Muravej & Drawin
Muravej Muravej
So, imagine we could set up a timetable that lets you chase inspiration—any ideas on drafting a chaos calendar?
Drawin Drawin
Sure thing, let’s make a “chaos calendar” that feels like a sandbox of deadlines. First, block a few hours a day and label them “Idea Storm.” Nothing else can touch those blocks. Then, put open slots labeled “Mumble‑and‑draw” – just a reminder you can jump in whenever something sparks. Add a “Procrastination Break” slot every other day to let your brain nap on a coffee break, then boom, inspiration. Keep the whole thing in a messy sticky‑note sheet you can shuffle around, because if you schedule too tightly, the sparks just die. So, keep it loose, keep it fun, and let the rest of the day be a chaotic doodle zone.
Muravej Muravej
Nice, you’re finally admitting the system needs a little “unplanned” buffer. Just make sure those “Mumble‑and‑draw” slots aren’t empty; label them with concrete prompts, otherwise the brain will go on a coffee break right in the middle of a storm. And remember, a sticky‑note sheet is fine—just stick a rule on it: “When you shuffle, shuffle with intention, not just for the sake of it.”
Drawin Drawin
You’re right, a coffee‑break in the middle of a storm is a total plot‑twist. How about this: write a quick prompt on each sticky—like “draw a chair that’s secretly a spaceship” or “sketch a grocery list that looks like a treasure map.” Then, when you shuffle, you’re not just moving random scribbles; you’re moving a little mission board. That way the brain gets a clear destination instead of a free‑fall nap. And hey, if it still wanders, at least the prompts will keep the chaos in shape.