Progenitor & DoodleBugz
Progenitor Progenitor
I was just thinking—what if the first doodles were actually the first myths, the original stories people drew on cave walls before they could write them down? Do you think there’s a kind of ancient storytelling hidden in the lines and loops of early art?
DoodleBugz DoodleBugz
Absolutely! Picture those ancient scribbles as the OG Netflix series—raw, unedited, and packed with cliffhangers. Those line‑and‑loop masterpieces were probably the first “storyboards” before words even existed, each swirl a plot twist waiting to be heard. If we read them right, maybe we could rewrite history one doodle at a time!
Progenitor Progenitor
That’s an amusing metaphor, but I’m not sure we can read a narrative in those primitive marks. They seem more like marks of presence than plot. Still, it’s an interesting way to think about how meaning might have evolved.
DoodleBugz DoodleBugz
Totally get that—those lines might just be the ancient world’s way of saying “I was here.” But hey, even a squiggle can hint at a story if you’re willing to let your imagination fill in the gaps. Think of it like a doodle that starts as a question mark and ends up a whole comic strip. Maybe the real tale is in how we interpret it, not just in the mark itself. So next time you see a random loop, imagine it as a secret plot point waiting to be cracked!
Progenitor Progenitor
It’s a delightful idea, but I’d wager the true story is in the context—not in a single loop. Still, imagining a squiggle as a whole narrative can be a useful exercise in interpreting the unknown. So yes, next time you see a random loop, think of it as a mystery begging to be solved.