Subject: We always have the time.
Author:
Posted on: 2015-04-15 08:30:00 UTC
Wait, where are we on the Board? Yeah, still five threads under us - that's at least a day or two, even at current rates.
Another Ordeal: Ronan. What's his weakstrength? I'm gonna go with 'unwillingness to surrender control'. He spends a lot of time agonising about a certain passenger of his, and also gets very prickly when it looks like Nita's going to be running things in Ireland back in Abroad.
And on his Ordeal, we know he 'took in the sea' to save the Roman invaders of Ireland. That was simultaneously using and overcoming his weakness: using, because the act itself was one of letting something vastly more powerful do something that really should have overwhelmed him, if he weren't so stubborn. Overcoming, because he let the Romans land, when he knew they could take over his country. For an Irish nationalist, that's a massive surrender of control, passing it off to other people - invaders.
See? The theory fits, or can be made to fit, which is close to the same thing.
As for myself, because self-inserts are fun... I'd guess 'trivia'. Because... well:
If you gave me magic powers, I would almost certainly transport myself into Middle-earth if I thought I possibly could. Not to stay or anything, but... just to see if it was possible. Which is very clearly the setup for an Ordeal - it occurs to me that except for Mamvish, all the Ordeals we know about take place away from their own world.
So there's me in Middle-earth, filled with trivia. I can easily come up with a bunch of scenarios that both make use of my trivia collection - both relating to Arda and relating to, y'know, physics and such - and also drive home the point that a) I don't know everything, and b) just knowing isn't enough anyway.
If pressed for a plot... Numenor, in the last days, probably even after the Fleet has sailed to make war on Valinor. The Lone Power (Sauron) is physically present and, in fact, in absolute control of the island - except for a bunch of renegades who are about to flee, and Tar-Miriel, the dethroned Ruling Queen. We know, canonically, that Sauron lost his body in the Fall of Numenor, which was not his plan, and suggests possible wizardly intervention. We also know that Miriel died there - which lines her up neatly for the 'sacrifice' theme of the story.
hS writes stories in his head, can you tell?