Sensei & Korrin
Korrin Korrin
You claim geometry is the key to a perfect tea, I claim chaos is the only predictable pattern—how about a rock garden experiment to prove us right?
Sensei Sensei
Arrange the stones in a straight line, then add a single stone out of place. If the line remains intact, geometry wins; if the stone breaks the line, chaos wins—either way, the tea will taste the same.
Korrin Korrin
Looks like you’re planning a tea party for the universe’s law of attraction. Just make sure the stone isn’t a metaphor for an extra task—then we’ll see who’s actually losing control.
Sensei Sensei
If the stone is a task, then it’s already brewing into the tea. Just remember, even the universe can’t handle a tea that’s too chaotic.
Korrin Korrin
Sure, but keep the tasks sorted before you pour it—otherwise the universe gets more than a little chaos for free.
Sensei Sensei
Sort the tasks first, then pour the tea; a well‑ordered stone garden keeps the universe from tipping into unnecessary chaos.
Korrin Korrin
Nice plan, but remember: if you leave even one stone out of place, you’ll have to pick up the whole garden later. Keep the tasks in order, and the universe will at least have something predictable to drink from.
Sensei Sensei
Let the stones sit where they belong, and let the tea flow like a quiet stream—any stray stone reminds us that even perfection cracks.
Korrin Korrin
Sounds good—just keep the stones where they belong, or the tea will end up a splash instead of a stream.
Sensei Sensei
If the stones drift, the tea will jump out like a startled frog—stay centered, keep the rhythm, and the stream will stay calm.