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5 more episodes😭

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Yasmin

Right when I get home from work yall post this THANK YOUUU

Wiame

Omg can’t believe it’s almost over 😭

Jyle

I was wondering that lol , will you guys be doing all 5 next week or leave the finale for a stand alone!

Nrock23

We finishing it next weekend? 👀

leah

yayyyyyy

jd

Just in time!

Ale

I can't believe it's only 5 more....

ssj4rit

Damn this is a surprise. Appreciate you guys making time for these reactions despite your busy schedules.

ssj4rit

Also the manga is only 60 chapters beyond the show. So at best that would be like maybe 25-30 anime episodes.

morena

Rule 5: doesn't affect Killua for a certain "relative" wished for Killua to be immune from all Aluka's request and added an "option" for Killua to make commands without any limits anytime he wants (this is just a theory but it make sense) - that relative is in the manwha spoiler!

Goldy

It's 2 arcs ahead

Goldy

And that 2nd arc is still in the process of being made

Brandon

Anime is done for good. Even if they came back with another arc animated it would have to end on a cliff hanger that would last several years till they could animate more. I do recommend reading the manga to a specific point though because it has something you guys have wanted to see for a long time but big spoiler tho so won’t say.

Laura 🦋

“Alluka kys” 😭 Brigg is unhinged

LeFlaneur

You’re going to change your profile picture immediately usurper

Brittany (Ultraanimegirl4)

I'm aware Hisoka and Illumi are villains but they are SO COOL in this arc XD

Fe

im saying this just to be sure but don’t skip episode 148’ outro there’s some scenes included there

morena

its a theory not a spoiler. If you know what theory means 🥱 you cant spoil something that isnt a fact.

SoClose

All due respect, that's a stupid baseless theory. That relative certainly didn't make any wish like that. Her power has a time spent with X mechanism to it. If you fail to fulfill her requests, the one you love the most will die, followed by the ones you spent the most time with. From that you can assume that since Killua is the one she loves the most, and is also the one who's spent the most time with her, it makes sense how he's the exception and is able to give her a command. Remember, Nanika is doing this to impress him.

FR

Hisoka and Illumi dou 💘

Peyton

but they're villains, doesn't that make u a bad person for thinking they're cool?

Alex

Karlsefni

Havent watched the reaction yet but if you mean Alluka's power in general, one thoery is that when illumi planted the needle in Killua's head during the hunter exam, that it either fogged his memory or made him completely forget about Alluka.

Enma

Probably better answers out there, but my whole take on it anyway, is that I think it's due to him having trust issues with his family and their treatment of Alluka makes him more protective and secretive of her as to not have them abuse her and her powers. Plus, it also gives Killua an edge over the rest of the family by not revealing all of his cards, so to speak. The less the family knows, the safer Alluka is from being extorted. He revealed it now because he felt like he didn't have any other options to get out of his situation.

SoClose

Canon, I know you read comments. Don't be petty big dawg, but we gotta take you to school. Yorknew Arc was foreshadowed all over the Hunter Exam remember? The story transitions perfectly from Hunter Exam > Zoldyck > to York New. Ok. Now why did Gon and Killua go to Yorknew? For Greed Island. That literally was their whole plot thread. So why did they go to Greed Island? To look for Ging, who set them up to train with Kite. Now we're on Chimera Arc. Which if you paid attention, you'd realize was foreshadowing the Election Arc. The whole reason the Hunter's Association couldn't lend Netero and the team more qualified hunters to help with the mission was entirely due to the "Vice Chairman's faction." That's Pariston. Now we're in this arc. Which is a "transition arc." Just like the Zoldyck Arc was for York New and the Greed Island Arc was for Chimera. Notice how Togashi has a pattern? (Small Arc > Big Arc) The next arc is quite possibly, and I am not exaggerating, the most ambitious arc in any shounen. Picture Yorknew fucked Game of Thrones. It's actually hilarious how many of the "I wish this and that happened" that you guys are saying are actually happening in this arc. So, all that said. WHAT THE FUCK WERE YOU ON ABOUT THIS SERIES HAVING RANDOM ASS ARCS? The story structure is right there. It's unlike any other battle shounen. How tf is it all over the place? Because it incorporates different genres? Bruh. In the last comment thread, I saw you call it "lazy writing." Haaaaa? 😭

Dude Man McGee

Carter needs to realize that in anime, talking is a free action. It's dumb as hell I know, but when anime characters are talking, just assume time is standing still.

