe. It was hard to tell. Anyway. I'd re-read both sets of books first and make sure I don't want to go for Narnia, and try Hogwarts if not. Wish me luck. I'd need it. O_O;;;

And I had to stop and think: would I actually want to LIVE in any of these places?
Let's start with places I definitely don't want to go to:
* Westeros: are you INSANE? It'd be like moving to medieval England during the War of the Roses. No. Hell no. Why is this even on here?
* Camelot: Okay, now it's medieval England just BEFORE the War of Roses, which will ruin everything forever. Still hell no.
* Wonderland: I think mixing LSD and mescaline would be safer and less terrifying. Pass.
* Neverland: The fairies only liked little kids, and I am not one. So I probably wouldn't get to fly. This setting was at best rustic and primitive for adults, assuming the pirates don't get you. Pass.
* Middle Earth: Elves get to be immortal or nearly so, which is cool if you're an elf. But the general society is still rustic and primitive and I'm still going to be a human. I don't think women even get to be wizards in this world. Also, is this before or after Sauron trashes everything just prior to his defeat? Either way ... I think I have to pass.
That leaves:
* Narnia: It's been about thirty years since I read the Narnia books. The biggest plus here was the talking animals, and IIRC magic usage was not confined to a tiny number of people. I think I need a refresher course before I can decide if I'd want to live here or not. Do I get to go to perfected version of Narnia that exists after the last book or do I have to survive the war in it first? I am not sure I like my odds.
* Hogwarts: am I going to be a Muggle? Then pass. If I can learn magic -- is this before or after the final confrontation with Voldemort? If it's before, maybe I can warn Harry et al before various disasters hit. Well, Harry probably wouldn't listen. Dumbledore might, though. Anyway, this setting is slightly suckier than the real world if you can't use magic (because you will randomly get killed by Death Eaters and whatnot), and perhaps slightly better if you can, assuming you don't get tortured by Death Eaters or those happiness-devouring jailers or killed during a brutal wizard war that decimates the population. Umm.
I have the bad feeling that I'd be happier staying home. The modern world is surprisingly awesome. I think I'd probably take the Hogwarts option, though. I'd never forgive myself if I wimped out on seeing magic at ALL, just because it was dangerous and I might be horribly tortured or possessed or compelled to kill my friends or ... yeah. I don't think those were *normal* fates in the setting. Maybe. It was hard to tell. Anyway. I'd re-read both sets of books first and make sure I don't want to go for Narnia, and try Hogwarts if not. Wish me luck. I'd need it. O_O;;;
no subject
Date: 2014-05-15 02:15 pm (UTC)DOORS?! DOORS TO ALTERNATE WORLDS?! Even if I never set FOOT through them, but only PEEK through, I've just seen the most awesome thing ever! Even if I step into Narnia and Aslan pops up and goes, "Nuh-uh. Only KIDS allowed in this convoluted pseudo-religious allegorical universe," I'd be like -- "ASLAN! I got tossed out of Narnia by ASLAN!" How awesome is THAT?! I mean, where would I even start or stop? As a good citizen, I should probably notify the authorities that, hey, there are some doors to other dimensions here. (Possibly a security concern, you know?) And their MERE EXISTENCE fundamentally alters my understanding of how reality works. I'd probably be making phone calls like crazy. Like, calling Koogrr, trying desperately to persuade him to come down here to (wherever these doors are), offering to foot the bill for the ticket or whatever because, like, this is WORLD-ALTERING STUFF (even if all we do is go bother Aslan again and get tossed out on our ears).
In case you wonder why I keep using the Narnia and Aslan example, it's not because I am hung up on pseudo-messianic lions. I confess that Wonderland has a certain appeal to it, but if I were really there, and I were experimentally choosing a world to go into, Narnia strikes me as the best choice for somewhere to visit where I wouldn't get killed outright. I imagine all my excitement of visiting new worlds would be considerably diminished if it were abruptly cut off by my SUDDEN AND VIOLENT DEATH.
But even if all the choices were hazardous, I would feel a certain OBLIGATION to pick one. I just might have to get my affairs in order, update my last will and testament, put considerable effort into preparing myself, and do so with the realization that it might very well be the last thing I ever do, so I'd better give it my best shot and make it count (and there'd be an awful lot more praying involved than usual). And of course there would be other factors: Can I tell anyone else? Gwendel's bound to have an opinion on the whole thing, to be sure! Is this a limited-time offer? Will the doors still be here? Can I visit ONLY one? Can I get BACK? Is there some sort of Narnia-esque time discrepancy between here and there I need to be aware of? Are there any other rules? And if I COULD tell the authorities, with any means of proving that I'm not a nutcase, I'd imagine the whole thing is going to be locked up like ... I dunno ... a UFO crash site.
Aaaanyway, I just mean that before I even get to the point of thinking "What would I do in {insert fantasy world here}?" I find myself tied up with the thoughts of all the implications of just being offered the CHOICE in the first place. I used to read stories about settings such as Narnia, with this business of "only kids can go to Fantasyland" and once you get too old you get rejected, etc., and thinking how unfair and cruel that was. But if I were able to visit a magical realm, then even if I got booted out, it would fundamentally alter my understanding of how the world works: If there is magic HERE, then there might be magic ELSEWHERE.
no subject
Date: 2014-05-16 03:12 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2014-05-16 03:31 pm (UTC)