username;
BuddyMaltese
cd name;
Skaro (scar-oh)
cd gender and orientation;
Male // Bisexual
do they believe in aliens?;
Short answer: Yes
Long answer: Skaro's parents were both astronomers, so growing up he learned all about charting the stars, identifying planets, and picking out constellations. The highlights of his childhood were when his mom and dad would bring him into the observatory they worked in and let him look through the giant telescope and behold the beauty of the night sky in exquisite detail. Being so young,
he would always try to search for extraterrestrial life as he was absolutely positive the little aliens from the cartoons he watched must be out there somewhere.
When he and his family returned home from those outings and Skaro was tucked into bed, he would stare out his window at the sky continuing to look for aliens until he fell asleep. His enthusiasm for space wasn't just confined to his home. At school he would relay what he had learned about astronomy to his friends, and even drew (to the best of his abilities) the constellations to show them what they looked like.
As an adult, Skaro has maintained his fascination with this subject. He didn't want to pursue exactly the same career as his parents, but rather chose to work as a grade school science teacher to instill a passion for learning in the future generation of Celestial Dragons. The question he gets asked most by his students is whether he believes in aliens or not.
"Well," he'll reply, "the universe is large and never ending. We're but a tiny spec in an infinite world, and to think we're the only possible living and conscious things out there seems a bit odd to me. Remember, alien life doesn't always mean green celestial dragons with antennae and huge eyes, it can be as simple as a little alien ant or grasshopper.
"Well mister Skaro," one student had replied, "What if there is them celestial dragons with some big ol' eyes that wants t' eat our brains?"
Skaro chuckled at his young imaginative mind, as it reminded him of his own when he was that age. "If that's the case, then I'll have to get out my ray gun and protect you all from the brain-eating aliens. They'll have to get through me before they get to my students." The student and rest of the class seemed happy with this answer. They most definitely believed that if any teacher were to have a ray gun, it would be Mr. Skaro.
That night when he returned home, Skaro opened the box that he kept all of his old drawings in and flipped through them. Eventually he came upon the one he was looking for, a crayon drawing of him shooting an alien with a ray gun. At this Skaro smiled, and wondered if there were any life forms beyond our planet who were wondering the same thing as that student.