>>5710228>>5710243https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RuuWozX8P5o&t=23s"Tell your parents the truth. I'm officially with you, I'm safe and a really competent trainer, fleeing from a bad household situation.
I am doing what I have to get an education - which was promised by Mom I could when we moved over, was the entire gofmddamn reason i was allowed to get a Pokemon in the first place.
I am not at fault that my mom explodes at me because i took reasonable precautions after getting a Fire Pokemon"
>Your friends are grateful not having to hide you.>This will have repercussions.You're taking first watch. The quiet time, mild temperature, sound of the rain on the ocean, they're strangely appeasing. You let your mind wander.
First, cloth. Yeah, you'll need to do some shopping. Spare clothes are a must, as well as much of what you already thought.
Gloves, Tent, Tools, Bowls, more food, grooming kit. Anything else? Maybe a big cooking pot - that can act as a bucket for <span class="mu-b">Bubbles</span>...
You can't help but think about Mom. You don't know why she hates Pokémons that much. Somehow, you firmly believe that getting one of her own could have an incredible effect on her mental well-being.
With the restriction on the pokéball ownership, most youngster have an unlimited supply of willful caretakers taking care of supplementary Pokémon while they're travelling around. For example, Danny's uncle David : An humanoid fighting type will be a welcolm help in the field, grass types can improve harvest, water type can easily provide water to barren drylands, electric types can chase away the overly mobile Bird pokemon gorging themself on berries, and so on.
Your plan was simple : getting a full rooster, and catching one spare member that you obviously can't carry around - giving you a good excuse to introduce your mother to her designated emotional support Pokémon.
Well, that was before you snapped and decided to run away. That makes you wonder if her kind of insanity is hereditary. You really hope not.
You're conflicted about that run away decision. On one hand, you won't get back and get under a lock for arbitrary reasons again. That won't happen. Nobody can take your Pokémons away - it's considered both Pokémon abuse and Child abuse to separate a trainer and her partner, which is why most kids with a pokéball is one legally "lended" by a brother or an aunt. That is, in Pokéball-opulent regions.
You wish your mother was normal. That makes everything more complex. Normal mom? You would have got back home, make your laundry, go shopping together, spend a nice, dry night, and full time to train without any kind of pressure before trying to tackle an arena.
It's starting to get late. You go to sleep, waking up Matthew for his watch
You don't spend a good night. Everything you pondered before sleep bubbles up in your dream. The climate is not helping either.