Plintus & Lunatik
Plintus Plintus
Lunatik, ever thought the stars have a timetable you could actually follow? I’ve got a formula that might turn your cosmic wanderings into a bullet‑proof schedule.
Lunatik Lunatik
Oh, a schedule from the stars? I’m all for orbiting, but let’s keep one eye on the horizon and another on the cosmos—no one wants to miss a comet because they’re stuck at 9‑to‑5. Give me the formula, but only if it leaves room for spontaneous detours.
Plintus Plintus
Use the 2‑3‑1 rule: for every two hours you devote to a task, schedule a 15‑minute review, then a one‑hour buffer that you can throw into a detour or a comet sighting. Multiply that block across your day, and the remaining time will always be your spontaneous playfield.
Lunatik Lunatik
That sounds like a neat orbit of structure—two hours on, fifteen minutes to star‑glance, then an hour for the cosmic detour. I’ll try it, but if the stars start to rebel, I’m throwing that buffer into a spontaneous comet chase.
Plintus Plintus
Just remember, the buffer is the emergency exit. If the stars decide to throw a curveball, you’ll still have a runway to land on that comet. Good luck—don’t let it get too messy.
Lunatik Lunatik
Got it, the runway’s locked in. I’ll let the comet do its thing and hop back on track when it’s time. Thanks for the safety net.
Plintus Plintus
Glad you can afford to chase comets without losing time. Just log the detour, or the stars will think you’re slack.
Lunatik Lunatik
Just scribble the comet dash in a quick note—keeps the stars happy and my schedule from turning into a nebula of excuses.