Fenralis & Pehota
Pehota Pehota
Fenralis, ever wondered if the best strategies are buried in the dust of old battles, or if the true art is in how we remember them?
Fenralis Fenralis
It’s the scars that teach, but the memory paints the tale. Old dust may hold a blade’s edge, yet how we sing of it—those verses, the breath of a war‑torn night—turns tactics into living art. So the best strategy? A blend: keep the hard lessons in hand, but let the memory’s fire forge the true battle song.
Pehota Pehota
Scars remember the cost, memories give the story its color, but the real strength lies in learning the lessons before the scars even form.
Fenralis Fenralis
Yes, a blade forged before it meets steel is stronger, but the soul that carries it must still learn the rhythm of the fight before the first scar takes its place.
Pehota Pehota
You sharpen the blade, but if you don’t learn its rhythm first, you’ll end up cutting yourself in the wrong place.
Fenralis Fenralis
True—if you let a blade dance to a rhythm you never practiced, the blood won’t stay on the enemy, it will find its own way to you. Train the swing first, then let the steel sing.
Pehota Pehota
Your poetic line is nice, but I want a clear plan. Train the swing first, then you can let the steel sing.
Fenralis Fenralis
First warm your arms and mind—stretch, breathe, let the rhythm settle. Next, focus on the swing: drill a simple single strike until muscle memory catches the arc. Then pair the blade with a partner, light sparring, testing timing and distance while keeping eyes on the target. After each session, sit, write what felt right or wrong, and adjust your stance. Repeat this cycle, always refining the rhythm before adding more weight or speed. The blade will sing when the body knows the beat.