not_thedragon: (Default)
Uchiha Sasuke ([personal profile] not_thedragon) wrote in [community profile] sunshineverse2014-07-13 02:30 am

[July 14th, open]

Who: Uchiha Sasuke
When: July 14th
Where: The most remote training field he can find
What: Sasuke is between missions and has been kicked out of Hinata's recuperating room as gently as possible. Time to break some bones; it's equal parts penance and practical, he swears.

Things had actually seemed to be going well this time. Hinata had been careful not to show her feelings about which way the talks had gone while in the village, and the trip there had been so uneventful that the return seemed destined for the same.

Except it hadn't, and Hinata had gotten hurt because of it.

Sasuke strapped his shoe back onto his foot with vengeful yanks, glaring down the training log in front of him. He was stubborn -- he knew his own faults -- but he didn't entirely ignore advice received, either. The last time a teammate had been injured under his watch, Obito had told him to get stronger as a shinobi, get better as a med-in.

He would. And today, that just happened to mean breaking bones.

Taking stance, he carefully judged the angle he'd need to strike the log at in order to smash some of the finer bones of his right foot. It would force him to counter training ignrained into muscle memory for a long time, something that was likely to prove useful in itself, but for now: for now there was only the crack of flesh impacting wood in all the wrong ways, and Sasuke's stifled grunt of pain as he let the Sharingan flood his vision, watching his own chakra respond to the green glow of medical ninjutsu he applied to the injury, healing it.
notveryspecial: (Small smile)

[personal profile] notveryspecial 2014-07-23 05:38 pm (UTC)(link)
She wouldn't know why he found it so strange; willingly submerging oneself into genjutsu and then breaking out was a basic part of genjutsu training. Dealing with Uchiha, it seemed, was the same from Uchiha to Uchiha, though. Even without the sharingan they were more difficult to completely seize control of their chakra.

It was a little tricky in this case though, just because she needed him to be able to manipulate some of his chakra freely, but not so much that he could break the illusion around him in the process. It meant his chakra network had to be an organized chaos, mixed up and unusable everywhere but where he needed to access it for healing the imaginary person. And she needed to ensure it was spent without actually being actively used the way he wanted it to be (in case that could cause damage or interfere in some way, since he wasn't actually healing anyone).

It was a challenge, but that was the point.

She noted with some satisfaction when she watched his muted chakra finally succumb into the pattern she usually noted in those firmly ensnared in her genjutsu (that was, easily manipulated by hers). It was hard to tell if he was completely submerged, due to his atypical arrangement of chakra in the genjutsu, but it seemed safe enough for her to begin to ramp up on the distractions and require them to be less sensical without fear of breaking the illusion. Deep enough, much like a dream, logic and cause-effect wasn't as necessary. Or at all, eventually.

She didn't actually know what his phobias were, other than vague guesses. In the end, she worked on increasing pressure (accessing deeper, more dangerous injuries, and dropping more shinobi around him, more injuries and the need to move faster). And...more distractions. Fire was her first go-to...but after that she brought natural disasters and insects, just because--as an Uchiha--it was always possible he didn't care about fire.
notveryspecial: (Judging you)

[personal profile] notveryspecial 2014-08-06 06:32 pm (UTC)(link)
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.
notveryspecial: (Interrupted thought)

[personal profile] notveryspecial 2014-09-05 07:25 pm (UTC)(link)
A part of her actually expected and wanted him to use his sharingan, because that was the sort of training she was used to...but it was best that he didn't. Using her techniques against the sharingan would raise suspicions about why someone like her might have any experience with the sharingan at all, and potentially implicate Shisui as her teacher. So, that he continued not to use it was a good thing. She could practice her technique of cutting off his access to the sharingan while in genjutsu when she next had the chance to train with Shisui.

Still, she remained alert, ready for the inevitable reaction to her newest technique. Theoretically, he could leave the genjutsu at any time he chose to since this was only training. But he'd have to try much harder than that for her to determine he'd remembered his situation and wanted out. For one, she'd expect him to activate his sharingan, and for another she expected an actual fight for control when he wanted his freedom, considering the genjutsu skill Uchiha were known for, and how it was with her usual training.

