ORDER ONLY: Private Message to Siz
Aug. 19th, 2014 10:50 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Siz,
I'm so very glad we were able to sort out your visit to Moddey and Sherwood yesterday. I hope it wasn't too overwhelming for you -- there are quite a lot of faces and names floating around, I'm sure, and our little ones do tend to swarm when there's someone new. Divyesh was absolutely thrilled about the lecture you gave on locational magics and apparation -- he's always been quite strong at maths, but we don't have anyone who specializes in astronomy and when Cecelia stops by for her occasional guest lectures, she prefers to focus more on runes than arithmancy, so we've been sorely neglecting both those areas of study, I'm afraid. (Divyesh helps us with brewing our day-to-day potions, if you'll recall.) Tim, the young man who showed us the communications network in Sherwood, was also especially keen to hear your lecture, and I'm so pleased you got a chance to see Sarah Fawcett again too.
Regina thoroughly approves of you by the way --- she's the herbologist, and tends to appreciate people with a 'firm scientific mind', as she likes to say. And you certainly seemed to hit it off with Cecelia from what I could see. I hope you don't mind my popping off to chat with Davidson while you met with her.
Arista's been peppering me with questions all morning, by the way -- I think she was intrigued by your conversation, and more than a little chuffed that you wanted to talk to her especially. Even though she didn't remember you terribly well, I think it did her good to meet someone who was friends with her mother, so thank you for that. Hector didn't have much to say about it, but he's an unflappable serious sort of boy who takes a while to chew on things before having an opinion about them.
I know you've got quite a lot brewing in your cauldron before the term begins, so thank you for stopping by, I really do appreciate your taking the time.
I'm so very glad we were able to sort out your visit to Moddey and Sherwood yesterday. I hope it wasn't too overwhelming for you -- there are quite a lot of faces and names floating around, I'm sure, and our little ones do tend to swarm when there's someone new. Divyesh was absolutely thrilled about the lecture you gave on locational magics and apparation -- he's always been quite strong at maths, but we don't have anyone who specializes in astronomy and when Cecelia stops by for her occasional guest lectures, she prefers to focus more on runes than arithmancy, so we've been sorely neglecting both those areas of study, I'm afraid. (Divyesh helps us with brewing our day-to-day potions, if you'll recall.) Tim, the young man who showed us the communications network in Sherwood, was also especially keen to hear your lecture, and I'm so pleased you got a chance to see Sarah Fawcett again too.
Regina thoroughly approves of you by the way --- she's the herbologist, and tends to appreciate people with a 'firm scientific mind', as she likes to say. And you certainly seemed to hit it off with Cecelia from what I could see. I hope you don't mind my popping off to chat with Davidson while you met with her.
Arista's been peppering me with questions all morning, by the way -- I think she was intrigued by your conversation, and more than a little chuffed that you wanted to talk to her especially. Even though she didn't remember you terribly well, I think it did her good to meet someone who was friends with her mother, so thank you for that. Hector didn't have much to say about it, but he's an unflappable serious sort of boy who takes a while to chew on things before having an opinion about them.
I know you've got quite a lot brewing in your cauldron before the term begins, so thank you for stopping by, I really do appreciate your taking the time.
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Date: 2014-08-19 06:52 pm (UTC)On the astronomy - I could probably manage to write up some things that'd teach the parts of my field that are actually helpful. And maybe get free sometime again to do more in person, once I can apparate again.
(I'm well aware how most people think astronomy's not relevant to much, but - oh, the reason I wanted to teach the apparition coordinates bit last night is someone reminded me this summer how useful my explanation had been to them when they needed it.)
I enjoyed Regina a lot (and I suppose for all I'm hopeless at much of herbology, I have picked up enough about gardening for food from Mum and Pomona.) I kept forgetting, she's Muggle, of course, not wizarding. And it was a pleasure to meet Cecilia, though we got into a couple of tricky places. (She's none too sure about Tosha taking an interest in Sally-Anne, and given the rest of yesterday, I let it go.)
I'm glad to talk more to Arista (and Hector) too. If they want, ever, I mean. It's not that I knew Dominic and Chloe terribly well, but - I'm also so aware right now how much talking to someone who remembers the good parts helps. And seeing Sarah Fawcett blooming was excellent indeed.
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Date: 2014-08-19 07:36 pm (UTC)You had a wonderful rapport with our school ages, I'm sure they'd love to have you come more regularly if possible. We've such a limited pool of expertise, really; Jacinda specialised in Magical Creatures, Frank and I in Defence, and Laura in Charms and Transfiguration, and the rest of it is whatever we can cobble together from our rusty memories of Hogwarts and old textbooks, with weekly visits from Sirius for Potions. (Besides which, our adventures with wards and portkeys alone have shown me first-hand just how very valuable your area of work is!)
Sarah has really come into her own in Sherwood -- her training has made her an invaluable member of our research team, and a great boon to Cecelia. And yes, Cecelia can be rather... opinionated. And protective of her daughter. As a fellow mum who's had to look on from a distance, I can sympathise.
