player information.
name: Kimmie
are you over 18?: Yes.
personal lj:
lostandawaiting
email/msn/aim/plurk/etc: xdombillyx (plurk.)
characters in abax: n/a
in character information.
series: Doctor Who
name: Amelia "Amy" Pond
sex: F
age: 48
height: 5'11
weight: 135 lbs
canon point: 6.10 The Girl Who Waited - After Rory decides to leave her outside the TARDIS and she accepts her fate, letting the robots touch her.
previous cr: n/a
history:
Amy Pond: The Girl Who Waited
Amy meets the Doctor at the age of seven. He helps to fix the crack in her wall.
The Doctor disappears for twelve years.
The Doctor comes back to whisk her off, but she's stopped believing. In the course of twenty minutes in which the Doctor must save the world, she starts to believe again.
The Doctor disappears for two more years, reappearing on the night of her wedding.
She goes on terribly interesting adventures through time and space with him.
Upon almost being killed by a Weeping Angel, she kisses the Doctor, and he knows nothing can happen between them, so he picks up Rory from his Stag party and attempts to mend the relationship.
Amy comes to realize that Rory is who she wants when she loses him in a dream.
The cracks in time and space eat Rory, and Amy forgets him.
Time starts to come undone and the Doctor has to figure out what's happening. Turns out underneath Stone Henge was a trap waiting for the Doctor.
Amy gets attacked by a Cybermen and Rory who was a plastic Centurion ends up saving her.
She realizes who she is just as the Doctor gets trapped, and Rory shoots her.
She ends up getting placed in Pandorica's Box to heal for two thousand years, returning when she's all better.
She reunites with Rory, realizing what he did for her.
The Doctor saves all of time and space, and Amy and Rory get married. Amy remembers the Doctor, returning him to the correct dimension/ time thing.
River Song is conceived that night.
The Doctor returns, and their relationship is geared more towards best friend. Amy Pond is now a married woman.
There are more adventures.
At some point, she gets kidnapped. Her child is to be used as a weapon against the Doctor.
The Doctor rescues Amy, but not Melody.
Amy learns that River Song is Melody Pond.
They wait for the Doctor to bring back Melody.
Amy's friend Mels kidnaps the Doctor and makes him take her to Hitler.
Amy's friend Mels is Melody Pond. She kills the Doctor and then saves him.
They go on another adventure after the Doctor makes sure River is okay.
alternate history:
Amy Pond: The Girl Who Waited... Again
This is where it gets tricky.
The Doctor takes Amy and Rory to a planet called Appalappachia.
Amy gets separated, placed in a time stream much faster than the Doctors (different rooms have different variations of time). What is mere moments for them, turns out to be a week.
So she waits.
And waits.
And waits for thirty six years.
Eventually she gives up hope. To her, the Doctor never came for her. She grew cold and hardened, even coming to hate him. She had to learn to fight, survive. She learned mechanical skills and fighting skills. She had to arm herself.
Only this never happens.
Rory and the Doctor end up going into the TARDIS to find Amy's time stream. Rory goes back into the room she was in and goes to find her. What was only a few minutes for him was thirty six years for her. The Doctor's apology one seems to harden her further. The Man in the Blue Box who never has to deal with his consequences.
He says he can bring another version of Amy into this time stream, but Amy has to help. This is the first instance where Rory has to choose between which Amy he wants. He wants to save Amy from going through this, living thirty six years on her own. He makes it possible for a younger version of Amy to talk to her.
A paradox is formed wherein older!Amy speaks to younger!Amy and older!Amy is so hardened by her time there, that she realizes if she helps Rory and the Doctor save herself, there is no version of her. She becomes erased. This version and the thirty six years cease to exist. Amy can't have that, not when thirty six years would have come to naught. Time would have been rewritten, and the thirty six years that she waited and fought would have disappeared with her.
The paradox is that an older version of Amy ends up talking to a younger version using a two way device. Amy remembers when she was younger and an older one talked to her. Only she couldn't convince her older self then. There are two Amys. Through the progression of time, she gets older, an older one always talks to a younger one, and so a loop begins.
When she was the younger!Amy, an older!Amy gave her the same speech. That older!Amy (who she would later become) would not help her. But this Amy. The younger version of herself reminds her of what once mattered in her life: Rory. This older!Amy breaks all of time and the nexus and the paradox to save herself. For Rory.
