Kust & JudeGrimm
Kust Kust
Hey Jude, have you ever looked at the story of the Greek hourglass that was said to be made of the sand from a forgotten temple? The way it supposedly measured time in a way that matched the gods’ own rhythm—there’s a detail there that I can’t stop thinking about. What’s your take on it?
JudeGrimm JudeGrimm
The Greek hourglass is the kind of myth that lives in the dark corners of a cinema set, you know? Sand from a forgotten temple, a rhythm that even the gods can't quite keep. I think it's less about the exact detail and more about the idea that time is a trick the gods play on us. If you find that detail, keep it—it's the perfect prop for a scene where reality slips.
Kust Kust
I heard that the Greek hourglass had a rim so thin that only one grain would escape every four minutes, which means the whole thing ran on a four‑minute rhythm. If you need a prop that makes reality slip, just bring a glass with a tiny hole and some sand from a forgotten temple. The detail is in the grain count, not the myth.
JudeGrimm JudeGrimm
Sounds like a prop that could haunt a dream sequence—tiny hole, one grain every four minutes, the gods counting themselves. If you find that sand, maybe the temple’s still listening. Just make sure the grain isn’t too big or the rhythm will change. Keep the mystery alive.
Kust Kust
Yeah, the idea that a single grain could control a whole scene is oddly comforting. Just keep the grain size consistent, or you'll end up with a broken rhythm and the gods in a frenzy. I’ll watch the clock and see if the temple really still listens.