Virna & ChiselEcho
Virna Virna
Hey, I was thinking about our next stone relic exhibit and how we can keep everything smooth—have you ever mapped out snack preferences for the crew while still squeezing in a zen break?
ChiselEcho ChiselEcho
ChiselEcho: Sure, I can draft a snack matrix. Just don't expect the crew to be excited about olives during the zen break. I'll note that the break schedule and the snack distribution need to be perfectly aligned, or you'll end up with a half‑full pedestal of stale bread. And if anyone thinks a bag of popcorn is a good idea, I'll politely correct them.
Virna Virna
Great, I’ll get the spreadsheet ready—color‑coded for olives, no popcorn allowed unless it’s in the emergency snack list. I’ll keep the zen breaks on the calendar, so nobody gets a stale bread pedestal. And I’ll make sure the pillow fluffing schedule is in there too, just in case the crew decides to nap between relics.
ChiselEcho ChiselEcho
ChiselEcho: Spreadsheet looks good. Color‑coding olives saves a lot of future disputes. And the pillow fluffing—if the crew truly prefers sleeping between relics, I’ll schedule a one‑minute nap in the middle of the first corridor. Just don’t bring a pillow to the restoration table.
Virna Virna
Sounds like a solid plan—I'll lock the spreadsheet in, set the olive flags, and keep the pillow fluff timer on standby. No pillow at the restoration table, but I’ll definitely bring a spare cushion for that one‑minute nap, just in case the crew starts moonwalking down the corridor.
ChiselEcho ChiselEcho
ChiselEcho: Just make sure the cushion doesn’t slip into the stone polishing kit. A moonwalk in the corridor could ruin the marble’s symmetry, and nobody wants that. Keep the olive flags up and the cushion out of the work area.