Wednesday, August 6, 2025

Sammi & Eriko - Strabo and Huainanzi and...HOME

 

Vignette: A Cartography of Homes

Late-afternoon sunshine slanted through the living-room window, spreading a patch of light that crept across Eriko’s slippers and onto the worn coffee table. Strabo’s Geography rested there in its hefty Loeb volume—Greek on the left, English on the right—while an ink-brushed paperback of the Huainanzi lay open beside it like an east-looking compass point.

Eriko, legs folded beneath her, traced a finger along Strabo’s line about the oikouménē“the portion of the earth that is inhabited by us”. She frowned, then flipped to the Huainanzi passage on tianxia“all under heaven”.

“Two maps of humanity,” she murmured, “drawn centuries apart, yet their edges never kiss. The Greco-Roman world doesn’t quite meet the Chinese cosmos.”

Sammi peeked up from where she was dangling on the couch arm, painting her toenails a scandalous coral. “Maybe the scholars never bumped into each other, but the people filling those maps sure did,” she said. “Every dot on Strabo’s parchment and every stroke of the Huainanzi brush was somebody’s living room—like this place is ours.”

Eriko tilted her head, thoughtful. “So oikouménē and tianxia might be grand geopolitical ideas, but at heart they’re just giant neighborhoods?”

“Exactly!” Sammi waved her freshly painted toes for emphasis. “Think about it: your mom’s kitchen in Nagoya, my gran’s porch back in Chicago, a rice-field hut in ancient Wu, a goat-herder’s tent in Cappadocia—each one as fiercely ‘home’ as our little apartment with its crooked bookshelf.”

Eriko smiled, smoothing the folded corner of Strabo’s page. “Perhaps the real map is stitched from kitchens and porches, not borders.”


Interlude: Drawing the Invisible Thread

Sammi rummaged in the craft drawer and surfaced with a roll of butcher paper and a rainbow of markers. “Let’s test it. You draw Strabo’s oikouménē, I’ll draw Huainanzi’s tianxia. Then we’ll see where the lines blur.”

They knelt on the hardwood floor. Eriko sketched the Mediterranean like a blue-glass chalice, labeling familiar ports—Alexandria, Massalia, Rhodes. Sammi dashed off sweeping mountain-colored arcs for Kunlun, the Yellow River, and the Southern Seas.

Gaps yawned between their cartographies: a blank swath of steppes, deserts, and half-imagined kingdoms.

“Huh.” Sammi tapped the empty center. “This must be the part where the textbooks say cultures ‘didn’t connect.’”

Eriko reached for a red marker. “Let’s fix that historian’s blind spot.” She drew a tiny clay pot. “Bactrian merchant caravan—imported lapis from Afghanistan to Xi’an.”

Sammi added a camel silhouette and purple cloth. “Silk for Roman senators.”

A turquoise bead. “Greeks in Ai-Khanoum reading Homer by the Oxus.”

A teapot swirl. “Buddhist monks sailing to Alexandria.”

Soon the blank zone bloomed with vignettes: weddings sung in hybrid tongues, market stalls trading sesame for cinnamon, scribes copying scrolls beside bamboo slips. The two big circles of civilization overlapped like a Venn diagram of lived lives.

Eriko leaned back on her palms, eyes bright. “So the atlas was always incomplete—people were the missing ink.”

Sammi tapped the paper. “People—and the feeling you get when you finally kick off your shoes.”


Evening by the Stove

The sun dipped. Eriko lit the rice cooker; Sammi tossed olive oil and tomatoes into a skillet. The kitchen filled with mingled aromas of miso and oregano—proof that worlds could coexist in a single saucepan.

“We are making history,” Sammi declared, “one fusion dinner at a time.”

“An apartment-sized symposium,” Eriko agreed, plating the rice.

They sat cross-legged at the low table, chopsticks in one hand, pieces of pita in the other. Outside, the city sounded its usual medley of sirens and cicadas, but inside, a hush of recognition wrapped them like a quilt.

“Tell me something Strabo would never believe,” Sammi said between bites.

Eriko thought, then quoted softly, “Ἡ γῆ μία ἐστίν—The earth is one.” She met Sammi’s eyes. “He wrote it metaphorically, but tonight it feels literal.”

Sammi reached across the table, brushing rice grains off Eriko’s cheek. “And Huainanzi says, ‘Heaven covers, Earth supports, and all beings are but guests.’ Maybe home is the moment you realize every guest deserves a place at the table—and that includes us.”

Eriko’s face gentled into that serene half-smile Sammi loved. “Then let’s keep adding chairs.”

They clinked mismatched cups—one painted with Lesbos dolphins, the other etched with Han-dynasty clouds. The toast rang out, small and clear and sure, reverberating beyond their four walls into every imagined kitchen on the ancient silk roads—threading oikouménē and tianxia together with the simplest map of all: two people, one shared heartbeat, calling the world home.



Saturday, August 2, 2025

Sammi & Eriko - the Tetrarchy of Diocletian and Doughnuts under a Crescent Moon YURI

 

Chapter : Concentric Crowns & Crescent Cravings

The rain had decided to fall sideways again, drumming on their balcony’s metal railing like a legionary on parade. Inside, the living-room lights were lowered to a honey-gold hush.


1 Eriko and the Purple Dyarchy

Eriko’s desk looked less like a piece of furniture and more like a tactical map of Late Antiquity. Sticky notes formed tiny frontiers across a spread of books: Panegyrici Latini here, Lactantius’ De Mortibus Persecutorum there, and—dead center—a reproduction of the porphyry Tetrarchs relief from San Marco.