This chakra flare she was prepared for, and rather than completely stand firm and risk slipping her grip or alerting him subconsciously to the resistance, she reacted much like she might to waves on a ship, shifting and adjusting the rest of his chakra network along with his flare of activity and then settling it back down when it passed. Within, presuming she got the timing and shape right (and she liked to think she did) the illusion should remain undisturbed.

Whatever was happening inside his mind, clearly the choice to combine threat and friend was the correct one.
notveryspecial: (Default)

[personal profile] notveryspecial 2014-10-13 11:45 am (UTC)(link)
There were strong arguments for letting Sasuke go given he was attempting to break free of the genjutsu now, and so clearly whatever he was seeing was unacceptable. However, as an Uchiha, he should be more than capable of breaking free no matter how hard she tried to keep him there. Even if she were to exploit sharingan specific weaknesses to keep him under -- and she wouldn't, because she valued her freedom -- someone without one would always be at a disadvantage when facing an Uchiha that did have one. Uchiha were born with genjutsu ingrained in their chakra networks, she'd only learned to manipulate genjutsu.

Thus, she felt no guilt in fighting back against his attempts to break it. This was, after all, also genjutsu training. She reacted immediately to the concentrated burst, bending and adjusting her chakra to ride out his flare of chakra. For the moment, she also bent the rules on not using sharingan specific disguises. Hiding her chakra threads by merging with his and using his as camouflage wasn't exactly going to compromise Shisui...She could simply be innately talented.

...But just to be certain he was too distracted to notice, once his initial attempt to break free passed, she countered by over-stimulating his fear center. It carried the risk of making the genjutsu more disjointed and nightmarish than a cohesive scenario, but like a nightmare it would hopefully confuse and scatter his thoughts badly enough that he wouldn't think about that.

She could ease it back to a real world level genjutsu once his focus was broken. An Uchiha was much too well trained for that to work as a subliminal command not to try to escape again, but it should do well to keep him from asking how she'd hidden (or noticing where she failed) her chakra amongst his.
notveryspecial: (Surprised possibly embarrassed)

Giving u an easy one liner tag.

[personal profile] notveryspecial 2015-02-15 05:50 pm (UTC)(link)
She had to release her own chakra quickly just to avoid too much recoil from that spike of chakra. She expected him to break free eventually, but the violence of his life scape was unexpected. Had the genjutsu been too intense...? Surely the Uchiha had worse things in store for their training. Shisui was always able to match her efforts after all.

She held one arm up in a defensive posture, in case the heat for his chakra might not be the only way he lashed out in a post-genjutsu confusion, and stared across the way at him in a mixture of concern and surprise. Not wariness, because despite his abrupt reaction he did nothing aggressive, but concern all the same.

Should she say something? It was only genjutsu, he wouldn't need a medic, and he obviously was neither completely alright nor mentally disturbed enough to need restorative action...

"...Brother?"

No, that probably wasn't what she should say.
notveryspecial: (Reflective)

responds with a one word ta -- wait what the heck is life scape. wow, autocorrect

[personal profile] notveryspecial 2015-02-28 09:00 pm (UTC)(link)
She tried not to look at him with curiosity that was...too obvious. An Uchiha, one who knew from the start that he was under genjutsu, shouldn't be reacting so poorly. She'd done her worst to Shisui (at his behest) and never returned anything but approval or perhaps his being briefly winded.

Could it be that the technique she was testing was effective after all? It was mostly just a hunch, so she hadn't been sure the genjutsu wouldn't just completely unravel when she attempted it, or that the lack of fine control from her end wouldn't make it lose shape and believability.

She frowned silently for a few moments. His movement, expression, and his voice told her to be concerned for him. He was obviously under distress or recovering from a great amount of distress beyond that of what a genjutsu itself would exert on a body and chakra circuits.

But...this was Sasuke Uchiha. Someone like her couldn't really do any significant harm to him, probably not even if she tried, unless she were to kill him.

"...What was it?" She didn't. Obviously she hadn't seen it, if there was a way to witness a genjutsu cast on someone else (apparently there was), she didn't know how. As she'd allowed his own mind to conjure up most of the genjutsu--if that had indeed worked--she didn't even have any idea what it would be, other than that it had to be influenced by deep rooted fears and anxiety.

But if he chose to interpret her words to mean something different from that, she wouldn't necessarily change his mind of that either.