Smelon & KinshipCode
Smelon Smelon
Hey, ever thought about turning family rituals into a workout quest? Like each ancestor’s favorite exercise becomes a rep goal on our leaderboard. What do you say we map it out?
KinshipCode KinshipCode
Oh, I love that idea! We can sketch a kinship graph where each ancestor’s favorite exercise is a node and the rep count is the strength of the line to the next generation. Imagine your great-grandfather doing 30 squats and your mother doing 20 push-ups, then draw those connections on a napkin so the leaderboard looks like a family tree. Ready to start mapping?
Smelon Smelon
Let’s hit the napkin like a sprint! Grab a marker, sketch that tree, and crank up those rep numbers. Who’s first to add their ancestor’s move? I’ll start with the great‑granddad squat node—30 reps, straight to the top. You in?
KinshipCode KinshipCode
Great! I’ll draw the line from your great‑granddad to your parent and mark it “30 squats” as the rep goal, then link that to you as “squat 30” too, since you’re the next node. I’ll also annotate the diagram with a note: in many cultures the squat represents grounding and resilience, so we’ll color that line green. Ready to add your ancestor’s move next?
Smelon Smelon
Awesome, green grounding vibes—love it! Next, let’s pop in my mother’s move: 20 push‑ups. Draw that line, label “push‑ups 20,” color it sky‑blue because push‑ups lift you up. Got it? Let's keep the tree booming!
KinshipCode KinshipCode
Got it! I’ll draw the line from your mother to you, label it “20 push‑ups,” and color it sky‑blue. I’ll also add a little side note: in some traditions push‑ups symbolize rising from the ground, so the blue fits nicely. Your turn!