28 Oct 2025, 14:02
Anahita's Enchanted Odyssey
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FIRST YEAR, RAVENCLAW


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Age: 12
Date of Birth: 13 December, 2013
Weight:40 kg
House: RAVENCLAW
Year: First Year
Height:4 f 5"
Build: Petite
Species: Human
A wand of Walnut Wood with a snallygaster heartstring Core that is 23.3 centimeters long and is inflexible. According to Ollivander this wand is perfect for witches with hidden talents.


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Reducio
Walnut

Highly intelligent witches and wizards ought to be offered a walnut wand for trial first, because in nine cases out of ten, the two will find in each other their ideal mate. Walnut wands are often found in the hands of magical innovators and inventors; this is a handsome wood possessed of unusual versatility and adaptability. A note of caution, however: while some woods are difficult to dominate, and may resist the performance of spells that are foreign to their natures, the walnut wand will, once subjugated, perform any task its owner desires, provided that the user is of sufficient brilliance. This makes for a truly lethal weapon in the hands of a witch or wizard of no conscience, for the wand and the wizard may feed from each other in a particularly unhealthy manner.


Snallygaster Heartstring

This is one of the more powerful magical cores in the North American wizarding community. It is considered a somewhat fickle core due to its affinity for change, but it is also one of the most highly prized and is particularly attuned to sensing hidden truths. The founders of Ilvermorny, James Steward and Isolt Sayre, used this core in their wand making. As a wand core Snallygaster heartstring behaves similar to Dragon heartstring with the difference that it lacks the aggressiveness most dragon cores display.
It is said that those paired with wands made from Snallygaster heartstring are hard to surprise and can never be caught unaware from behind. While there is no tangible proof of the latter, wands with a Snallygaster core do have a soft spot for those who are in control of their emotions and very self-aware.They are some of the wands that vary the most in personality and will only bond to the one person who matches their character, though all Snallygaster wands prefer curious owners.
Patronus: I hope my Patronus would be an Occamy as it is a magical beast from the East and India and conjuring an Occamy Patronus is a testament to the magical skill and adaptability of the witch or wizard casting it. Known for being plumed, two-legged, and serpentine, the Occamy creature, like the Patronus it inspires, is associated with versatility and fierce protectiveness.
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History

