12. Thank Goodness for iPhone Notes
- Vaisey Stiles | Write In Real Time

- Dec 18, 2023
- 3 min read
[Vaisye's note: I've gotten some questions about what type of editing goes into these post prior to publication and other than a basic spell check, there isn't any. If I re-write a sentace or correct my phrasing as I go that's one thing, but I don't go through and check my grammar or flow. The spellcheck is mostly to ensure that my typing stays legible as I often transpose letters and when there's too many of those things can become gibberish. I do want to get published, so this is the balance I've decided on between being raw and uneditied vs being comprehensible.]
After yesterday's bout of writers block and frustration that kept me up most of the night - I figured it was time to go back and check my notes. I've been writing this/these books for years now and every time I have an idea or mark something as an 'indicator event' I would make a note in my phone.
So today I went back and found those notes. Not gonna lie - it was touch and go for a few minutes there as I had locked those notes and couldn't remember what unique password I had secured them with. My laptop almost went flying.
Rest assured, I did manage to unlock the notes and discovered that my writing has been raw and unedited for years. Raw to the point of nearly being gibberish and making me feel like I need a glass or two of something strong to be able to understand what exactly it is that I wrote.
***
They knew she would have questions, that she would need to understand why (even though how is much more fun). "Years" (time did not pass the same way here as it did for Nicole) went into figuring out how to explain why she was important/critical, and given that one cannot be taught something they do not already know (Nicole needed a foundation, something to build upon) three things were put into place.
TNG: She watched Star Trek the Next Generation with her family, weekly, as new episodes were released, and key foundational concepts were reinforced through people in her life having also watched the show and episodes being rewatched and brought up in conversation
MCU: The Marvel Cinematic Universe was so successful that not only did they have 20+ movies over 4+ phases, but multiple tv and Disney+ shows, Loki in particular
Groundhog Day (and that movie with Andy Sandburge where he relives the same wedding for a really long time) - this provides the foundation for looping until certain criteria are met/specific events happen. TNG also has episodes that feature this thematic concept which 'happened' to be frequently viewed through re-runs and syndication.
Nicole was kept oblivious, needed to be kept in the dark until it was no longer possible to proceed without looping her in (hahahah - see that play on words?).
THe timing had to be perfect. It it wasn't it's not as if they themselves would get caught in a loop, rather the outcome they were working towards would be lost. Not lost as in 'maybe someday it'll be found/realized' but 'gone forever' and 'in the land of wind and ghosts'.
Conceptually, the foundation had been laid through the media and relationships. The next step was to test suggestibility.
The app game test was henceforth created, and it went like this:
Player plays games and baseline recorded.
Player gets inebriated, plays more. At a certain response, subject is fully receptive to unconscious queuing, feed manipulated.
This opens a bridge to the multiverse and subject conscious of other indicator events that happen in other timelines. This difference from Loki because people not killed off the timeline to preserve the main one, rather subject is critical to an event and saves many lives.
[The game test was found in my iphone notes]
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