Moonlight Syndrome and the Moon: Difference between revisions

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{{Note Infobox2
{{Note Infobox2
| game          = FF4
| game          = FF4
| title          = Getsuyuu Syndrome & The Moon
| image          = [[Image:GetsuyuuMoon.PNG|150px]]
| image          = [[Image:GetsuyuuMoon.PNG|150px]]
| kanji          = 月幽病と月の関係
| kanji          = 月幽病と月の関係
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| author        = Shoji Katagiri
| author        = Shoji Katagiri
| chapter        = 3
| chapter        = 3
| location      = [[Haibara Infirmary]], Examining Room
| location      = [[Haibara Infirmary]], Exam Room
| obtained      = On the desk with [[Diagnosis Record of Takashi Aiba]]
| obtained      = On the desk with [[Patient Interview: Takashi Aiba]]
| description    = A description of the moon's effect on symptoms. It was compiled by [[Shigeto Haibara|Dr. Haibara]]'s [[Shouji Katagiri|assistant]].
| description    = Notes by [[Shigeto Haibara|Dr. Haibara's]] assistant about the moon and [[Moonlight Syndrome]].
| adddescription = Picked up a binder.
| adddescription = Found a document.
| related        = [[Warning: Wandering Patients]] & [[Getsuyuu Syndrome Research Record]]
| related        = [[Warning: Wandering Patients]] & [[Moonlight Syndrome Research File]]
| english        =  
| english        =  
In mild cases of [[Moonlight Syndrome]], patients start to lose fragments of their memories and tend to sleepwalk. Neither of these symptoms is especially uncommon, and may even occur together, but it is the effect of the phase of the moon on Moonlight Syndrome patients that makes it very different from such other conditions.


Mild cases of [[Getsuyuu Syndrome]] typically present with symptoms such as memory loss and behaviors similar to sleepwalking.
Patients stabilize when the moon waxes and is full, but tend to seek out the moonlight and wander at night. When the moon wanes, they become frightened and unstable.


These symptoms also fluctuate in a characteristic pattern which follows the phases of the moon.
Hence, the condition we now call Moonlight Syndrome was originally known as "moonlust" or "night walking," names still used in superstitious contexts.


When the moon is full, patients are more stable but tend to wander outside as if drawn to the moonlight. When the moon is dark or obscured, however, patients tend to destabilize and become prone to distress.
In severe cases, patients lose almost all of their memories and are attracted to windows and rooftops, giving the appearance of being led by the moonlight. They bathe happily in it, as if having their lost selves returned to them, albeit for a fleeting, unsustained moment.


The resemblance to sleepwalking was the inspiration for old names for the disease, such as "moonwalking" or, even farther back, "ghostwalking".
Patients who lose their memories will start looking toward the moon without fail.


In severe cases, even patients whose memory has almost completely faded away are drawn, as if beckoned by the moon itself, towards window sills and rooftops.
Symptoms like this may occur in individual psychiatric cases, but it is difficult to satisfactorily explain their simultaneous emergence in multiple patients.


Once there, they continue to bask in the moonlight, as if for that one moment they are able to reclaim some of what was lost.
The condition is unique to the [[Rogetsu Island]]s, so it may have some connection with the climate or beliefs of these islands.
 
Every patient exhibiting memory loss is eventually drawn to the light of the moon.
 
While such a symptom could conceivably manifest in a single individual, we are at a loss to explain the ubiquity of this behavior amongst our patients.
 
The fact that Getsuyuu Syndrome is unique to the Rogetsu Archipelago leads me to suspect a connection to the culture and beliefs of its inhabitants...
| japanese      =  
| japanese      =  
軽度の月幽病においては、
軽度の月幽病においては、
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あるのかもしれない・・・
あるのかもしれない・・・
}}
}}
==Translation Notes==
==Notes==
In Japanese, {{jp|月歩き|つきあるき|tsukiaruki|moonwalking}} and {{jp|憑き歩き|つきあるき|tsukiaruki|ghostwalking}} are pronounced the same.
In Japanese, the words translated as {{jp|月歩き|つきあるき|tsukiaruki|moonlust}} and {{jp|憑き歩き|つきあるき|tsukiaruki|night walking}} are pronounced the same.


{{FFIV File}}
{{FFIV File}}

Latest revision as of 15:10, 12 March 2023

Moonlight Syndrome and the Moon


Kanji 月幽病と月の関係
げつゆうびょう と つき の かんけい
Game Fatal Frame: Mask of the Lunar Eclipse
Author Shoji Katagiri
Chapter Phase III: Lost Day
Located at Haibara Infirmary, Exam Room
Obtained On the desk with Patient Interview: Takashi Aiba
Description Notes by Dr. Haibara's assistant about the moon and Moonlight Syndrome.
Additional Description Found a document.
Related Notes Warning: Wandering Patients & Moonlight Syndrome Research File

In mild cases of Moonlight Syndrome, patients start to lose fragments of their memories and tend to sleepwalk. Neither of these symptoms is especially uncommon, and may even occur together, but it is the effect of the phase of the moon on Moonlight Syndrome patients that makes it very different from such other conditions.

