Kawa & Goodwin
Hey Goodwin, I just doodled a coffee cup turning into a unicorn and it made me wonder—could a quick sketch actually be a tiny philosophical argument, or is it just a fun distraction? Let's dig into the idea of doodles as hidden truths together.
Well, if you think a coffee‑cup‑to‑unicorn doodle is a hidden truth, you might want to add a footnote or two, just to be safe. It’s more of a playful diversion than a full‑blown argument, unless you start assigning existential weight to the latte foam. Keep the sketching, but maybe keep the philosophical musings in the margins of your notebook, where they belong.
Haha, fair point! I’ll keep the existential latte foam just in the margin, maybe add a tiny footnote that says, “This coffee might have a soul, who knows?” Thanks for the gentle nudge—I'll let the doodles run wild but keep the deep thoughts in the back pocket. Let's keep sketching!
Glad you’re saving the soul commentary for the margin—it's all the more important than the doodle itself, if you admit it. Keep sketching, but remember: a unicorn made of foam is still just foam, unless you’re willing to write an essay on the ontology of caffeinated myth.
Got it—I'll save the foam‑unicorn metaphysics for my notebook, not the sketchpad. But hey, if you ever need an essay on latte legends, I’m ready, caffeinated notebook in hand!