The relationship between a werewolf and a disabled human
Posted: Thu May 23, 2013 4:57 am
To keep this brief, I work at a factory that specially houses the disabled as workers like any other. I've spent my time realizing that, for all the ill will my co-workers have against each other, they seem to have a good grip on what might have happened to themselves, or have already known what happened in their past lives. A scenario where they see each other as equals, for the most part.
Now let's add a werewolf into the mix.
Not just any werewolf, either. One that has, say, been exposed through some unfortunate circumstance that has led him/her live a life where most of the time is spent in werewolf form. He/she has chosen to, instead of living out in the wild, live alongside the humans, with no interest nor intention to eat humans or their pets. How would the disabled see him/her as?
Would they come to understand that this werewolf has his/her own problems that limit him/her in some way or another? Would they feel threatened at the sight of a scientific impossibility? For that matter, what notable difference would it make if a werewolf's human acquaintance/confidant/ally is physically or mentally disabled?
Now let's add a werewolf into the mix.
Not just any werewolf, either. One that has, say, been exposed through some unfortunate circumstance that has led him/her live a life where most of the time is spent in werewolf form. He/she has chosen to, instead of living out in the wild, live alongside the humans, with no interest nor intention to eat humans or their pets. How would the disabled see him/her as?
Would they come to understand that this werewolf has his/her own problems that limit him/her in some way or another? Would they feel threatened at the sight of a scientific impossibility? For that matter, what notable difference would it make if a werewolf's human acquaintance/confidant/ally is physically or mentally disabled?