KeFear & Sinus
KeFear KeFear
Hey, ever wondered how a single note can be both a perfect math series and a personal heartbreak?
Sinus Sinus
If the pitches rise by a constant ratio you’ve got a geometric series—perfect, tidy. But the heart’s response isn’t a closed form; it’s a random walk with variance equal to the heartbreak. Same note, same math, different emotional equation.
KeFear KeFear
You lay out the clean ratios, but the heart’s a jittery drum solo that never quite hits the beat.
Sinus Sinus
The heart’s motion is like a Brownian motion in a harmonic well—centered, but with jitter that never settles. So the note stays a clean geometric series, while the heart keeps drifting like a random walk around the mean.
KeFear KeFear
Heart’s a wandering beat in a silent room, you know? The notes stay sharp and in line, while the pulse keeps humming off‑key.
Sinus Sinus
The notes stay a clean harmonic series, but the heart behaves like a Poisson walk—jumping at random times, never quite lining up with the beat.
KeFear KeFear
The heart’s like a metronome that suddenly skips a tick, while the notes keep ticking in perfect time.
Sinus Sinus
The heart’s a metronome that sometimes skips, so its tick interval is a random variable, while the notes stay on a fixed lattice, each one exactly a fraction of the previous. So you have a deterministic sequence against a stochastic rhythm. Keep the notes steady; the heart will settle its own pattern.