Fia the Phoenix
Disorder: Dissociative Amnesia
Phobias/Fears: Claustrophobia
Bad Habits: Drinks a ton of caffeine if available. Fidgets a lot if forced to stand still for a long time. Taps pencil without realizing she is doing so.
Good Qualities: Generally tries to be helpful to those she knows. Hardworking. Honest.
Bad Qualities: Can be sort of quiet at first meetings. Indecisive. Disorganized in everything but keeping track of her memory notebook.
Sexual Background: Asexual
Likes: Walking around outside, staring at the clouds, singing, comedy and action movies, photography.
Dislikes: Sad movies, staying indoors for too long, violence, being the center of attention, pools/oceans/large bodies of water because she can’t swim
She always carries around a notebook that is labeled “Mind and Memories” to keep track of exactly what it sounds like.
History: She comes from a fairly normal family that included her mother, father, 2 older brothers, and a younger sister. Her adoption was at a fairly young age with her found abandoned somewhere in a large wooded area surrounded by ash.
The amnesia didn’t really start until age 15 when a fairly large fire engulfed her house in the middle of the night. She had been found in room in a catatonic state, which took her a few days to come out of. One of her brothers did not survive the fire, however. The suspected cause of the fire was arson with some gasoline evident around the outside of the house. Her parents were oddly hesitant to get her any sort of psychiatric help when the problem became obvious. Instead, they bought her a book to keep track of her memories and her life conditions.
She doesn’t really remember much of when they took her away from home. She does remember a scuffle, being frightened, a feeling of lightness and warmth, intense pain, falling, more pain, and then nothing. Her notebook didn’t give much insight on the whole incident, but she wound up in the hospital where a shouting match between her family and an unknown group of people. She remembers words like “dangerous” and “deaths” being thrown about a lot, but the shock had most of it go in one ear and out the other. Her parents spent a lot of time arguing about whether she should go off with some mysterious people in the room. Not much was explained to her, but she was asked to cooperate if she wanted the best outcome. And so she did.