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Brown inferno
Brown inferno





For every person she helped, there were hundreds who were starving, and looking at her, desolated. When they arrived in Manila, they didn't feed poor fishermen nor farmers as she had thought, she gaped in horror at the scale of the poverty that wasn't something she had ever seen. Sienna worked harder every week and, although people told her to slow down for she could not save the world, she considered it a terrible thing to say and continued.Ī local humanitarian group came in contact with her for a monthlong trip to the Philippines, and she jumped at the chance. None of the people she helped noticed that she was different as they were simply glad that someone cared, and she felt much better to the point that she was no longer depressed. She felt isolated for her intellect was too much for her social skills to keep up thus, she was ostracized by the other students.įollowing the psychiatrist's suggestion, Sienna started a philanthropic initiative, ladled soup to the homeless, and read books to the blind. Throughout her childhood, she had tried to attend regular schools but was frequently teased by the other kids since she didn't fit in which caused her depression. This was also the age when Sienna thought she had read The Divine Comedy.Ī year later, she had ran from her home in Blackheath, London to an upscale hotel there, she had stolen a key, had pretended to be the daughter of one of the guests, and lived alone, undiscovered for ten days by ordering room service from someone else's account, and occupying herself with Gray's Anatomy to figure out what was wrong with her brain. Her parents took her to a psychiatrist, who told her to focus on the problems of the world rather than her own.

brown inferno

With all these medical texts, she had read enough to diagnose herself with deep depression.

brown inferno

She was then a virtuoso violinist, could master a new language in a month and was teaching herself anatomy and physiology. She grew up catholic so she most likely frequented the church as a child in spite of her never believing in God.īy the time she was seven, Sienna had displayed a 208 IQ. With her excellent memory skills, in a single night, she had memorized every character's lines and cued her fellow cast members during the first rehearsals. A year later, she was a child theater prodigy, starring as Puck in Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream.

brown inferno

At the age of four, Sienna had hobbies such as violin, chess, biology, and chemistry she also had beat a grand chess master at his own game, could read in three different languages, and was a celebrity in scientific circles.







Brown inferno