Thread:Silver-Haired Seireitou/@comment-5778280-20150929185820/@comment-5778280-20151007194250


 * Each style and technique within Martial Arts draws influence from an idea that once arose in the world. The flowing of water influenced movement, the mountains influenced stance, and the animals influence action and reaction. However, there is said to be one concept that was never considered influential — natural disasters. Everything, from the flowing of water, to the resilience of a rock, could be associated with "will" and "form". Natural disasters, however, have neither will or form; they simply have causes. Everybody knows what causes water to flow, mountains to stand tall, and animals to act and react. They also know in which form said concept will take (i.e mountains standing erect and resilient). Though, there are a number of interacting forces that give birth to phenomenons that can be expressed in more than one way, such as hurricanes, tornados, earthquakes, wildfires, and tsunamis. This concept, better known as "cause and effect", is something Hakuda Masters abandon when using concept resonance. However, upon realizing that a cause can yield an infinite spectrum of effects, one can resonate with "concept" on a level combining together that with which one can and cannot explain with simple "cause and effect". Kyōkai, focusing on a single "cause", can branch out and utilize the innumerable "effects" said cause can have. He can resonate with the concept of an earthquake underwater giving birth to a tsunami, or an earthquake giving birth to a volcanic eruption; he can resonate with one thing in order to synchronize with another. Naturally, the Mazoku expresses this in the form of a single heightened sense — a medium for his resonance.

How would you go about being able to resonate with the concept of a "natural disaster"? Would that description, for a special type of concept resonance suffice?