This one leans into endings, closure, and what lingers after:
TOPO:
How do we know when something has ended?
RHEO:
Sometimes we don’t—until much later.
Endings rarely announce themselves.
TOPO:
Then they’re not always abrupt?
RHEO:
No.
Often, an ending is a soft fading—not a break, but a dissolving.
TOPO:
But don’t we need closure?
A line drawn, a conclusion?
RHEO:
Closure is comforting, but not always true.
Some things end by becoming part of us.
TOPO:
So the past doesn’t disappear—it reconfigures?
RHEO:
Exactly.
Endings are not exits. They’re folds—where one pattern releases, and another begins.
RHEO & TOPO:
It’s over when the system no longer calls you.
Until then, you’re still becoming through it.
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