Passive Smoking Algorithm v0.0001 (unstable build)

      Start with a single point on the map: Brunswick, latitude –37.764, longitude 144.963,      the square root of the distance between a gig that ran late and the tram that never came.      From this coordinate, draw a circle with a radius equal to the number of times William has      turned up guarded, multiplied by the number of times you’ve told an algorithm you’re broke,      divided by the stray dogs named on the way to Killarney. Let that number wobble a bit.    

      Inside that circle, the code runs:      if (legend.walks_home_after_gig) publish_story("Demolition Weekly"); else play_audio("Don't Stop 'Til You Get Enough");      It never quite compiles, but the intent does. Algorithms hate certainty, floors hate being level,      and old tractors prefer running at 30% forever.    

      Take the Great Ocean Road, flatten it onto an A4 page, and use it as a timeline from Jurassic      to next Tuesday. Every bend is a memory: a dog vomiting in the back seat, tape hiss on a Yamaha MTX4,      lacquer rippling on a parquet floor in Brunswick. In the corner of the page, quietly write:      “longitude of nonsense = latitude of memory ÷ weight of an old tractor at thirty percent”.    

      Let Regina be the constant, Dave Whittle the variable, Sabina the rider of hypothetical pigs across      the integer line. Let JVG be the exponent leaning everything slightly sideways. Whenever the system      drifts too far into chaos, it checks a condition: if (sophia.frowns_in_german) redirect_to("pups_for_comfort");      and the world soft-resets to something almost manageable.    

      True wisdom, in this model, is understanding why the lacquer ripples. Why a man cannot step into the      same demolition site twice unless he forgot his gloves. Why a site can be built entirely from mistakes      carried with confidence. This is geographic, philosophic, nonsense-local math: familiar enough to trust,      wrong enough to stay interesting.