She could see--sense, rather, given she didn't have any dojutsu techniques that allowed her to physically see his chakra network--the disturbances in his chakra network as he struggled with the genjutsu. Unfortunately, she could only monitor his level of emotions and stress, and how deeply he was entrenched in the genjutsu, with her connection to him.
She couldn't tell exactly how he was doing in there, or how well he was dealing with the genjutsu fears thrown at him. He wasn't trying to resist her genjutsu in any way that indicated an attempted escape to her, and the part of his chakra she allowed him to keep access to wasn't completely disturbed with panic or distraction, though. There was no reason she couldn't leave him at this level, but since she didn't know how well he was distracted, and his current state suggested he wasn't at his limit, she didn't.
There wasn't a point to a training that didn't push you to some limit or another, right?
For this, she dipped into more specific shinobi fears: worse wounds, more injuries that made it harder to keep up with as one medic (pressure was a good idea to push him with, she thought), and...endangering his teammates specifically.
She had to rely on a thin representation of them that his mind would fill out, though, because she didn't know them well enough to take a direct hand in manipulating them. After a moment or two of contemplation, she decided to make up for that by making certain to cross the feeds of 'hostile threat' and 'loved one'. The inherent confusion involved in turning an ally or loved one against him would help cover up for other weaknesses in the genjutsu.
It wasn't that she didn't want to work on those weaknesses, mind, it was that some weaknesses couldn't be avoided when dealing with enemies: she was never really likely to know their loved ones well enough to back them up with her own knowledge of them. Better to practice the distraction and smoke-screen techniques around those weaknesses.
no subject
She couldn't tell exactly how he was doing in there, or how well he was dealing with the genjutsu fears thrown at him. He wasn't trying to resist her genjutsu in any way that indicated an attempted escape to her, and the part of his chakra she allowed him to keep access to wasn't completely disturbed with panic or distraction, though. There was no reason she couldn't leave him at this level, but since she didn't know how well he was distracted, and his current state suggested he wasn't at his limit, she didn't.
There wasn't a point to a training that didn't push you to some limit or another, right?
For this, she dipped into more specific shinobi fears: worse wounds, more injuries that made it harder to keep up with as one medic (pressure was a good idea to push him with, she thought), and...endangering his teammates specifically.
She had to rely on a thin representation of them that his mind would fill out, though, because she didn't know them well enough to take a direct hand in manipulating them. After a moment or two of contemplation, she decided to make up for that by making certain to cross the feeds of 'hostile threat' and 'loved one'. The inherent confusion involved in turning an ally or loved one against him would help cover up for other weaknesses in the genjutsu.
It wasn't that she didn't want to work on those weaknesses, mind, it was that some weaknesses couldn't be avoided when dealing with enemies: she was never really likely to know their loved ones well enough to back them up with her own knowledge of them. Better to practice the distraction and smoke-screen techniques around those weaknesses.