Finn mac Oisínn (FINN mahk uh-SHEEN)
A Resident
Finn mac Oisínn
Finn carries the calm strength of still water and the quiet brightness of dawn. He does not boast nor charge ahead as legends once painted his grandfather, Fionn. Instead, he is a listener—his mind a vast and shifting sea, absorbing stories, gestures, silences. Those who meet him often find their truths spilling out uninvited. He has that kind of presence—the kind that mirrors what’s hidden in the heart.
In Tír na nÓg, Finn is not a warrior but a weaver of insight. He moves with intent through the realm’s forests and still groves, planting questions more often than seeds. His gifts are not martial but metaphysical—he senses the way moments are knotted together in memory, how paths tangle in a person’s past. He’s often found near the older trees, humming melodies he claims were never taught to him, only remembered.
Though his name means “fair,” it is his fairness—his deep, bone-deep sense of balance—that defines him. He never judges aloud, but those who seek him usually leave understanding what they must do, even if it wasn’t what they wished to hear. It is said that even the rivers change course for him, adjusting their currents to mirror his movements.
He calls Oisín “my echo” rather than “father,” not out of disrespect, but because he believes they are notes of the same song. Niamh, to him, is the stillness between those notes—the measure that keeps the melody from becoming noise. He is of them, but not limited to them. He claims no purpose but to reflect, and yet reflection is often what leads others to transformation.
Relationships
Current Location
Species
Ethnicity
Realm
Professions
Spouses
Siblings
Oscar mac Oisínn
(Brother)
Plór na mBan Oisínn
(Sister)
Children
Sex
Male
Sexuality
Omnephilic
Other Affiliations