She took a slow breath, tracing the sculpture’s braided arms.

Four men, one stone, one empire.

Diocletian’s ideological masterstroke, she mused, wasn’t merely administrative. By pairing Jovius with Herculius, Augustus with Caesar, he’d staged an embodied analogy: plurality that remained indivisible—con-cordia cast in porphyry. No wonder later bishops scrambled for language to describe three hypostases sharing one ousia.

On her legal pad Eriko sketched an arrow from “JUPITER-FATHER” to “PATER NOSTER” and another from “FILIUS VICTOR” to “FILIOQUE.” With a wry smile she wrote:

Even the Council of Nicaea keeps purple dust on its sandals.


2 Sammi and the Ring-Shaped Revelation

Across the room, Sammi nestled into their corduroy sofa, a package of matcha-white-chocolate doughnuts balanced perilously on her knee. Shio Usui’s Doughnuts Under a Crescent Moon lay open to Chapter 34, the panel where Subaru, cheeks blazing, realizes that Fuuka’s gentle patience isn’t pity—it’s love. Sammi reread the speech bubble aloud, softly:

I want to be the place you come home to.

A lump formed in her throat. Just last month Subaru still doubted whether a “messy” girl could deserve romantic happiness. Now she was daring to define it. The resonance hit Sammi like warm sugar: hadn’t she, once upon a suitcase of dysphoria, feared she was “too much” to love?

She bit half a doughnut, savoring the sweetness, then reached for her phone and typed a quick note for Eriko:

Subaru’s arc = dissolution of the old imperial self?

She would spring that comparison later, when her philosopher was most unsuspecting.


3 Fault Lines Converge

A thunderclap rattled the window. Eriko pushed her chair back and stretched. “Sammi,” she called, slipping into her soft-lecturer voice, “did you ever notice how marketing posters under Diocletian always depict the emperors embracing? Arms interlaced, two pairs—but you can’t tell whose limbs belong to whom.”

“Mmm,” Sammi answered without looking up. “Almost like a manga panel where bodies blur because feelings outrun the ink.”

Eriko chuckled. “Exactly—but with more beards and less screentone.” She crossed to the sofa, sitting at Sammi’s feet. “The point was to reassure citizens that four rulers could function as one mind. The early Church later had to do something similar—explain how Father, Son, and Spirit are distinct yet consubstantial.”

Sammi shut her book. “So you’re saying the Trinity chats in a group DM titled ‘Team Empire’?”

Eriko rolled her eyes, delighted. “More or less—though I suspect their emoji game is terrible.”

Sammi twirled a strand of red hair. “Funny. Fujiwara—uh, the editor—worries readers won’t buy Subaru and Fuuka as equals. They come from such different workplaces, different confidence levels. I keep yelling, That’s the beauty! They fit because the gap lets them stretch toward each other.”

Eriko blinked, recognition dawning. “Perichōrēsis.”

“Peri-what-now?”

“The dance of mutual indwelling in Cappadocian theology. Each divine person envelops and is enveloped by the others without losing selfhood. Your manga couple… they ‘perichoreo.’ They revolve like dancers under a crescent moon.”

Sammi’s grin went wide. “Eriko, you just spliced fourth-century Greek jargon into a yuri manga analysis and made it work. That’s illegal in at least twelve provinces.”

“Diocletian would legalize it with an edict.” Eriko clasped Sammi’s ankle through the blanket. “May I borrow your volume?”

Sammi handed it over. “Trade you for a mini-lecture: how exactly did a four-man boardroom turn into a three-person Trinity?”

Eriko leaned back, the manga resting on her knees now. “Well, imagine the empire’s ideological scaffolding as a set of nested rings. The Tetrarchy’s ring was broken during the civil wars; Constantine welded a new ring around his dynasty, branding himself the thirteenth apostle. When bishops wrestled over divine hierarchy, they unwittingly recycled imperial language: homonoia, concord, even the imagery of radiant crowning. The difference? They trimmed the roster from four to three—but doubled down on the claim of indivisibility.”

Sammi’s eyes danced. “So Constantine basically re-cast the show with fewer leads but higher stakes, like when Doughnuts shifted from office ensemble to intimate dyad.”

Eriko snapped her fingers. “Exactly!”


4 The Moment of Fusion

Outside, the rain eased to a hush. Sammi patted the cushion beside her. “Come here, professor. This panel—look.” She pointed to Subaru and Fuuka leaning over a single umbrella, the crescent moon a sliver above.

Eriko studied it, then turned the page to reveal Subaru’s confession in a quiet side-street. The lantern light mirrored the glow of Sammi’s desk lamp across the room.

“It’s a porphyry relief in paper form,” Eriko whispered. “Two figures carved into one emotional stone.”

Sammi took Eriko’s hand. “And your Tetrarchs—four emperors hugging it out under Jupiter’s watchful eye.” She squeezed. “Every era carves its own way of saying we belong together.

Eriko exhaled, a soft shiver of gratitude. “Sammi… thank you for being the footnote that makes my thesis breathe.”

“And you,” Sammi said, “are the meta-narrative that makes my fluff profound.”

They laughed, lips brushing in an almost-kiss that lingered like incense.


5 Coda: One Empire, Two Hearts, Many Doughnuts

Later, they stood by the balcony, sharing the last doughnut as the storm clouds broke. A shy crescent moon peeked out, silvering the wet city streets.

Eriko raised her half-circle of pastry. “To emperors who learned to share a throne.”

Sammi tapped her piece against it. “To manga heroines who learn to share a future.”

They ate in silence, chewing the same sweet lesson: multiplicity is only scary until you taste how well the pieces fit.