Artemis
Allure
Allure
Meg
Anyway, I may as well just write here although I mean, I can write tons, but I guess it’s harder to dictate it out than to type it and I do type a lot. So one thing I can say when it comes to this besides the idea of comparing myself to myself which I think is obvious that every blind person does in the mirror of their eyes and the lens of themselves, but besides that as I’ve mentioned before I have synaesthesia Which means that I will pick up objects and I can see myself creating songs with them, depending on the object heaviness and the temple of the peace and how it feels and sounds in my hands and in my head. Also places and events like being in a restaurant is in the key of a flat major being outside is an F major things like that, but that’s really only half of it. I feel tactile sensations and things that are very nice and helpful And personal that are for myself only and I know what they’re like and they’re very special. I opened up and shared some very personal stuff that was going on and it said on the computer that the comment was too long. So I can try to break it down later if you really want to know because I’d like to open up and share a bit more. 
Meg
Kayotic
Yes, absolutely Pikachu. I remember when I was a kid if somebody would gift me a plushy I would be so disappointed when it was anthropomorphized and didn’t look like the exact animal, because I always wanted to know what they really looked like. One of my favorite toys as a kid was a stuffed crocodile someone gave me. It looked just like a crocodile, even had the leathery skin, not fur. Fortunately, one of the things my mother did really well, was she always let me touch things if she knew I had never seen it before or would like to see it. For example, if we were in a shop and there was a glass squirrel statue that looked like a squirrel and she knew I had never seen one before, she would bring me to touch it and tell me what it was.
PIKACHU! Kawaii!
Kayotic
Calum
I get what you mean about art galleries and people going to see paintings, I’ve never understood it probably for obvious reasons but I could never understand how a picture of a vase of flowers for example is more beautiful than an actual vase of flowers. But perhaps it’s something like someone describing a food dish to you in such exquisite detail that when you then taste it, you’re disappointed because it doesn’t match up to the description. 
DevilishAnthony