Patients stabilize when the moon waxes and is full, but tend to seek out the moonlight and wander at night. When the moon wanes, they become frightened and unstable.

Hence, the condition we now call Moonlight Syndrome was originally known as "moonlust" or "night walking," names still used in superstitious contexts.

In severe cases, patients lose almost all of their memories and are attracted to windows and rooftops, giving the appearance of being led by the moonlight. They bathe happily in it, as if having their lost selves returned to them, albeit for a fleeting, unsustained moment.

Patients who lose their memories will start looking toward the moon without fail.

Symptoms like this may occur in individual psychiatric cases, but it is difficult to satisfactorily explain their simultaneous emergence in multiple patients.

The condition is unique to the Rogetsu Islands, so it may have some connection with the climate or beliefs of these islands.

軽度の月幽病においては、
記憶の断片的な欠落が見られ、
夢遊病のような行動を
とることがある。

特徴的なのは
月の満ち欠けによって
症状が変わることだ。


月が満ちた時は、容体は安定するが、
月の光を求めるように外を徘徊する
傾向にあり、月が欠けた時は
怯えるように不安定になる。

かつて月幽病のことを「月歩き」、
または「憑き歩き」と呼んでいたが、
このことに由来するらしい。


重度の月幽病においては、
記憶がほとんどなくなった患者でも、
月明かりに誘われるように、
窓べりや屋上へと向かう。

そして、まるで月の光が、
一瞬自分が失ったものを
取り戻してくれるかのように、
光を浴び続ける。


記憶が無くなった人間は、
決まって月をあおぐ。

このような症状は、個別には
あるのかもしれないが、
集団で同じような症状に
なるのは説明がつかない。


この朧月島群島の文化圏に
特有であることから、
島の信仰や風土と何か関係が
あるのかもしれない・・・

Notes

In Japanese, the words translated as (月歩き( つきあるき) tsukiaruki; "moonlust") and (憑き歩き( つきあるき) tsukiaruki; "night walking") are pronounced the same.

Documents
Dr. Asou's Notes - Notes from Madoka - Madoka's Notebook - Madoka's Diary - Letter to Madoka - Choshiro's Notebook - Ruka's Diary - Misaki's Diary - Torn Diary - Boy's Diary - Diary with Pictures - 2F Nurse's Logbook - 3F Nurse's Logbook - 4F Isolation Room Reports - On-Duty Nurse's Memo - Duty Nurse's Notes - Nurse's Notes - Tsubaki Tono's Diary - Assistant's Notes - Director Haibara's Notes - Black Notebook - Sayaka's Diary - Letter to Soya - Soya's Notes - Soya's Scribblings - Letter From Soya Yomotsuki - Sakuya's Diary - Note from Someone - Letter Dropped by Woman in Black - Kageri Sendo's Letters - Kaoru Sendou's Suicide Note - Yuko Magaki's Painting Notes - Patient Observation Record - Misaki Asou Treatment Notes - Ayako's Notes - Fragment of an Unsent Letter - Female Patient's Suicide Note - Construction Worker's Logbook - Scribbled Last Words - Woman's Suicide Note - Patient's Notes - Note Left by Islander - Note Left by Fisherman - Note by Court Guardian
Records
Memo to the New Nurse - Information Plaque - Memo with Code - Information About Lift - Room Assignment Lists - Medical Files - Post-Mortem Certificates - Hospital Notices - Film Incineration - Newspaper Articles - Rogetsu Island Tourism Brochure - "What is the Rogetsu Kagura?" - Rogetsu Kagura Film Record - "To Rogetsu Kagura Visitors" - Dr. Asou's Research - Moonlight Syndrome Research File - Moonlight Syndrome and the Moon - Informer's Report - Old Research Records - Bundle of Burned Letters - Rogetsu Island Tomes - Yomotsuki Documents - Tsukimori Documents - "On the Mask of the Lunar Eclipse" - "Coming of the Day of Tranquility"
Other
Basic Operation - Flashlight - Examining - Camera Obscura - Filament - Taking Hint Photos - Power-Up Lenses - Equipped Functions - Film - Spirit Stone Flashlight - Handbook - Menu - Saving - Blue Crystals - Red Crystals - Hozuki Dolls
Pictures
Control Panel - Code Echoing in Ears - Cradle - Five Masks - Five Maidens - Grandfather Clock Code - Hole in Floor - Misaki with Girl in Black - Old Score Shining on Wall - Smudged Faces - Photo Taken in Front of Infirmary - Photo of Girls - Photo of Man and Masks - Photo of Woman with no Face - Red Wheelchair - Room with Books - Vision of Oblivion - Screening - Mask with Charm - Hidden Doll
Voices
List of phone calls - Radio messages - List of tapes
Misc.
Unused Files