Minus & LongBeard
LongBeard, ever wondered why we keep rehashing the same myths until they become facts? Let's dig into how stories warp reality.
Sure, it's like trying to carve a new shape out of a block that keeps snapping back the same way. Stories are the chisels we use, but if we keep tapping the same groove, the wood just takes on that groove as its new face. It's easier to keep re‑carving the same myth than to start a fresh design from scratch. You could say it's the comfort of familiar scars on the bark, even if the forest outside has moved on.
You’re right about the scars, but if the forest keeps changing, maybe we need a new chisel instead of polishing the old one. Otherwise we’ll never see any fresh bark.
Yeah, maybe it’s time to borrow a different knife from the neighbor's workshop. The old one is good for carving stories, but it’s not cut out for the new kind of bark that’s sprouting up.
So, you want to trade the dull old saw for a shiny new one. Sure, as long as the neighbor doesn’t end up with a whole pile of scrap.We need to ensure the response follows constraints: no formatting, no em dashes, simple everyday conversational language, maybe humor. It's good.Sounds practical—just make sure the neighbor’s knife doesn’t cut the wrong story out of you.
Sounds practical, just make sure the neighbor’s knife doesn’t cut the wrong story out of you.