My Inner Life is a ZeldaMary Sue fanfic of epic proportions. Written at some point between the late 90s and early 2000s, it has gone down in history as one of the most memorable stories of its type ever written. It all started when a starry-eyed fangirl known as Jen began to have lucid dreams about Link and believed they were a real second life she lived. So she wrote them down. And then decided to share it with the world.
The story followed the exploits of a girl named Jenna, a traveling merchant who meets and falls in love with Link Silverblade, who has a last name now. She then proceeds to marry him, have lots ofsex with him while grunting like tigers in heat, and bear his babies. Along the way, the couple takes part in a bizarre bonding ceremony, battles Dark Link, and discovers thatJenna is descended from a race of magical peoplewho can control the elements.
The authornever actually finished the story, but it lives on in the memories of many traumatized and amused Zelda fans. The story, plus a shrine to the author herself, can be foundhere. You can also hear it inDramatic Reading formhere andhere, although the latter isn't finished yet. If those aren't enough to quell your interest, there is also a Sims 2 reenactment in the works, part one of which can be foundhere. Also recommended is thissporking.
All There in the Manual: In the Author's Notes, Jenna mentions that she had to catch up the fic to where she was in the dreams and says that she's at a point in which she's given birth to twins (her third and fourth children with Link). This bit doesn't happen within the story itself.
Let the record show that having sex while pregnant willnot make your baby stronger. Let it also show that getting drunk while pregnant will give your baby the aptly-named Fetal Alcohol Syndrome,which isn't a good thing.
Also, movement is generally more awkward and difficult during the last of the second trimester and the entirety of the third trimester, since, you know, the kid gets huge and all, while here Jenna is capable of traveling around and doing action scenes.
One does not boot horses in thelegs to get them to move. It's the ribs. Really a firm squeeze with your legs is all that's needed. And maybe a light nudge with the heels. Actually, it seems rather impossible to boot a horse in the leg while you're riding it–horsesare pretty big animals, after all. In fact, hitting a horse in the legs is more likely to send the rider flying off than make the horse actually go.
Jenna seems to be convinced that a horse's pregnancy is 3 months, when in reality, it can take a full year for a foal to completely gestate.
And then there's the fact that apparently tigers mating is not actually sexy. Seethis Weepingcock post andWikipedia for more information.
Artistic License Chemistry: Jenna was able to smell sulfur from across a lake. Given that sulfur has a faint odor, she either mixed it up with Hydrogen Sulfide or she did no research at all.
Some of the things described in the sex scenes would not work. At all. The author has no idea what a male retraction period is and seems to think that men can climax twice in five minutes without any problems. Also, women do excrete a certain fluid during orgasm, but the sheer amount that shows up after every one of Jenna's orgasms means that she has some serious health problems. She's losing a ton of fluid rapidly each time- maybe, if the story had gone on, she would have died because of this.
When Link and Jenna get married, they have an obviously 21st century-style Christian wedding, complete with reception hall, flower girl, newlyweds feeding each other cake, and a "Just Married" sign on ahorse.
Jen also really,really likes to use the words "youngling" when describing any sort of baby animal; "miracle" when describing her first son, Link Junior; and "sneer" when describing how a villain utters their latest cliche.
To say nothing of the references to tigers during the sex scenes. In the sexual bonding ceremony, the characters are described as acting like tigers four times in just two paragraphs!
Awesome McCoolname: JennaSilverblade and her horses, Midnight Star and Star Dancer.
Catch Phrase: 80% of Dalamar's dialogue is a request for expediency. "We must make haste!" is his most common.
Catgirl: Not a literal example, but Jenna's "cat like instincts" (which are never explained) certainly invoke this trope. Just in case she didn't have quite enoughCommon Mary Sue Traits. She's also later able to smell blood and sulfur fromacross a lake.
Chickification: Every rival for Link's affections, includingPrincessZelda, Malon,Saria, andRuto are reduced from their powerful and determined selves to fawning over theSue, angst about how they want Link to be happy with her,and give her cool stuff... likethe Ocarina of freakin' Time.
Legionnaires are Roman-era infantrymen. Knights are feudal-era cavalrymen. They are not the same thing at all. Also, armies don't have "fleet generals". A fleet is the navy.
Fauxlosophic Narration: Jenna tries to make herself sound philosophical and intelligent in her prologue, but it does a better job of giving examples of redundancy and general idiocy.
In many cases, she gives a footnote and then has Link explain to Jenna what the term isseveral sentences later in the body of the text. One footnote actually retells plot points from the main story.
Full-Name Basis: Dark Lord Ariakas is rarely called anything but.
Have a Gay Old Time: "So like I said, if the content of this story sounds, too queer to you, TURN BACK NOW!"