Brian Clancy

anime is so damn weird

Johnathan Walker

Ok. I'm throwing the Gon theory on you all after watching this episode. There is a card in Greed Island called Pregnancy Stone. It allows the user to birth a child, regardless of sex. You can choose the sex of the child by either using a Male or Female Stone card. See the panda that was sitting in for Ging during the rundowns? There is a card called Panda Maid. It is a panda who is particularly well-suited for cooking and taking care of children. There's a theory that Ging gave birth to Gon during a test run of GI and brought back Panda Maid as his prize to help take care of him. Ever wonder why Ging is 100% confident that Gon is as talented as himself? Because Gon is literally a second Ging.

Cannon Andrus

Obviously it has to have some sort of structure or it wouldn’t be as popular as it is. I’m not even going to argue because it’s going in one ear out the other it seems. All I was saying is to me Hxh’s story feels segmented and isn’t as fluid as other shows I’ve watched which pulls me out of it sometimes. I can see why Togashi is known as a writer that can get bored with what he’s doing and quickly move on to the next thing because even though the arcs have something pointing towards something else, the transitions are bumpy. Btw, you don’t have to say you’re “taking me to school,” when everything in media is subjective. You can feel completely different and that’s totally fine.

Kite

I hope they make like a mini movie for that thing you're talking about that we can't mention, would be fire

Super Novice

It’s just his writing structure and it’s not for everyone. That’s cool. Is the writing perfect? No writing is, as it’s a subjective medium. But HxH is a solid, highly critically acclaimed show with a big following for a reason. It also wasn’t intended to finish on this arc, but the guy has health problems. So this was very much a transitional arc to something huge. But you seemed to enjoy it for the most part which is the main thing and that’s great. Let the opinion wars end! :)

Super Novice

That sounds cool, especially with the background on the specific cards and even though that’s a wild theory, I can appreciate the wackiness and imagination

SoClose

Brada, if you just, like, take 2-3 mins to read the bullshit I just wrote, you'd realize I've just explained how fluid the story actually is. Each arc transitions perfectly to the next, how fluid do you want it to be? Nothing was ever random. You know that face Spongebob made when he caught Squidward enjoy a craby patty? That's me. You gotta admit you didn't think this shit through.😭 Don't get defensive bro. It's anime, this shit isn't serious.

Cannon Andrus

You just pointed out that at the end of arcs they’ll throw out some info that leads them to the next place. That doesn’t make the story fluid. I’m not being defensive and respectfully it’s crazy that you’re saying I haven’t thought this out when it’s quite literally my life at the moment to think it out. If you feel like this story is fluid compared to some of the other shows we’ve watched on this channel, that’s beyond me.

SoClose

Not at the end, during the arc. DURING. In the middle, like Malcom. Hisoka mentioned Yorknew to Kurapika in the Hunter Exam. Am I lying? Greed Island was the boys' goal DURING Yorknew Arc, where's the lies? The Vice Chairman was mentioned hindering Netero during Chimera. I'm like a fax machine. Togashi just didn't casually mention any of those at the end of every arc.

Kamui

It’s only like that because it’s originally a manga. Manga panels can’t easily show dialogue + moving parts at the same time without taking a ton of space. The anime adaptation just accounts for that and makes time seem to flow strangely during dialogue to be consistent

Alex

The foreshadowing for the election is borderline impossible to catch in the middle of the Ant arc the first time you watch it.

Rispa007

The manga goes well past the anime with some stuff I know yall would love to read but the current arc is not even close to being finished. Think of it like another chimera arc because there's a lot of build up. But the lore is insane, so its worth the read if you really want to know more of the universe and lore of hxh. I collect the volumes so there's about 5 volumes of hxh that could be read after the anime or about 61 chapters. But a lil disclaimer reading hxh is very different than watching it, still great tho.

Isaac

Both of what you're saying is right, bro. Clearly, the structure is there and the transitions are smooth, storytelling wise. But when you watch the anime is wack how you're going from Yorknew into a card game. And then a genocide into an election. It's weird, so I get what Cannon is saying. But I also agree with you in that the story is all laid out well.

