SmartMonsters

med

Purpose: enter an altered state of mental and physical existence.
Synonyms: meditate

SYNTAX EXAMPLES
1. med 1. med
2. meditate 2. meditate

USE:

  1. Use Meditate to attempt to achieve an altered state of being.
  2. Use form two if you enjoy typing.

Meditation is a condition of altered physical and mental being. It has the potential to alter your metabolism in a way which will cause you to regain energy and health more rapidly than any other alternative, including sleep. It's also likely to change your conscious perceptive apparatus in ways that may or may not be immediately apparent to you.

Like all changes in posture, meditation will very likely cause your attributes to vary, particularly including dexterity and armor.

Unlike Sleep or Rest, Med is not assured of automatic success. You must first master the Meditate Skill sufficiently for your character. And, it'll actually cost you energy to attempt to enter a meditative state. On the other hand, you may well receive experience points once meditation is successfully achieved.

 
 

Complete command reference:

Player Command Reference home
Complete Player Command Reference
Players' Guide TOC

 
 
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"Burroughs's zone, or interzone, is a vast, ramshackle structure in which all the world's architectural styles are are fused and all its races and cultures mingle .... Sometimes it is located in Latin America or North Africa, sometimes (as in The Ticket That Exploded, 1962) on another planet, sometimes (as in Cities of the Red Night,, 1981) in a lost civilization of the distant past. By contrast, Alasdair Gray's zone (in Lanark, 1981), a space of paradox modeled on the Wonderland and Looking-glass worlds of the Alice books, has been displaced to the ambiguous no man's land between cities .... Pynchon's zone is paradignmatic for the heterotopian space of postmodernist writing .... Here ... a large number of fragmentary possible worlds coexist in an impossible space which is associated with occupied Germany, but which is in fact located nowhere but in the written text itself."
--Brian McHale,
Postmodernist Fiction (info)

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