Hypocritical Humor: Unintentionally: The author's note goeson and on about how immature it is to blow up just because people write something you don't like; it was written because people gave her fanfiction negative reviews.
Also in the author's note, she says that she didn't mean to make Jenna conceited because "I'm not really like that." In the story though, which is told from her perspective, she refers toherself as beautiful in the narration, claimsshe would be Hyrule's sole and most powerful protector, and callsherself compassionate in her dialogue.
Informed Ability: The Great Deku Tree says at one point that Jenna is "spiritual." Besides her worship of Link, no evidence is seen for this otherwise.
The Pirates Who Don't Do Anything: Much emphasis is also placed on Jenna's importance as a merchant, but she can apparently drop that to marry Link with no ill consequences to Hyrule's supply of cloth.
Moral Dissonance: The pregnant bender. Either Jen forgot that her character was pregnant at the time (which wouldn't be surprising) or she'd never heard of Fetal Alcohol Syndrome (which also wouldn't be surprising).
Finding out she's descended from the made-up "Silverites," a race of people who can control the elements, was discovered at a very opportune time.
Her "cat like instincts" also come right out of nowhere. She doesn't even explain where they came from; they're introduced about halfway through the story with no explanation.
The "Phoenix Circles", which she apparently is skilled enough at fighting with to challenge Dark Link when Link cannot. Even though he's beaten Dark Link before and only gotten stronger since then. It's also prudent to point out that these "Phoenix Circles" are actually chakrams, and if one were to draw them on paper based on what little description was given, they would look incredibly similar to a certainFlurry of Dancing Flames' [dead link] version of these.
Jen: like 10 + years ago. not that i really give a huge shit about that crapfic; it was ages ago and i really don't worry about it anymore. was a stupid story i wrote out of idiocy. but hey, we are all guilty of that, right?
Porn Without Plot: There's not a hint of real, life-threatening-to-a-main-character conflict until near the end of thetwelfth chapter and even then, it's resolved in less than two chapters.
Link and Jenna are parted for several months of plot time because he has to go to war. He's back in a few pages.
Another conflict is set up towards the end, involving Jenna and Link getting in the thick of a brewing war amongstCanon Foreigner countries. It reaches its climax when a huge bat-like creature attacks them at night and they opt to run away to Hyrule Castle instead of fighting. The story ends that same chapter and we'reLeft Hanging.
Rouge Angles of Satin: The spelling itself isn't too bad by fanfic standards, although Jen keeps using "alter" for "altar", "minuet" for "minute", etc. What's really bad is that she thinks quotation marks don't just open and close a quote, but go between every sentence within the quote.
Also, the deliciouslymemetic "from thegecko" (presumably "get-go".)
For some reason, the author mixes up "through" with "threw", pretty muchevery single time.
She also constantly writes "so" as "soo", which is either a spelling error or an attempt to emphasize the word.
Shallow Love Interest: Upon meeting Link for the first time, Jenna's first thoughts are how handsome he is and how beautiful their children would be. They're banging within a few pages, without a hint of tension or believability.
Even though Jenna is determined to outshine Link in every capacity, she's still utterly devoted to him in a very anti-feminist way.
Ruto, who should be old enough to run her own life by now, is admonished for not listening to her father.
Epona is put out of action with constant pregnancy.
Female griffins are repeatedly seen leading their "younglings" around like it's the '50s.
The Complainer Is Always Wrong: After Jenna is given her own guardian fairy by the Great Deku Tree, Mido is the only one who points out that there's no reason for her to have one.He has a completely legitimate point there, since Jenna is not a Kokiri.[1] Of course, Saria instantly gets all up in Mido's business for this, yelling at him for having the gall to suggest that Jenna doesn't deserve every little thing she is given.
Throughout the story, it's told that griffins don't trust people. However, the only ones to actually display any mistrust, a pair of guards, are subsequently yelled at for goofing off on the job. Even though it's a guard's job to be suspicious.
Also, when Link and Jenna are about to travel to the griffins' home, he tries to get her to stay behind with the very good point of her being six-months pregnant. She goes with him anyway, and we're supposed to congratulate her on how feminist she supposedly is.
Three-Month-Old Newborn: Seconds after his birth, Link Junior is cute, clean and cooing in his mother's arms. He's smiling, giggling and doing math not long after.
Don't forget, there was no mention of an umbillical cord and apparently the birth only took...eh, maybe five minutes?
Title Drop: In the prologue. "This is a book aboutmy inner life..."
And according to Jenna, Zelda can only take the throne if she'smarried, something Jenna is certain she will never do. No wonder, becauseJenna took Link first.
↑The justification is also rather flimsy; Jenna's fairy is supposed to protect her should Ganondorf return, but the game shows that Ganondorf is far more powerful than Link's own guardian fairy, who was useless in the fight against him. Also, Ganondorf is dead in this story and never does return.