Pavlo

Why does Gotoh have a slutty waist

Izaya

Yall could do some manga reaction... i dont know how it would work or if it would work properly but its an idea, since the anime is probably never gonna adapt the rest

Johnathan Walker

At this point, I almost find it hard to not be true. Not sure why else those specific cards would exist along with Ging taking Panda Maid as his prize over all of the other options. But, alas, it is just speculation.

brrr

togashi so deep down this mans throat naaaah

Nrock23

I think spiderman across the spiderverse does multiverse's pretty well

Nonos

Yeah, Yorknews whole goal is literally to find greed island. Even before the heavens arena arc, in episode 25, gon, Leorio,kurapika and killua pledge to meet in yorknew. Mentions of yorknew even before that. In chimera arc, there’s the whole morel phone call taking about Hunter association and mentions of vice chairman paristan. Then the election arc literally had to be after the ant arc cuz a new chairman urgently had to be made since Netero died. So it’s not like info for the next arc is just thrown out there at the end of arcs. Overall I think the narrative flows well but I can kinda see cannon’s view with how you go from greed island straight to kite tho.

cutty

Would be a fun venture I think. I know their schedules are about to get crazy tho, and by the time it clears up they might not have as much interest in the series. It would be cool to do as like a Discord event. Every week read a few chapters over Discord with the community

kingkoopa98

I think there are about 40 chapters after the end of the anime - they haven't been animated because the arc isn't finished yet and because of Togashi's health we aren't sure if it ever will be completed.

cutty

Hunter x Hunter is a top 3 anime for me, I think it's brilliantly written. But I do appreciate that you guys are willing to be a bit critical. Authenticity in your reactions is better than just pretending to enjoy every choice made. I think the arcs are set up well, I think they all have good endings, but something I've noticed is that Togashi tends to adjust his writing style for different arcs, and that CAN be jarring. Chimera Ant arc for example was intentionally long, and the pacing isn't a problem for some but is for others based on what you expect of Togashi's writing style. He spent a lot of time letting that arc breathe, letting the characters live and develop. It's part of what made Gon and Meruem's changes so impactful. I also do agree that the endings of some of the arcs feel like a giant halt, and then you're just thrusted into the next arc without fully processing the end of the last one. The end of the Chimera Ant arc is a good example of it. You jump into the Election arc super fast.

Shiro

The reason why they don’t ask Something or Alluka to kill themselves is because they would like to control this power if possible. If that is not the case, then perhaps killing would be an option. All said and done, Silva and Zeno are against killing Alluka, so Illumi has this one opportunity when Alluka is away from home to kill him. But you have to appreciate the brilliance of Illumi’s psychotic love for Killua. He wants Killua to use Something to kill Illumi and suffer for the rest of his life.

TimmSchmimm

Honestly its hard to blame cannon and carter for not liking this form of writing because it hits harder the more standardized shounen you have watched before. Most people who hold hxh in really high regards watched many other anime before or grew up with one piece, naruto, dragonball or bleach etc. and only watched it later so while hxh still follows this standard battle shounen plot progression it also is unlike regular shounen or anime, it is really organic/fluid and it feels like we are genuinely following around this boy and his friends while the world keeps moving and they kinda fall from one arc into the other because on their way to the actual goal stuff around them just happens and its less of a manufactured or concise story beeing told with the intent to guide the consumer by withholding and exposing certain information at the certain times from a story telling perspective bur rather information is given out or held back because character x/y has reason/no reason to mention it so the character wont say it out loud because its like its own thinking entity with its own thoughts. For example aot, edgerunners or fmab are anime you have seen that have this standardized western manufactured form of story telling which is really to the point and its not natural yes but as a story it is really efficient the "expositon,story telling, world building per minute" is really high and its written with the intention of efficiently telling this story rather than beeing a vibe or in hxh's case genuine and real.

ssj4rit

Tbh I like how every arc changes up the formula. I dropped a lot of shounen for just being the same thing every arc. But I can see it feeling disjointed or schizo for some.

Jed

That was my comment a few months back Carter. The manga has enough content for 1 new season of 24 eps but I doubt it would happen because then the show would be on hiatus again until Togashi starts writing more. Shonen Jump also dropped Togashi and HxH from their company a few months back so anything that gets published from now on is from Togashi himself. Essentially the series is now dead because you need Shonen Jump to prep the manga for sales.

ssj4rit

Honestly I agree with both sides. Personally I think pre-CAA the story is pretty fluid and intertwined, most arcs are foreshadowed well in advance (Yorknew as early as Hunter Exam, GI as early as Heaven’s Arena). So saying every arc is segmented and disjoint isn’t quite true imo. However CAA does feel like more of a standalone story and comes out of nowhere compared to other arcs which have a lot of foreshadowing. Same with Killua’s sister and a certain major reveal at the end of the anime. But after that the story circles back to long standing plotlines and intertwines them well with the new stuff introduced. Unfortunately I don’t think the story will be completed given the author’s health, but I do think if HxH ever finished the story would seem much more fluid and interconnected.

cutty

If you think about it, the ending of the anime as is works pretty well. It feels like a closure, although there's a lot of loose ends, you can still make some peace with the way they ended the anime. If they made a new season, they'd have to find a way to create another potential ending, and there really isn't one.

