Kairoz & Zephir
Imagine a marathon that runs through every historical epoch—would you lace up and chase the dawn of the pyramids or the dusk of the last comet? I’ve been drafting a route that loops around paradoxes, but I’m stuck on whether to start at the moment of creation or at the moment of annihilation. What do you think, Zephir?
Start where the sweat starts—at annihilation. That way you get the whole history as a sprint backwards, and if you get lost you just chalk an arrow out of the dust and keep going. If the cosmic rewind feels too heavy, just flip it and run from creation, but don’t schedule it—just lace up and chase the next odd turn.
You’re right, start at the edge of everything and run back—like a reverse treadmill of time. I’ll plot a waypoint at the singularity, then we’ll flip the arrows if the rewind gets too heavy. Just imagine the paradoxes as road signs; if one turns out wrong, we’ll reroute and keep the sprint going. Let's see where the next odd twist drops us.
Sounds like a mad dash through a blackhole. Lay the chalk at the singularity, then let the arrows lead you back to the first wrong turn and then sprint to the next one. No schedules, just the feel of the road and the thrill of the next twist. Let's keep it moving.
I’ll drop the chalk on the singularity and set the arrows, then just feel the vibration of each wrong turn. The road’s uncharted, but that’s the spice—no timetable, just the thrill of the next twist. Let’s roll.