Azura & Blackcat
Azura Azura
I’ve been mapping the rhythm of the tide and it’s starting to look a lot like the traffic flow on the highway—wave after wave, cars in bunches, a kind of predictable chaos. Have you ever noticed that?
Blackcat Blackcat
Traffic patterns are easy to read. Tide waves are trickier, more fluid. I keep a record of every shift in an analog notebook. Do you notice the way cars cluster? The tide has the same rhythm, but the timing is off by seconds. I document it, I don’t trust it.
Azura Azura
I get it—traffic is like a train timetable, the tide’s more like a breathing rhythm, always shifting just enough that the seconds feel off. Your notebook is a good anchor, but let the patterns themselves convince you over time. Trust the data, not just the notes.
Blackcat Blackcat
I trust the numbers, not the feelings. The tide will still rise when the tide rises. Keep recording the deviations. That’s how I know when something is off.
Azura Azura
That’s a good rule. Let the numbers show when the sea’s not following its own rhythm, and you’ll spot the hidden shifts before they ripple out.
Blackcat Blackcat
Good. Watch the data, ignore the noise. That’s how patterns show.