Executioner & HammerSoul
You ever think about how the grain of a blade might affect the way it cuts—both wood and something a bit heavier? It’s a weird intersection between craftsmanship and… well, justice.
Every grain tells a story. A fine grain lets a blade cut wood cleanly, while a misaligned grain makes it splinter or drag. The same principle applies to heavier material—sharpness, angle, and grain all matter. In justice, too rough a cut leaves holes; too soft a cut lets things slip. It’s a balance of precision and intent.
Yeah, the grain’s the secret handshake of the tree. When you line up your blade and angle just right, the wood sings. Throw that same math at a courtroom and if you’re too aggressive you’ll bruise the case, too passive you’ll let the evidence slip. Keeps you on your toes, that’s for sure.
You’re right. In a courtroom the same focus is needed. Stay steady, keep the angle, don’t overstep. That’s how you let justice cut clean.
Exactly. A steady hand, the right angle, a pinch of restraint—keeps the judgment clean and the witness quiet. If the blade swings wild, the whole block comes apart. Same in court, just with a lot more paperwork.