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So…her special talent is…herself?
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Maybe a little too much self-acceptance
@Brony_Conundrum
@wselfwulf
@Background Pony #C094
Personally, I’d say it’s not as much self-esteem (and certainly not narcissism as Cirrus Light suggested). I think it’s more likely to be self-acceptance (as DracoKX said), and the ability to enjoy her life, even though her large form doesn’t conform to the social norm of being a little pony.
Though I also like what mathprofbrony said, that she could be a counselor/psychiatrist who helps others see through their doubts and delusions to realize their strengths, weaknesses and worth.
Edited
That’s what I was thinking, too. The color scheme. Her overall shape and design. Especially how her eyes are kind of discolored like in some of curtsiblings’ older stuff.
It’s all about her cutie mark: @DracoKX You think that, fine, but it can also be taken the obsession route.
Also, there are some things you should not accept… Self-improvement and self-actualization (actual psychological term for achieving happiness) are not about “acceptance”, they’re about changing yourself, which is hard, which is why so many people want you to think you don’t have to, but some things you should change, though yes, sometimes it’s important to be at peace with how things are.
The trick is doing both. Being at peace with the situation, but not accepting it when it’s within your control.
She’s never shown to display either in the canon show. She said one line.
Because pony world is a friendly one and I’m actually going in the direction to become an actual professor, I’m going to assume that wasn’t sarcasm. Impossible to tell over the internet, but usually comments like that are, but I’ll assume this wasn’t :p
Thanks professor**
Thanks professionally
Any object of mass will have orbits associated with it if it is sufficiently removed from other gravitational (or, force of any kind) influences.
An orbit is just a class of trajectory where the object is moving too slow to escape an object’s gravitational pull. Imagine I’m holding a ball over a plate, then I drop the ball. Now I throw the ball to the side, and it misses the plate. Now, replace the ball with, say, a satellite, spaceship, or the moon, and the plate is the Earth. That’s what an orbit is: you’re going so fast sideways that you “miss” the Earth, or whatever it is you’re orbiting: but not so fast that you fly off into empty space forever.
Yeah but this one has its own orbit
Well, everything has some kind of gravitational pull.
Stars have densities that vary from super thin, to literally just about the densest that’s physically possible before matter collapses into a black hole.
Actually, black holes are technically stars, and define the most amount of material you can cram into that volume of space, so, yeah…
(fun fact, though: the smaller the black hole, the more dense it is. While typically black holes are about 10 trillion times as dense as water, a black hole of 136 million solar masses would be about as dense as water, larger would make it less dense (*most black holes are around 8-15 solar masses, but supermassive black holes are larger. The one at the heart of our galaxy is 4 million solar masses). At about 3.6 billion solar masses, it’s as dense as sea-level air. It’s an odd quirk of physics; though it’s worth noting that spacetime is curved in weird ways around black holes and “Density” depends on volume, but it’s difficult to really say exactly how “big” the volume within a black hole is because of how wacky space is around it - but you can make a circumference, and based off of that circumference, define volume as how much volume a sphere with that circumference would have in non-curved spacetime, which is the definition used here).
@mathprofbrony
This I accept, someone who’s special talent is helping others optimize themselves to reach their full and unique potential.