She is sitting in the library, studying. It's her most common pastime, by hours; spending time with her sister is more enjoyable but Jaromira prefers to socialize more broadly and Katarzyna would only get in the way. This is better on net; the two of them share a room, so it isn't as though her sister's time is entirely hogged by the other girls who call this boarding school "home." Or at least "prison." Katarzyna doesn't mind it, though; the school library is excellent, and basic manners and care for the books has endeared her to the librarian to a sufficient degree to lubricate the interlibrary loans process when there's something she wants to read that they don't have.
We've been allowed to see PG-13 movies since we were like nine if Renee thought they had artistic merit.
Xander says the idea is then you have something to talk about in whatever time remains.
Good policy. At least if you only communicate it to a few people and not to green ink types.
For some reason it's a term for crackpots who write to newspapers and stuff? I don't know why
Hm. I might look into that. Anyway, yes, people who fail to be interesting at all should not give me unsolicited information, but ideally they shouldn't talk to me more than absolutely necessary.
Have you tried legible clothing that says that? For moments when you aren't doing magic.
Legible clothing that conveys the sentiment. If I want to wear a shirt that says something completely innocuous, that's fine, and if I convey the sentiment verbally--not to a teacher, and not loudly enough to disrupt class--that's fine, but if I wear a shirt that says "you must be this smart to talk to me"--or politer versions, I checked--then I'm being "antisocial" apparently.
We had a quarrel about the meaning of the word "antisocial" and whether it was an inherently negative thing. They were unimpressed.
I could have won if I really wanted to but I have higher priorities. Like leaving campus to see the world's best girlfriend.