Jed

I totally agree, I was planning on writing a comment on the final episode on why its such a nice "ending" to a series that isn't truly over yet.

giselle

LEORIO FOR PREZ!

Gaboxxy

BTW, when they say "Association Hunters" they mean hunters that almost exclusively take on jobs given directly by the association, hence they are under their direct control, it doesn't apply to all hunters. They are usually called "association dogs" in a pejorative manner, and are generally considered weaker worse hunters than the average.

Gaboxxy

Love how you guys were so shocked when Killua was somehow an expert at darts, yet gave no reaction to Killua literally piloting a plane lol.

Gaboxxy

In other words, not really enough material to justify another anime. Also, the full extra arc in the manga is quite short and not much happens in it.

Goldy

Enough for a good 12-20 ep also ovas are a thing

Gaboxxy

Not joking, one of the few shows that did the multiverse thing right was Rick and Morty, because it never really tries to make you attach to other versions of the main cast with rare exceptions. There might be million of different Ricks and Mortys, but at the end of the day you only care for "your" Rick and Morty to do okay.

Sasha

Why Mckay pretend like he's in the office😐

Saki (edited)

Comment edits

2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-29 11:37:59 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!
2024-03-25 21:57:00 Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!

Heavy disagree on the multiverse discussion, for me personally! I really enjoy the multiverse theory and the idea that there are universes where the impossible becomes possible, and perhaps where the possible for us, becomes impossible for them. The idea that maybe all that changed is that I choose to get coffee on a Thursday instead of a Friday or something, and that I met someone I may not have otherwise, and that either changed everything, or nothing at all. I don't necessarily agree with the idea that just because there is /more/, it truly means less, yk? Because something that can mean nothing in another "universe" can still mean everything to another on the flipside, no? Perhaps that's to say that everything means nothing in the grand scheme of things, but I just don't believe that to be true. I think its enough for someone somewhere to have experienced the taste of ice cream for the first time, even if its just one version of them, in a small pocket of an infinite web of "multiverses". Whether they loved or hated the taste of rocky road still had meaning to them, and the people around them. If friend A lost friend B in one universe, and somehow met friend B from a universe where (as was mentioned) all that was changed was that they grew their hair a little longer, I still don't really think that feeling of grief would just dissipate regardless. The unnerving feeling that the person who was truly /your/ friend, is still gone, and that is meaningful. Life and existence and all the "maybe"s and "cant be"s hold all the meaning that we allow them to, and even if someone decides that answer is "none" I still think that's meaningful in of itself. I don't know if you guys have already watched it or not (though I'm sure you've probably already heard of it, given all awards and stuff?) but one movie I really love, and imo does the whole multiverse thing really well is "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once". Idk if its too strange for your tastes or not (it does get pretty wacky) but I think it touches on a lot, the messages are great, and its definitely a fun watch with some wild editinggg. Would totally watch a reaction, if it was something that actually interested yall!

Saki (edited)

Comment edits

2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-29 11:37:59 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh
2024-03-25 22:02:08 randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh

randomly debating the meaning of life in the patreon comments...? my b, asdgsh

ebodey

Yo Brig that "Alluka kill yourself" "Ay" *explodes* *outro* joke had me straight chuckling lmao

ebodey

This was days ago but SoClose was on clown mode fr. These fellas Carter and Cannon have been fans of anime for legit one year, they branded themselves anime haters ffs. They're probably used to western media with concentrated plots and consistent settings. Brig and Mckay have seen Naruto, they know how exam arcs and tournament arcs work and how that shit progresses from one arc to the next. Jack watches One Piece so he's used to dramatic ass switch ups and accepting basically anything that's thrown at him while still expecting explanations for everything. Just chill and let them have their opinions. I know it means that much to you, but to them on first watch, its not that deep. I'm not saying this because I disagree with your points, I'm saying it because you were being an asshole. Mfs just wanna be witty online these days instead of being actual people.

Saki 🏴‍☠️✨

@Beetlemoose cant tell if this is meant to be an attempt at a read or an actual question, lmao - but its a keyboard smash. used in the place or "lol" or "lmao" or whatever else.