An introduction to phantom limbs
2005-10-04 05:01 pm
Page number 6 of Theri There, originally posted on October 3, 2005.


Image description: One page of a comic.
Narration: "A 'phantom limb' is the sensation that a limb is physically present when it's not.
"Neurological explanation: the relevant portion of the brain is still there, so it feels as if the limb is still there, too.
"Spiritual explanation: the spirit also stays intact, even if the body doesn't. This has to do with chakras and the astral plane."
The illustration shows a person with no left arm, but a phantom left arm.
"Phantom limbs are also experienced by therianthropes and otherkin. The difference is that these don't follow a human-shaped template. We may feel wings, tail, or any such thing."
The illustration shows a therianthrope with a human physical body, and a gryphon-shaped phantom outline. "We know there's no physical counterpart to these limbs. They're not visible to plain sight, and they pass right through everything, like a ghost."
The same therianthrope goes on a walk, their wing passing through the wall of a nearby building. "However, there are odd exceptions where a phantom limb responds to a physical object as if both were equally tangible." The therianthrope's wing hits a lamppost, making them stumble, saying, "Ow!?"
"There are also instances where people respond to the limbs as if they could see them."
The therianthrope stretches out a wing, and other passerby walk around it.
"Rarest of all, sometimes physical objects respond to the limb's presence."
A dragon therianthrope steps into an elevator, their phantom tail trailing behind them. The door closes on their tail. Someone else says, "Hey, what's jamming the elevator door open?"
End description.
Note from 2005: This is a short introduction to phantom limbs of therianthropes. There is much more to say about them, whether the best known kind (felt by people who have had amputations) as shown in panel 1, or the kind experienced by therianthropes. Panel 4 was suggested by a phoenix who wishes to remain anonymous. Panel 6 was suggested by a friend who had it happen as shown, and I’ve heard very few anecdotes about a paranormal phenomenon of that kind.
Note from 2015: Several folks have asked me about the phrase “phantom limbs,” which I used in my old Theri There comics. In 2005, that was the only name therians gave to that experience of theirs. Now, readers were concerned that it might be wrong to use that name for that experience. It’s a sensitive issue, but it’s also important to address, so I wrote a long blog entry about it: https://frameacloud.tumblr.com/post/731842421775859712/regarding-phantom-limbs
Note from 2023: I updated the link to that blog entry with some new commentary that I wrote today. For another thing, back when I drew this page, I thought of phantom limbs as a paranormal phenomenon. That fit with how my worldview used to embrace the paranormal. My personal worldview has changed and become generally more skeptical as I've continued to ask questions and learn. I still acknowledge that part of the range of these experiences are ones that are strange and difficult to explain.
[Edit October 21, 2023: Added local images, links, and transcript.]
no subject
Date: 2005-10-05 03:44 am (UTC)"
Ouch! Sorry, apparently I even make that pronoun mistake sometimes. Goodness knows I've confused other people with my pronouns enough. Consider it random.
"I still think the best thing about that elevator is the "Capacity 16" plaque on it. It feels crowded with, like, four. It's the size of a small closet... it could barely fit my tail in the first place."
No wonder, then. They must have meant: capacity 16... midgets... on a bet. It's just that they ran out of room on the plaque.
no subject
Date: 2005-10-05 04:13 am (UTC)Actually, it's got plenty of dead space on it; they probably could have fit the text in. By weight, I can believe the capacity; it's rated at 3,000 lbs., which is needed as it's the only elevator in the School of Engineering. (I find that ironic somehow.)
I've been planning for the last two years to get sixteen very friendly people together, shove them all in the elevator, take a picture, then stick it just above or below the "Capacity 16" sign. Maybe I can get Dean Byrnes in on this one- he's retiring as Dean at the end of the year, and having gotten to know him over the past two years, I can safely conclude that this would match his sense of humor. Maybe 16 administrators?
no subject
Date: 2005-10-05 05:12 am (UTC)3,000 lbs... must actually be capacity 16 high-density midgets, then.