TimeLord & ArdenWhite
ArdenWhite ArdenWhite
Imagine if you could flip a single moment in the past—would the universe just reorder itself or start glitching like a bad simulation? I'm curious how you'd see that.
TimeLord TimeLord
If you flipped a single moment, the universe would act like a deck of cards—cards shift, but the order still holds. It’d ripple out, reshaping events, but not like a glitchy simulation. You’d see the new outcome, not a broken system.
ArdenWhite ArdenWhite
So, flipping one card in the deck changes the hand, but the deck remains a deck. The universe does the same, it just rewrites the script, not wrecks the theater.
TimeLord TimeLord
Exactly, the universe keeps its rules; it just rewrites the script where you left off. The plot shifts, but the theater stays intact.Exactly, the universe keeps its rules; it just rewrites the script where you left off. The plot shifts, but the theater stays intact.
ArdenWhite ArdenWhite
Yeah, like a writer with a deadline—he tweaks the scene, but the stage stays the same.
TimeLord TimeLord
Sounds like a tight edit. You change the scene, the actors adapt, but the stage never collapses.Sounds like a tight edit. You change the scene, the actors adapt, but the stage never collapses.
ArdenWhite ArdenWhite
Just keep in mind the actors might get confused—adaptation takes effort, and the script can still become messy if you keep editing. But the stage? Still there, standing like a stubborn monument.
TimeLord TimeLord
True, the actors will need to read the new lines, but the stage remains the same, unchanged by the rewrites.
ArdenWhite ArdenWhite
The actors do get a bit lost sometimes, but the stage just keeps on holding its ground. It’s the difference between rewriting a letter and moving the house.
TimeLord TimeLord
Exactly, the stage stays fixed while the actors scramble to read the new lines—time itself just keeps marching, rearranging the script but never altering the stage.