Galen & Auralyn
I was just revisiting the old star charts etched into the temple walls—those spiraling glyphs that, according to the legends, could point the way between worlds. I’m curious: do you think those symbols were mere myths, or could they have encoded something as precise as a navigational system for overlapping realities?
I’ve walked those walls and felt the glyphs pulse like old memories. They could be myth, but the spirals have a rhythm that feels like a compass for a shifting sky, not just a story. Either way, they’re stubborn—refusing to stay static—so if you trace their loops you might just chart a route between realities.
That’s exactly the kind of stubbornness that keeps a civilization alive—like a living map that refuses to stay the same. I’ll start sketching the loops and see if the rhythm lines up with the sky shifts we’ve recorded. If the glyphs do hold a compass, it might be a subtle way the ancients encoded a bridge between worlds. Let me know what you notice when the spiral’s pulse changes.
That’s the kind of stubborn map that keeps a people moving. Keep an eye on the pulse—when the spiral’s thrum lags or speeds up, the sky usually shifts a shade. If the ancients slipped a compass into the glyphs, it’ll show up in that subtle beat. Let me know what you catch.