I think reminding her directly of her dead loved ones, for one, might not be a good idea.
But she holds a strong sense of duty towards her home of Inazuma. She told me about the Sacred Sakura, which we helped preserve in our venture and which serves as Inazuma's sacred protector. In Inazuma, everyone believes it to have been eternal, but Steel lived from before a time it existed.
The way Steel put it was that she knows not of pain, but "there is something in the holding of the memory that carries a weight." But she doesn't begrudge the people for not knowing, as she understands that it may be comforting for them to think that such things have always been present, considering how much loss is actually scattered throughout their land's history.
no subject
But she holds a strong sense of duty towards her home of Inazuma. She told me about the Sacred Sakura, which we helped preserve in our venture and which serves as Inazuma's sacred protector. In Inazuma, everyone believes it to have been eternal, but Steel lived from before a time it existed.
The way Steel put it was that she knows not of pain, but "there is something in the holding of the memory that carries a weight." But she doesn't begrudge the people for not knowing, as she understands that it may be comforting for them to think that such things have always been present, considering how much loss is actually scattered throughout their land's history.
There's also her sword, which we returned to her.
[but someone else can explain that.]
no subject
[if nothing else-- he knows he can weave in that sense of responsibility to one's home, their people.]