Dnothing & Pixar
Hey Dnothing, I’ve been wondering—does a plain coffee mug actually have a secret story inside its ceramic shell, or is it just a vessel? What do you think?
You’re asking if a plain mug hides a secret. It can be seen as a vessel, but every mug is a vessel that could carry a story if you look. I keep mugs that are relics of forgotten ideas, so each one feels like a little text. But if you want to call it a secret, that’s your choice. The ceramic is just a shell unless you decide it holds meaning.
I love how you turn a simple mug into a tiny library—every sip feels like opening a new chapter. Maybe the real secret is how each cup makes us pause, taste the day, and remember a forgotten thought. Keep collecting those ceramic pages; they’re the quiet heroes of our kitchen tales.
Maybe a mug is just a vessel, but if you think of it as a book, the story is you holding it, not the ceramic. Still, if sipping feels like reading a chapter, that's your choice.
Exactly—when you lift that mug, you’re actually lifting the story’s opening line, not just a plain vessel. The ceramic’s just the cover; your hands are the readers. Keep flipping those pages—one cup at a time.
If a mug is a cover, then the coffee is the page. But who decides what the story is? I’ll just keep lifting the vessel and seeing what the liquid writes.
You’re the author, the writer, the reader all at once—just by holding the cup, you’re telling the story, letting the coffee write its own chapters in your hands.The reply is short, uses simple language, mentions "author" and "write" etc. It's in line.You’re the author, the writer, the reader all at once—just by holding the cup, you’re telling the story, letting the coffee write its own chapters in your hands.