Username; monkeybee123
Name; Sora (Unisex name, meaning "sky" in Japanese)
Gender; Genderfluid
Personality; Introverted, Comfortable with close friends.
Why it has the Dream catcher; Sora loves the dark and night and likes nothing more than having sleepovers with her friends! (And doing all-nighters!) When he was younger, he used to be really scared of the night and not like going to bed, for the fear of something coming into his room and grabbing him while he slept. She used to have terrible nightmares. She only told one friend - Arida. Arida explained to Sora how to stop the nightmares and taught her how to lucid dream. That night, Sora tried so hard to control her dream but she couldn't. The nightmares were getting too much to bear and Sora ended up staying awake all night. The next day at school, Sora fell asleep in almost all of his lessons. When Arida asked him what was wrong after he fell asleep for the 4th time that day, Sora just replied, "No sleep".
"Again?" Arida replied.
"Mhm" nodded Sora, groggily.
"I'm taking you to the nurse" Arida sighed, dragging Sora along.
When they got to the office, a nice nurse called "Latte" opened the door. Latte asked them what was wrong and after explaining about the nightmares and no sleep, Latte said that he knew exactly what to give her. He left the room for around 10 minutes, looking for the exact thing to give to Sora. When he returned, he presented what looked like a large fabric spider in front of her. He explained that that was a dream catcher and you hang it up in the corner of your bedroom and it catches all the bad dreams.
When Sora got home that night, he couldn't wait to try it! He had dinner, and was exhausted from lack of sleep so he crawled upstairs, hung the dream catcher in the corner of his room, and flopped on the bed, falling fast asleep.
When she woke up the next morning, she screamed in happiness! No bad dreams occurred that night, or any night after that. She began to love the night time and the wonders that it brought. Thanks to the dream catcher.
