On Chronic Pain and Heredity


ABSTRACT

Chronic pain is a doozy (according to robots).


INTRODUCTION

The subject harbors the heart of a dancer While its vessel, more or less, falls apart.

As if insistent on withering away, The same system by which the subject intakes nutrients in order to properly function Consistently folds under the pressure of that which sustains it It is an unhealthy yet obligatory relationship Upkept solely by mentha-flavored substances and the occasional vitamin.

Its epidermis is translucent, resembling other endemic species Such as those which fall under the Hyalinobatrachium genus*

*It has been said that the subject is similar to that of the hippotigris subgenus, However this claim is dubious at best due to the hippotigris’ lack of observable viscera.

The subject can, at times, extend further than what is considered common for their species, however what may initially be seen as an evolutionary advantage is foreseen to cause immense complications as it ages. This specimen in particular had begun to suffer a stinging and aching sensation throughout the vessel, where its internal structures connect and anticipate movement.

METHODS

That anticipation
The subject’s passion
The subject’s undoing
Decrepit
posthaste
The Eroding
The subject
It is water
It is stone also.

The subject has been raised in an environment aware of that which afflicts it and, with the guidance of a previous subject, has taken preventative measures to ensure its safety, such as ceasing unnecessary and extraneous movement typically displayed in various social gatherings of its species within the natural habitat of its ancestors. This may or may not have affected the subject’s level of enrichment.
No alternative measures have been taken to improve its quality of life in this area
(Uptown et al, 2021).

RESULTS

From what we have determined,
The subject has begun to undergo foreseen complications
Involving the arduous process of living.

Every new day is a new complication.
The body is punished for being.

Sitting in its room all day
Is bad for the subject’s health
Opting to dance the night away
Is bad for the subject’s health
Though in this case,
The heart thrives
as long as it continues beating.

Disclaimer: the action of beating
May be bad for the subject’s health.

DISCUSSION

The current subject has not existed long enough
For us to determine the rate at which it fades.

We could apply data from related cases
Where an ancestor of the subject is observed daily
Often in a state of disrepair
And assume that this current subject
Will meet the same demise–
however:

CONCLUSION

We cannot guarantee the fate of this subject
as compared to its relatives within the species.

This particular specimen
May have to break trajectory of its own accord–

If it is even possible.