Of course it's under the stipulation that she comes along. She still can't give up the thirty six years.
The Doctor agrees.
Amy makes it so that younger!Amy is transported into her timeline using the macarana, a memory tied to Rory, something strong enough to bring the timelines colliding (also using some science fiction gadgety things that are never explained).
They still have to make it back to the TARDIS, battling hand robots on the way.
Rory saves younger!Amy, while Amy does her badass thing and gives them time. Rory takes Amy into the TARDIS and the Doctor shuts the doors on future!Amy. First rule is the Doctor lies. He already made the choice that he was going to save his Amy, the younger Amy.
Angry, Amy first tries to get in, but when Rory talks to her, and she realizes how much he loves her, any version of her, Amy knows this has to be. This version of herself and the thirty six years must be erased. As much as she needs to fight, needs to exist, she knows that if she gets in the TARDIS then everything is lost. Not just her. For once she puts her stubbornness aside and does what needs to be done.
It's then the hand robots catch up to her. With the TARDIS at her back, she asks to see Earth once last time before she succumbs to her fate, dropping to the floor.
personality:
The Girl Who Waited
Amy is a headstrong, young woman. She starts off very determined as to what her reality is. Things have become what they are. A man in a box once came to open her eyes, but he left. Amy became rather hard for this. While she was always stubborn, there was almost a hardness to her. People tried to tell her what was, but eventually she was worn down.
Until the man in the blue box returned. While she is still stubborn and would gladly run into a situation head first, he is the person that opened her eyes. There are stars. There are things she could have only imagined out there. Her curiosity is lit ablaze and she wants more.
Amy was never the type to take the word 'no', but with a universe in front of her, she is wild, imaginative, and wants to know it all. She is fun and light, and dedicated. Amy is loyal to those she trusts. Once the Doctor proves who he is, that she was right all along, she would do anything for him. The same with Rory, her fiance. She does love him. He is her stability. The Doctor shows her the world, but Rory shows her herself. Who she is. It's why she chose the reality that has him in it. Her choice was her fiance.
She's strong. She's willing to go to any lengths. Amy put herself in the vampire's layer, because she not only trusted the Doctor implicitly, but because she wanted to help. She wants to do things. We see how boring Leadworth is. She's the most exciting thing in it, with her tales of the Doctor and her flighty job. But Amy wants more. This is her chance to see and do the impossible, and she gladly excepts her role as the Doctor's companion.
This means that she is the Doctor's humanity. She sees things he doesn't, because he's seen the universe ten times over. It's become dull to him, but to Amy not only is he amazing, but the universe is as well. It's immense and Amy is so longing to know it.
Amy is caring. She loves hard. It's why she ended up trying to jump the Doctor after the Angels ordeal or why talking to him after the Space Whale was so important. Amy grew up without a family. Or at least they were eaten by the crack in her wall, so she doesn't remember them. She lets the people around her become her family, the Doctor and Rory especially. But she even starts to let River in, even before she finds out who she is.
She goes from a childlike innocence to being an adult, and then the Doctor reminds her of the importance of fairytales. That dreaming is important, that there are things out there that are so inconceivable, we must poke them. She shares that outlook with the Doctor, wanting to know more. She's known him since she was seven, and she's loyal enough to follow him to the end of the universe and then some.
The Girl Who Waited... Again
That is to say that was who she was then. But now? Thirty six years in isolation can change a person.
"Thirty-six years, three months four days of solitary confinement. This facility was built to give people a chance to live. I walked in here and I died."
Amy Pond is not the girl she once was. Somewhere along the line, she'd become hardened. With hand-bots chasing her, everything became about survival. Despite the fact that her younger self put out a sign that said she was waiting, when we see it, it's all marked up and barely legible.
Giving up? Amy would beg to differ. She's come to terms with her reality. Though she may live in a beautiful place, it's a prison. Her life is hell, as she tells the Doctor. Her relationships have completely changed. When she sees Rory again and he offers a solution, she refuses it.
In fact, she goes on to say she hates the Doctor. He's allowed to traipse in and out of people's lives, but they're the ones that have to live it. And this was her reality, cruel and harsh, and she turned into it.
But somewhere in there, deep in there, the Girl Who Waited is still there. The girl who can laugh at the Doctor, who can get Rory to do a double take, the girl that loves Rory above all else.