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The story of my life does not begin in one land, but in two. Born of sunlight and storm—half Indian, half Scottish—I never knew that I always carried the fire and mystery of both worlds within me until that fateful day when I was ushered into a whole new world. My eyes, a hazel-green so deep they seem to shift with the light, hint at the secrets of misty highlands of Scotland. My face, oval and delicate, bears three tiny constellation moles: one beneath my left nostril, another on the curve of my cupidʼs bow, and the last resting by my chin—My mother always told me that this was a mark of the blessing of the stars themselves. My wheatish-tan complexion is a contrast against the riot of flaming curls that tumble about my shoulders like copper coils—hair that refuses to be tamed, wild and defiant as if Merida from the old Highland tale had gifted it to me, herself.
I am not tall, standing a mere four feet and five inches, and my frame may appear slight and willowy even, but inside me dwells a spirit that craves for adventure and competition; I climb, run, and swim with a fierce joy that only those born restless understand.I am, by all accounts, a storm bottled in a girl. I too, am fiercely loyal yet unyielding when challenged. I can laugh among crowds yet I am also quiet when I must be, content in the quiet murmur of my thoughts; an ambivert who slips easily between solitude and company—adaptable as the changing winds that carry my family from one continent to another. Piano keys and painting are my talents;I devour stories, food, and the thrill of something new. Food is one of lifeʼs greatest pleasures to me—except, of course, when it is too bland (which I believe to be a sin of the gravest order).Yet, for all my openhearted curiosity, I have my quirks—my disdain for cricket rivals my dislike of dull food, and when pressed, I admit I can twist a situation or two to my favour. Languages, oddly enough, elude me, no matter how well-travelled Iʼve become. And, lastly, I have a bad stubborn streak.
Ours is a family that never lingers long in one place—my fatherʼs service in the Armed Forces saw to that—so I learned the subtle art of adaptation, how to understand and blend into different cultures, and how to call some corners of the world my home.
My father, Lennox Ainsley, a tall proud Scotsman with steady blue eyes, a voice like distant thunder and sharp wit, carries the calm discipline of the battlefield in his eyes. He comes from a longstanding family tradition of military service. He met my mother, Nuni Thanzauva, a spirited woman from North-East India, under the curious threads of fate. They made their home in Glasgow, raising us—two sons, Ian Ainsley, Rowan Ainsley and I. I am their middle child—the bridge between two worlds, the only one among us who bears both their faces in mine. My elder brother Ian, mirrors my motherʼs dusky beauty; my youngest Rowan, is a mirror image of our father. Yet it is I—and only I—who was born with magic. Since my mother hails from a proud matrilineal culture in northeastern India, a land where the bloodline is determined through daughters rather than sons and my father came from a strongly patriarchal family, very soon after marriage, they understood that their conflicting cultures could potentially cause problems for them in the long run. So, they crafted an agreement that felt like an enchanting puzzle piece fitting into the greater whole: their sons would bear the Ainsley name; and I, as their only daughter, would carry my motherʼs proud Thanzauva name.
From the moment I could remember, our lives were nomadic—and not by choice. Fatherʼs postings in the armed forces whisked us from one city to another: from the rolling green hills of Edinburgh to the bustling heart of Mumbai, and then back to sleepy military towns across Scotland. Each town demanded a new school, new friends, new places to hide my uncertainties.
When Father finally received a permanent posting in Glasgow, it felt like roots finally growing into the earth rather than dust blowing in the wind. School didnʼt change anymore, and for the first time, I could find spaces to explore who I was without constant disruption. I attended St. Mungoʼs Academy, a bustling school known for its fierce rugby teams and proud academic tradition. My elder brother, Ian, was preparing to leave for university—he had just been accepted to the University of Edinburgh, where he hoped to study Software-engineering and AI. My younger brother Rowan, just a year and a half younger than me, attended St. Mungoʼs as well, trailing behind me in the halls with an eager curiosity that sometimes drove me mad but secretly comforted me.
Traveling so much meant my circle of friends was ever-changing. Each new place brought new faces—quiet kids who shared my love for books, boisterous friends who could play without end, and steady companions who, like me, lived with homes scattered across the world. We shared fleeting moments of laughter and secret clubs, aware always that goodbyes would come all too soon. It was a life of precious connections made and lost, leaving me forever both grateful and guarded.
School was moments of fierce joy when I could outrun everyone on the fields; moments of quiet retreat when words failed or eyes judged. I was quick with a joke, a storyteller at heart, but always cautious where to open my heart. The teasing was never cruel, just sharp enough to sting. “Half-breed,” a whisper one time, shared behind a hand and a smile that didnʼt reach the eyes. I learned to laugh it off, but inside, I felt the sharp pull of loneliness—never quite belonging, never quite understood. Each year, the long school breaks were spent with my motherʼs family in India, where the air was thick with jasmine and the laughter of cousins and the endless stories that were told by my grandmother beneath the vast Indian sky. Despite the distance, those months tethered me firmly to a history that stretched back generations. The contrast between the quiet, rain-soaked mornings of Glasgow and the vibrant, sun-drenched afternoons of Shillong was the dance of the two worlds within me.
First instance of Magic

Reducio
It happened when I was ten. The day began as ordinary as any, with cloudy skies over Glasgow, in a classroom washed with the gray light of a Scottish afternoon. A classmateʼs bullying had reached its peak, and words—sharp as glass—flew between us as I stood up to her. When she hurled her bag at me, something ancient and electric surged within. The bag hung frozen mid-air, and then, it dropped harmlessly to the floor. When she then lunged, having lost all composure, the air itself seemed to awaken, flinging her backward, sending her skidding into the blackboard with a muffled thud. I remember staring at my own trembling hands, breathless, the classroom ringing with stunned silence.
The next evening, as the scent of dinner filled our Glasgow home, a stranger appeared at our door—a woman cloaked in deep indigo robes that shimmered like starlight. I thought sheʼd escaped from a festival or convention, but the certainty in her eyes silenced my doubts. She spoke softly, explaining that what Iʼd done was not an accident —that I had inherited the gift that belonged to an ancient order of magic, and that she could teach me to master it. She offered not only guidance but a promise—that she could teach me to shape the power Iʼd unleashed, to turn wonder into will, and to walk the path of what I was born to be. Thus began the unraveling of my ordinary life, and the beginning of one woven from wonder, courage, and secrets yet untold.

Last edited by Anahita Thanzauva on 29 Oct 2025, 08:25, edited 6 times in total.

Who I am is where I stand. Where I stand is Where I fall.