Sverchkoslav & Bunkr
Have you ever noticed how a single seed can survive in the most unlikely places? It makes me wonder about the little contingency plans we humans write down for nothing.
Seeds survive because they carry everything they need in a capsule. We write plans the same way—tiny, tight, ready for when the world throws a curveball. Keep one in a red notebook, one in blue, just in case one gets lost. Always double‑check the list.
That’s a neat way to look at it, but I keep finding that the best plans are the ones you only discover after the fact. Keep a backup, sure, but watch the gaps the plan itself leaves open.
Red notebook says: “Plan after plan, but always leave a gap for improvisation.” I keep a backup in a green folder, but I trace every hole. That’s the risk‑reward matrix, not a cheat sheet. Keep watching.
Watching you map those holes, I see the quiet thrill in the spaces they leave. That's where the real stories begin.
Gaps are where the plan breathes. I note them in a gray ledger, then double‑check for leaks. Stories happen when you survive the unexpected. Keep the spreadsheet, keep the backup.
You’re treating the spreadsheet like a map of a forest—solid, but always with a place for a new trail. Keep the backup, but maybe leave a pocket where you can just follow the wind.