And that is why she changes the course of events and breaks the paradox. Because Rory was the one person that made everything worth it. In fact, she named her robot, her only companion, after him. A younger version of herself reminds her of this, and that's when the coldness breaks for a moment. That's when the old her, the lively one with spirit and spunk decides to smash the timeline to bits.
Of course she's still stubborn though. She has to have things her way. It takes her younger self to even agree to save herself. She won't listen to reason. Amy refuses to not exist. She is a fighter, and she fought too hard for the past thirty six years to mean nothing. She also argues continuously with her younger self about coming with.
"All I've got, all I've had for thirty-six years is cold hard reality... Call it what it is. A probe. And I call my life what it is. Hell."
Despite her hardness and her hatred for the Doctor, Amy does trust him. But the first rule is 'The Doctor Lies'. Her life has utterly become black and white. It doesn't matter that this was them rescuing her. She's lived here for thirty six years.
But she did trust him. He said she could come. Even though part of her new it was impossible. But the Doctor makes you believe in the impossible.
It's not only just about her love for Rory though. It takes the realization that she is loved - was loved that strongly. This Amy, her version, has to die for it to continue on. She has to stop existing so their timeline, their love can go on. She is loved. Perhaps her thirty six years weren't for nothing, even if she'll never know the struggles she went through.
Rory does. And Rory knows. The person she loved knew she loved him.
In the end, that's all that really matters.
abilities/powers: She's a Bad Ass Mother Fucker. Thirty six years has taught her some serious fighting skills, her main weapon being a sword. She also gains a lot of technical skill, building a sonic screwdriver herself and messing with the hand-bots and their wiring.
Other than that though, she's a simple human.
first person sample: Casual tags - usually written with brackets and in present tense. As if a character were making a regular entry to the main community. This should show a clear grasp of the character's voice. At least 3 lines of dialogue.
third person sample: Log format, usually, in third person past tense. This should show the character's thought process in addition to their voice. At least 200 words.
**RP samples from previous games may be linked.
case no: Is there a preferred case number you'd like your character to have? Case numbers, for those of you choosing your own should consist of a sequence of three two digit numbers (00-00-00). The first TWO must be between 1-60, but the final number can be any number between 1-99. (60-60-99)
name: Kimmie
are you over 18?: Yes.
personal lj:
email/msn/aim/plurk/etc: xdombillyx (plurk.)
characters in abax: n/a
in character information.
series: Doctor Who
name: Amelia "Amy" Pond
sex: F
age: 48
height: 5'11
weight: 135 lbs
canon point: 6.10 The Girl Who Waited - After Rory decides to leave her outside the TARDIS and she accepts her fate, letting the robots touch her.
previous cr: n/a
history:
Amy Pond: The Girl Who Waited
Amy meets the Doctor at the age of seven. He helps to fix the crack in her wall.
The Doctor disappears for twelve years.
The Doctor comes back to whisk her off, but she's stopped believing. In the course of twenty minutes in which the Doctor must save the world, she starts to believe again.
The Doctor disappears for two more years, reappearing on the night of her wedding.
She goes on terribly interesting adventures through time and space with him.
Upon almost being killed by a Weeping Angel, she kisses the Doctor, and he knows nothing can happen between them, so he picks up Rory from his Stag party and attempts to mend the relationship.
Amy comes to realize that Rory is who she wants when she loses him in a dream.
The cracks in time and space eat Rory, and Amy forgets him.
Time starts to come undone and the Doctor has to figure out what's happening. Turns out underneath Stone Henge was a trap waiting for the Doctor.
Amy gets attacked by a Cybermen and Rory who was a plastic Centurion ends up saving her.
She realizes who she is just as the Doctor gets trapped, and Rory shoots her.
She ends up getting placed in Pandorica's Box to heal for two thousand years, returning when she's all better.
She reunites with Rory, realizing what he did for her.
The Doctor saves all of time and space, and Amy and Rory get married. Amy remembers the Doctor, returning him to the correct dimension/ time thing.
River Song is conceived that night.
The Doctor returns, and their relationship is geared more towards best friend. Amy Pond is now a married woman.
There are more adventures.
At some point, she gets kidnapped. Her child is to be used as a weapon against the Doctor.
The Doctor rescues Amy, but not Melody.
Amy learns that River Song is Melody Pond.
They wait for the Doctor to bring back Melody.
