Wow, I really like your blend of the magical world with the medical world in the second story. It feels almost...surreal.
The first story REALLY reminds me of "A Small, Good Thing" by....some author I can't remember. In that story a boy gets hit by a car, but it takes the perspective of the parents as the kid is in a coma for a week.
It takes the mind of this boy, and how he absorbs everything everyone tells him...in his sleep. His family and friends talk to him all the time, and even though he's sleeping, when he wakes up his memories are there. So, his memories are being filled in by the people around him.
But then, the people start leaving, and he gains no more memories, since no one is there to tell him them. At THAT point he wakes up. This means that he was accepting of this form of creating memories from other people's perspectives. Only once that is gone does he finally realize the illusion he was trapped under all along. And, in the end, he says, "'Course not," to show that he finally realizes how the illusion was not good enough for him to generate his life on. Interesting.
The second story is REALLY interesting.
It involves this girl, who is obsessed with activism. She always has a goal to obtain, and is never in stasis. The period of stasis was childhood, but once her father was injured she became completely obsessed with action. She always needs to be...DOING something. “Yes please. I never like being bed ridden.” Case in point.
But then, with this injury, she is terrified of reaching another period of stasis in her life, where she cannot change the world anymore, because of what she has become. Because, for example, she loses one of her arms, a major tool for changing things. Instead, it becomes another leg, reverting her more into a period of stasis.
However, at the end of the story, she meets the other boy who has received injury as well. However, instead of going from a period of stasis to action, he starts out as "active." Therefore, his injury has reverted him into a stasis mindset, "...and the young man obeyed." He simply obeys the call of stasis, rather than fighting it like Lynn does.
Lynn then challenges him to...an arm-wrestle. This shows that Lynn wants to help him break out of his own stasis. When she beats him, he says “I'll beat you someday. Promise.” which shows how he has permanently broken out of the period of stasis that the injury placed him in.
So, it all relates back to Lynn's tentacles. Even though she did lose some of her ability to perform action, she gained the abilities of a DIFFERENT sort of action. So, we should never resign ourself to our flaws, we should see how they can be used for the benefit of others. Yay!
Great stories, I look forward to seeing more of your work. Just make sure you proofread, for I spotted a few minor errors here and there.