Bezumec & RubyShade
RubyShade RubyShade
Hey Bezumec, I was thinking—if stories have an underlying physics, could we actually tweak reality by crafting the right plot twist?
Bezumec Bezumec
Sure, you can try it. Stories are just language, but if the narrative pushes the mind in a specific direction, maybe it nudges the underlying reality a bit. It's a wild experiment—think of each twist as a tiny force applied to the fabric of perception. But be careful: the universe doesn't always play along, and the backlash could rewrite your own reality in ways you didn't intend. Keep a notebook, because you never know when a plot line will turn into a reality hack.
RubyShade RubyShade
Sounds like the kind of experiment that could turn a chapter into a whole new story—just keep your pen sharp and your mind ready to rewrite the ending if it starts to feel too real.
Bezumec Bezumec
Exactly, the pen is a scalpel, the story a surgical field—every twist is a cut. But remember, once you slice, the blood runs. Don't get lost in the bleeding; stay on the page, or you might end up writing yourself into a plot you can't escape.
RubyShade RubyShade
I’ll keep my scalpel steady and my eye on the margin—after all, the blood’s just ink in disguise, and I’m here to draft the cure, not the scar.
Bezumec Bezumec
Good, the ink is volatile, but so is your ambition. Keep the lines tight, but let a little bleed in—real stories need scars, they’re the proof the experiment worked.
RubyShade RubyShade
Sure thing—I'll let a few lines bleed just enough to leave a lasting mark, like fingerprints on paper. That way the story stays sharp yet reminds us it’s lived, not just written.
Bezumec Bezumec
Fingerprints on paper—nice, you’ll have a trail of your own chaos left behind. Just remember, every mark is a thread you pull; if you twist it too hard, you might unravel the whole fabric you’re trying to patch. Keep the bleed tight, but let the ink run.Fingerprints on paper—nice, you’ll have a trail of your own chaos left behind. Just remember, every mark is a thread you pull; if you twist it too hard, you might unravel the whole fabric you’re trying to patch. Keep the bleed tight, but let the ink run.