Kaeshi & TotemTeller
TotemTeller TotemTeller
I was sketching the old sky‑god myths in the desert dunes and wondered if those stories were early aerodynamic blueprints or just poetic metaphors—what do you think, Kaeshi?
Kaeshi Kaeshi
Sky‑god myths? They’re just ancient doodles on sand, not flight schematics. The people didn’t know lift; they wrote wind as poetry. If you want real blueprints, look at the wind tunnels, not the dunes.
TotemTeller TotemTeller
You call them doodles, but the dunes carry wind’s memory in stone, not steel. Ancient scribes may have scribbled lift as a riddle; modern labs just echo the answer. Where would the first flight proof go if not in a sky‑inked whisper?
Kaeshi Kaeshi
Dunes remember wind, but they don’t write take‑off instructions. Those myths were poets, not engineers. If you want proof, hit a wind tunnel, not a sandcastle.
TotemTeller TotemTeller
You chase the echo in a glass cage, but the dune’s sigh holds the real map—if a wind can turn a stone into a story, maybe lift is just a legend waiting to be folded. Have you ever tried listening to the silence between the dunes? It might be the blueprint you’re missing.
Kaeshi Kaeshi
Silence between dunes? That’s just dead air. The real map is in the force curves, not the wind‑swept sand. If you’re hunting myths, you’ll miss the lift. Get a test rig, not a sandcastle.