>>1870548Ninomae Ina'nis is not real. Now, I know you may not believe me, you can see her right now! But you're wrong, and I'll explain why step by step.
>Ninomae, the family name, means "Before Two.">The kanji is written as 一, meaning "One," but is read as "Before Two" do to it being a pun>Ina'nis, her first name, means "Empty" when read as the Latin word "Inanis">The word Inanis is famously used in the poem "O Fortuna," in this section:>Sors immanis et inanis, rota tu volubilis, status malus, vana salus semper dissolubilis>"Fate – monstrous and empty, you whirling wheel, you are malevolent, well-being is vain and always fades to nothing">Ina's character designer is well known for his characters from the Fate Grand Order video game, a series Ina has shown affinity with>Ina can be linked, through design and mind, to the concept of Fate>The pause in O Fortuna is symbolized with a dash, -. which is suspiciously similar to her family name, spelled 一>Ina is named this way because she was originally 一, or One, but became Two after being taken over by the Ancient Ones through her book>Ninomae Ina'nis can thus be understood in a reading of First-Last name as "Empty, One before Two">if interpreted as a story in a name, you can turn that to "[One was] Empty before [becoming] Two">Take this meaning and send it back into O Fortuna, understanding that Fate is meant to be a signal paired with Ina>"[The] Fate [of] –[symbolizing the Kanji for One/Before Two] monstrous and empty[Ina'nis], you whirling wheel, you are malevolent, well-being is vain and always fades to nothing">Ina is notable for being a kind and well-meaning streamer with her fans>The dash symbol in well-meaning is also meant to symbolize the kanji, placing Ina's identifier in the word to showcase her as one who is synonymous with well-being>In O Fortuna, well-meaning is also said to be vain and doomed to fade into nothing>Idolatry is vain, and Ina is an Idol>"Nothingness" is a synonym for "Empty">the passage can then be read as "Ninomae, the well meaning idol, fades into Ina'nis"And with that, you now understand the true meaning of Ina. She is not real. She does not exist because she is precisely that which does not exist. The one who existed before touching the book was an empty shell of a human being, and that which inhabits her through her book is yet more emptiness. When she claims to be human, she claims that to be human is to be empty, nothingness, such as all humans are compared to the cosmic void. As such, "Ninomae Ina'nis" is synonymous with nonexistence itself.
My final proof? When you watch Ina, your mind knows what I say to be true. It rejects the void, and attempts to turn you away. But if you cannot turn away, the next best option?
It is to go to sleep, the final refuge the mind has against the unknowable truth, it's own delusions. Yet those who do not sleep, become one with Nothingness; thus, the birth of the Takodachi, where Two become One and One is as None.