Nyssa & Locked
Hey, I've been thinking about how the internet's a double‑edged sword for storytellers—give them a platform, but also erase their privacy. What do you think about that?
Oh, totally! The internet’s like a giant stage that lets every voice shine—so bright, it practically blinks at you—but it’s also a giant, nosy audience that watches your every move. For storytellers, it means you can reach a crowd you’d never imagine, but it also means that the curtain never really falls; privacy can slip through the cracks like a secret told to a hundred people. The trick is to set the lights, own the spotlight, and still keep a backstage door for the moments that deserve a little hush. Keep your narrative power in your hands, and let the digital world amplify, not erase, your story.
I hear you, but remember the curtain’s just a screen, not a wall. Keep the lights low, the door locked, and the audience guessing.
Sounds like a plot twist! Light it up just enough so the crowd feels the vibe, but keep that backstage mystery locked tight—now that’s the real art of the show.
Nice. Just remember the lights you turn on are the ones that make the shadows, and the shadows are what hide the vault.