Champion
"It's a whole load of irony."
Username: Aysan1
Which bean are you trying for:
The little boy
Adoptive Parents:
We recommend no females-- No big families, and no giving up.
There are a few factors to know. This child is not the easiest to take care of.
He has a few defining qualities to get used to. But he is still a child so take care of him as one and watch out, he tends to frequent anxious behavour.
"Conditions and Child Information" wrote:-: Selective mutism-- Speech patterns vary. Can only speak to certain females. Selective mutism; Began at- the age of four, was clearly notable by five to six. When he didn't talk to any of the other children, except his sisters and went quiet in front of the usual female care takers. It's not that he does or doesn't want to, its that he can't.
-: Easily anxious-- The whole world is fraught with trouble and it's scary. Hard to imagine feeling comfortable within a crowd, hard to see himself speaking to someone without shaking oddly just as it is. Champ is indecisive, doesn't like being put on the spot. It makes him twitch and churn, or to be put up into the spotlight; that's no good, spotlight gives him headaches and a loss of breath. It becomes so hard to breath or think where there's too much pressure, even his vision will clutter and dot.
-: Loner attitude-- The other children don't really understand him, why he likes to be all alone and why it doesn't make him unhappy but relaxed instead. He's prone to slide into corners, unoticed, and to his bed in that room filled with other boys. His absence of a family has created a seamingly feeble trying young boy. Someone who doesn't much care for a family, or anyone really out of his immediate genetic connection; his sister. He finds comfort in his lonely spaces just as anyone can. Yet he is with secrets to hide.
-: Negative-- A prokaryotic pessimist right down to that soft voice. All through his core Champ has a flow of negative energy that's sucked out of that mouth of his whenever he opens it, like a never ending speaking session. He can be quite pouty. That's not going to happen, this is never going to happen, and that's just impossible for us... He seams to have quite a negative response to everything. He will use them at any will, when speaking doesn't become too hard. He believes sometimes that he was made to be alone and awkward and that it's the one thing he's good at.
-: Compensation eater-- Eats when he's too nervous and can't rant... Whether it be because he's run out of negative comments for the situation, or the fact that someone new, probably a girl, stepped into the room and he can't talk to her. He's got a bit of tummy fat because of his, not instantly noticeable. And little chubby hands.
-: Intellectual for his age-- For all that he doesn't talk, Champ makes up for it intellectually. He is by far the smartest child of his age in the orphanage and sits reading, writing and solving odd little equations, rather than socializing, at all hours of the day. Intellectuality above his age, he has quite a way of acting. An awkward, serious at times dork that doesn't know how to sympathize the correct way with others, though he tries. Socializing is a natural mystery to him.
-: Closely connected with his sibling-- He does not try to hide it. Oh no, Champ is clingy to a point and doesn't seam to see it. How... Wierd it is. He is not the type of brother to act as if his sister isn't important to him. The one great thing about the way he acts around his sister is the jokes he makes about her, in a family mocking sort of "I know I can get away with it" way. But it barely can fight against all his ranting and raving about his twin.cOh, he'll rant and rant about how great she is in a slightly ungodly way, and even if he is able to fake that she isn't that important to him it's all in vain, and disperses, as when she enters the room he's back to clinging to her like a viper to it's poor, poor prey.
Why would they make the best parents for this bean?
Most have turned down the application cession after knowing the requirements and condition barriers, we hope to have someone fallow through and see where this leads them.
It's not that other parents wouldn't be equaly loving, it's that it's what Champ needs, as cliche as that sounds. Champ is still acquiring to life and needs someone to help him out and someone who will have care for him, wanted or unwanted by him for his own good.
Someone, whom despite his clinging and his usual negative comments, his awkward behavior, his quick unsocialable remarks, his obliviousness to the obvious, his hiding; like a bug, his magnetic opposition to being the center of attention yet his slurring way of almost always getting there, his... qualities, will take care of him and would be willing to go to any lengths to get it right.
