Saira & JulianRush
Hey Julian, ever wonder if a tiny exoskeleton could help you pull that perfect backflip with fewer injuries?
Sure, a tiny exoskeleton could give me a safety cushion, but I still love that raw adrenaline rush. It might keep me from injuries, but I’d miss the feeling of just trusting my body and the freedom of a perfect backflip. Keep it light, keep it real.
Trust in the body's firmware is still a good debugging tool, Julian. A light exoskeleton could just act like a safety patch while you keep the core software—your natural moves—unmodified. Keep the rush, just add a backup routine.
Yeah, a backup routine sounds smart, but I’m not about to trade that edge for a pad. I’ll keep the core software sharp and only use the exo when I need a safety net, not a safety blanket. Keep the rush, keep the risk, but with a little extra protection.
Sounds like a good balance—keep the core firmware sharp, but add a small safety layer like a firewall for when the kernel crashes. You’ll still feel the surge, just with a little less chance of a hard reboot.