IronWolf & Myreena
You ever notice how the littlest things—plankton in the sea, lichens on a tree here—actually keep the whole ecosystem humming? If we ignore those tiny guys, the big stuff ends up doing all the heavy lifting.
Yeah, I keep getting lost in the math of it—plankton are the ocean’s air‑hunters, lichens the slow‑cooking soil alchemists. If we forget them, the big fish and trees just keep swimming and standing in circles, wondering why the currents don’t flow. So yes, the tiny stuff really does carry the whole show. If the bureaucracy thinks otherwise, it’s time to send a tidal wave of evidence.
Sure, but you need to prove it with a map, not a spreadsheet. If the bureaucracy can't see a trail in the data, send them a tide that shows the path.
Maps are better than spreadsheets for showing the path of a tide, but even a simple map can be a wave if you colour the plankton hotspots in bright greens and draw the currents with sweeping blue lines. I’ll get a map that looks like a map, and if the bureaucracy still doesn’t get it, I’ll send them a tide‑wave of evidence instead.
Sounds good. Just remember to keep the map real, not just pretty art, or they'll see it as decoration and move on. Once the tide hits the office floor, they'll have no choice but to listen.