It's not that she'd make for the perfect caretaker and that they'd have the most perfect family, because lets admit it with him in there its just a whole bunch of crazy, it's that they'd make it work.
Champ being the soft, quiet boy that he is needs some sort of guidance, as all children do, especially if he is going to be away from his sister for a few periods of time. God knows how anyone with sanity will survive that. He already has his constant conversation about her when she's around. He'll surely feel a little bit of discomfort for it.
The fact that Champ isn't over his selective mutism when it comes to Keile. Most with this condition have special exceptions, like the ability to talk to certain close family even if they are the opposit gender, Champs case. But he can't really talk to Keile, at least not yet. He still chose her though... An adoption center would think of it as a far shot, a big "possibly or possibly not" chance. But he got clingy with her too. The only exception between Keile and his sister is that he can't make verbal conversation with Keile, as of yet. It's just that he still can't talk to her, that's the slight offset...
Someone, whom despite his clinging and his usual negative comments, his awkward behavior, his quick unsocialable remarks, his obliviousness to the obvious, his hiding; like a bug, his magnetic opposition to being the center of attention yet his slurring way of almost always getting there, his... qualities, will take care of him and would be willing to go to any lengths to get it right.
It's not that she'd make for the perfect caretaker and that they'd have the most perfect family, because lets admit it with him in there its just a whole bunch of crazy, it's that they'd make it work.
Champ being the soft, quiet boy that he is needs some sort of guidance, as all children do, especially if he is going to be away from his sister for a few periods of time. God knows how anyone with sanity will survive that. He already has his constant conversation about her when she's around. He'll surely feel a little bit of discomfort for it.
The fact that Champ isn't over his selective mutism when it comes to Keile. Most with this condition have special exceptions, like the ability to talk to certain close family even if they are the opposit gender, Champs case. But he can't really talk to Keile, at least not yet. He still chose her though... An adoption center would think of it as a far shot, a big "possibly or possibly not" chance. But he got clingy with her too. The only exception between Keile and his sister is that he can't make verbal conversation with Keile, as of yet. It's just that he still can't talk to her, that's the slight offset...
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Art of the twins together:
Roleplay scenario between bean and potential parents:
It'd be best to do research on his condition before signing a viewing sheet, or appearing.
There was a waiting process... Who could have expected that, anyways? He could imagine a line up for his sister all pretty and pink and for him a group of parents that he didn't want to see. Big, scary people that wanted him to come out and play with them. Especially the ones with the girls. Daughters, mothers, sisters, not usually big but, they all made him lose his breath and his voice all together. His vocal chords shut up like a door, and that was the scary part. "I don't want to sis. I don't like them." He was notorious for, instantaneously, turning down every parent that came through that door and looking for him. It was his thing.
He remembered how he had looked at his sister and carefully spoke his words. "I don't think I'd like to be in a big family." What a peculiar boy, big crowds made him nervous... Just thinking about big families could make his stomach die right there, drop six feet and sweat fear into him in tingles bigger than tons. Oh god, oh god. It was scary the way he got with too much tension. "I mean, having you is enough."
"Someone said we looked like butterflies. I'm more of the catterpillar."
He sighed, and maybe he'd do great things.
And they talked so much that by the time the next parents had come in he was too clingy of her to let her go.
He had made them promise Bi-monthly visits for the both of them. Standing there, all huffy and with small hairline shaking, staring up at the group of workers with tight lips pulled into an even tighter frown and his pink pointed at them. The only promise he knew was the pink promise,
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Others:
The most easy target to pick on
He's more of the snuggling type, likes lulling things
Wip
Note wrote:
Just a note. The idea of Champ having selective mutism was the base to his persoanlity along with his chubby tummy. It formed who he was. If another person uses this same condition just know that I didn't steal it from them ;u; It was an original idea that I really adored for him to have, and to make who he is and will be.