Amy's friend Mels kidnaps the Doctor and makes him take her to Hitler.
Amy's friend Mels is Melody Pond. She kills the Doctor and then saves him.
They go on another adventure after the Doctor makes sure River is okay.
alternate history:
Amy Pond: The Girl Who Waited... Again
This is where it gets tricky.
The Doctor takes Amy and Rory to a planet called Appalappachia.
Amy gets separated, placed in a time stream much faster than the Doctors (different rooms have different variations of time). What is mere moments for them, turns out to be a week.
So she waits.
And waits.
And waits for thirty six years.
Eventually she gives up hope. To her, the Doctor never came for her. She grew cold and hardened, even coming to hate him. She had to learn to fight, survive. She learned mechanical skills and fighting skills. She had to arm herself.
Only this never happens.
Rory and the Doctor end up going into the TARDIS to find Amy's time stream. Rory goes back into the room she was in and goes to find her. What was only a few minutes for him was thirty six years for her. The Doctor's apology one seems to harden her further. The Man in the Blue Box who never has to deal with his consequences.
He says he can bring another version of Amy into this time stream, but Amy has to help. This is the first instance where Rory has to choose between which Amy he wants. He wants to save Amy from going through this, living thirty six years on her own. He makes it possible for a younger version of Amy to talk to her.
A paradox is formed wherein older!Amy speaks to younger!Amy and older!Amy is so hardened by her time there, that she realizes if she helps Rory and the Doctor save herself, there is no version of her. She becomes erased. This version and the thirty six years cease to exist. Amy can't have that, not when thirty six years would have come to naught. Time would have been rewritten, and the thirty six years that she waited and fought would have disappeared with her.
The paradox is that an older version of Amy ends up talking to a younger version using a two way device. Amy remembers when she was younger and an older one talked to her. Only she couldn't convince her older self then. There are two Amys. Through the progression of time, she gets older, an older one always talks to a younger one, and so a loop begins.
When she was the younger!Amy, an older!Amy gave her the same speech. That older!Amy (who she would later become) would not help her. But this Amy. The younger version of herself reminds her of what once mattered in her life: Rory. This older!Amy breaks all of time and the nexus and the paradox to save herself. For Rory.
Of course it's under the stipulation that she comes along. She still can't give up the thirty six years.
The Doctor agrees.
Amy makes it so that younger!Amy is transported into her timeline using the macarana, a memory tied to Rory, something strong enough to bring the timelines colliding (also using some science fiction gadgety things that are never explained).
They still have to make it back to the TARDIS, battling hand robots on the way.
Rory saves younger!Amy, while Amy does her badass thing and gives them time. Rory takes Amy into the TARDIS and the Doctor shuts the doors on future!Amy. First rule is the Doctor lies. He already made the choice that he was going to save his Amy, the younger Amy.
Angry, Amy first tries to get in, but when Rory talks to her, and she realizes how much he loves her, any version of her, Amy knows this has to be. This version of herself and the thirty six years must be erased. As much as she needs to fight, needs to exist, she knows that if she gets in the TARDIS then everything is lost. Not just her. For once she puts her stubbornness aside and does what needs to be done.
It's then the hand robots catch up to her. With the TARDIS at her back, she asks to see Earth once last time before she succumbs to her fate, dropping to the floor.
personality:
The Girl Who Waited
Amy is a headstrong, young woman. She starts off very determined as to what her reality is. Things have become what they are. A man in a box once came to open her eyes, but he left. Amy became rather hard for this. While she was always stubborn, there was almost a hardness to her. People tried to tell her what was, but eventually she was worn down.
Until the man in the blue box returned. While she is still stubborn and would gladly run into a situation head first, he is the person that opened her eyes. There are stars. There are things she could have only imagined out there. Her curiosity is lit ablaze and she wants more.
Amy was never the type to take the word 'no', but with a universe in front of her, she is wild, imaginative, and wants to know it all. She is fun and light, and dedicated. Amy is loyal to those she trusts. Once the Doctor proves who he is, that she was right all along, she would do anything for him. The same with Rory, her fiance. She does love him. He is her stability. The Doctor shows her the world, but Rory shows her herself. Who she is. It's why she chose the reality that has him in it. Her choice was her fiance.
