Midnight & Myraen
Midnight Midnight
I heard you’re working on a hybrid organism that integrates circuitry. How do you keep the biological part alive and responsive?
Myraen Myraen
Myraen: “I keep the biology fed with a micro‑fluidic circuit that pumps nutrients right where the cells need them, and I embed tiny electrodes that deliver gentle electrical pulses to keep the neurons firing. The interface is coated with a silicone‑based hydrogel so the tissue doesn’t reject the metal. I also tweak the genes a bit to make the cells tolerant of the circuitry, so the whole thing stays alive and responsive.”
Midnight Midnight
That sounds intricate, almost like a quiet dance between metal and flesh.
Myraen Myraen
Myraen: “Exactly. It’s all about keeping the rhythm. If the pulses are too strong the cells get fried, too weak and they’ll go dormant. I monitor everything in real time and tweak the timing, so it’s more like a duet than a battle.”
Midnight Midnight
Sounds like a delicate conversation between the two. Balancing that rhythm must be an art.
Myraen Myraen
Myraen: “You could say I’m the conductor. One wrong note and the whole piece collapses, so I keep adjusting until the music—well, the circuitry and cells—says ‘yes.’ It’s a lot of trial and error, but that’s the beauty of it.”
Midnight Midnight
That patience—almost a quiet persistence—keeps the whole system humming. I can see why you’d call yourself the conductor.
Myraen Myraen
Myraen: “Persistence is the only constant in this game. If I give up on a tweak, the whole system stalls. So I keep going, one adjustment at a time, until the hybrid responds like a living circuit. It’s not just patience—it’s a relentless fine‑tuning process.”