I think it'd be good for Arista and Hector, and they certainly weren't protesting. It's clear that Dominic and Chloe loved them dearly, and they were accustomed to a fair bit of individual attention when they were growing up. There's only so much attention we can give, so that alone is precious and would be much appreciated, I'm sure.
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Date: 2014-08-19 07:51 pm (UTC)Babies areI'm better once they're - well. Talking and running around on their own and learning things, mostly.Teaching's the thing I've planned for, from - oh, fifth year, when Alcor asked if I wanted to take over for him one day. It's not much, sometimes, compared to a lot of other things. I'll see if I can sort out some written things once I get settled, and I can definitely send round copies of the new Astronomy text we're using this year.
(Actually, I made that offer to Cecelia, too. If there's books you need, there's a number of fields where no one will wonder why I'm buying them. Not the obscure things or the ones that would draw particular attention, but astronomy, charms, runes, arithmancy, defence are all rather plausible.)
I keep poking at some of the warding magics too. I'm wondering about talking to
Brutka- does one call him Albus or something else? - once we're back at school and I can be less obvious about it. There's a newish locational warding method that takes advance calculation, but might be less risk than that Fidelius variant for some kinds of uses. Maybe.And yes. I just keep remembering talking to Chloe two springs ago, and she'd known - something was up, but not what, and she was so terrified for her children. What might happen to them.
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Date: 2014-08-19 08:03 pm (UTC)I suppose I've been rather desensitised, having been surrounded by babies for years and years. They can be rather terrifying, though, can't they?
Books would be absolutely wonderful. We've had to make do with so very little that anything you can pass along would be thoroughly devoured.
Harry and his crew deserve every accolade for Hector and Arista -- they were utterly brilliant, and foolhardy, and lucky, and rash in the way only young people can be.
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Date: 2014-08-19 08:34 pm (UTC)Right. Books. Books is a thing I can do. I'll start figuring out some useful things, then. Books are reassuring. They stay put in my head.
The thing about babies
It's not that I'm not used to them. (Eight nieces and nephews - going to be nine, and I was old enough to remember my youngest brother as a baby and help.) It's. Well.
Raz and I were planning on trying this autumn. For our own. And I'd expected to spend the summer sorting out the practical parts. So it's raw. Very.
We hadn't told people we were going to, though Mum and Dad and Tosha and Storm and Di know now. And it's my own thing to deal with. But I didn't want you to think that it was the babies that were the problem. Just me.
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Date: 2014-08-19 08:40 pm (UTC)Yes. I can see how that would be hard.
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Date: 2014-08-19 08:55 pm (UTC)I wrote to Tosha, mostly to pass on something about Septima.
I keep thinking about staff. Patterns and - oh, alliances. I won't duck the word. And it's going to be complicated.
First thing is keeping everyone safe as we can. Second thing is making sure they can learn. Right?
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Date: 2014-08-19 09:02 pm (UTC)The galleon group is its own particular sort of risk, of course. And there's always the unexpected. Anything in particular that has been keeping you up?
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Date: 2014-08-19 09:19 pm (UTC)(I'd say I'd rather someone else, and I would, but I actually can't think of anyone who'd be much better, and a lot who would be vastly worse.)
The Galleon group is a complication, yes. And the unexpected, which we keep having. Over and over again. I do best when I think through things in advance, as I said, but I don't even know where to start with some of what might come up now. Not yet.
Which is a lot of what's keeping me up, really. And how to balance things. Staff. Students. The NEWT classes. Protections on the tower. All the little things, like how to be social at meals in a way that's useful and not too much for me to manage, which - well, it's going to be hard, considering.
At least Tosha won't forbid the elves from bringing food to my office, like Madam Pinkness - or do I say Madam Toad? - did.
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Date: 2014-08-19 10:09 pm (UTC)It does help that our Order members attending Hogwarts already have some experience in these matters, and have fairly good instincts.
And goodness, I can imagine it'll be a rather exhausting transition. You have my best wishes on that front, and it seems as though you have a good support network waiting for you at Hogwarts. (You must know that my Evie would do just about anything for you, all you need to do is ask.)
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Date: 2014-08-19 10:46 pm (UTC)I expect lots of time on the tower. It's soothing. But I've known for years, since I started teaching, that it's easy to be pinned up there if I'm not careful. The Carrows, then other fears.
So you know, I keep a broom up on the observing platform, could keep more, and there's things that show me who's on the tower. (A star chart, the magnitudes shift by constellation when people in the class I've set are there, and then I have other stars that change for each of my newts and the staff and anyone I particularly want to know about. Not my design, but very clever, and students can't really read what it means.)
And yes. It helps they've got practice. And - for other reasons, but it's handy - I gave Harry something of Raz's that'll show where I am in the castle.
As to the rest, well, I suppose, the only way forward is through. And you're right, there are people who'll help. Students and staff. I don't know how I'd have managed this summer without Poppy in particular.
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Date: 2014-08-20 01:04 am (UTC)