She's strong. She's willing to go to any lengths. Amy put herself in the vampire's layer, because she not only trusted the Doctor implicitly, but because she wanted to help. She wants to do things. We see how boring Leadworth is. She's the most exciting thing in it, with her tales of the Doctor and her flighty job. But Amy wants more. This is her chance to see and do the impossible, and she gladly excepts her role as the Doctor's companion.
This means that she is the Doctor's humanity. She sees things he doesn't, because he's seen the universe ten times over. It's become dull to him, but to Amy not only is he amazing, but the universe is as well. It's immense and Amy is so longing to know it.
Amy is caring. She loves hard. It's why she ended up trying to jump the Doctor after the Angels ordeal or why talking to him after the Space Whale was so important. Amy grew up without a family. Or at least they were eaten by the crack in her wall, so she doesn't remember them. She lets the people around her become her family, the Doctor and Rory especially. But she even starts to let River in, even before she finds out who she is.
She goes from a childlike innocence to being an adult, and then the Doctor reminds her of the importance of fairytales. That dreaming is important, that there are things out there that are so inconceivable, we must poke them. She shares that outlook with the Doctor, wanting to know more. She's known him since she was seven, and she's loyal enough to follow him to the end of the universe and then some.
The Girl Who Waited... Again
That is to say that was who she was then. But now? Thirty six years in isolation can change a person.
"Thirty-six years, three months four days of solitary confinement. This facility was built to give people a chance to live. I walked in here and I died."
Amy Pond is not the girl she once was. Somewhere along the line, she'd become hardened. With hand-bots chasing her, everything became about survival. Despite the fact that her younger self put out a sign that said she was waiting, when we see it, it's all marked up and barely legible.
Giving up? Amy would beg to differ. She's come to terms with her reality. Though she may live in a beautiful place, it's a prison. Her life is hell, as she tells the Doctor. Her relationships have completely changed. When she sees Rory again and he offers a solution, she refuses it.
In fact, she goes on to say she hates the Doctor. He's allowed to traipse in and out of people's lives, but they're the ones that have to live it. And this was her reality, cruel and harsh, and she turned into it.
But somewhere in there, deep in there, the Girl Who Waited is still there. The girl who can laugh at the Doctor, who can get Rory to do a double take, the girl that loves Rory above all else.
And that is why she changes the course of events and breaks the paradox. Because Rory was the one person that made everything worth it. In fact, she named her robot, her only companion, after him. A younger version of herself reminds her of this, and that's when the coldness breaks for a moment. That's when the old her, the lively one with spirit and spunk decides to smash the timeline to bits.
Of course she's still stubborn though. She has to have things her way. It takes her younger self to even agree to save herself. She won't listen to reason. Amy refuses to not exist. She is a fighter, and she fought too hard for the past thirty six years to mean nothing. She also argues continuously with her younger self about coming with.
"All I've got, all I've had for thirty-six years is cold hard reality... Call it what it is. A probe. And I call my life what it is. Hell."
Despite her hardness and her hatred for the Doctor, Amy does trust him. But the first rule is 'The Doctor Lies'. Her life has utterly become black and white. It doesn't matter that this was them rescuing her. She's lived here for thirty six years.
But she did trust him. He said she could come. Even though part of her new it was impossible. But the Doctor makes you believe in the impossible.
It's not only just about her love for Rory though. It takes the realization that she is loved - was loved that strongly. This Amy, her version, has to die for it to continue on. She has to stop existing so their timeline, their love can go on. She is loved. Perhaps her thirty six years weren't for nothing, even if she'll never know the struggles she went through.
Rory does. And Rory knows. The person she loved knew she loved him.
In the end, that's all that really matters.
abilities/powers: She's a Bad Ass Mother Fucker. Thirty six years has taught her some serious fighting skills, her main weapon being a sword. She also gains a lot of technical skill, building a sonic screwdriver herself and messing with the hand-bots and their wiring.
Other than that though, she's a simple human.
first person sample: Casual tags - usually written with brackets and in present tense. As if a character were making a regular entry to the main community. This should show a clear grasp of the character's voice. At least 3 lines of dialogue.
third person sample: Log format, usually, in third person past tense. This should show the character's thought process in addition to their voice. At least 200 words.
**RP samples from previous games may be linked.
case no: Is there a preferred case number you'd like your character to have? Case numbers, for those of you choosing your own should consist of a sequence of three two digit numbers (00-00-00). The first TWO must be between 1-60, but the final number can be any number between 1-99. (60-60-99)
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