timeplate, this is what an indvidual timeplate looks like when you craft you
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Linear Time/Circular Time

Time can be understood not only as linear or circular (as a wheel), but also as a spiral that combines forward movement with cyclical repetition. In this spiral model, the past and future curve around the present, remaining close without collapsing into a single point.

This proximity makes communication and influence across time feel more plausible than in a strictly linear view. Ancestors, for example, no longer appear as distant figures locked in a closed past, but as presences whose patterns may return.

To explain this model fully, it helps to move beyond theory and create a physical spiral that can be held and examined. You do this by repeatedly connecting a set of circular disks, as shown in the example above. Building such a model reveals how past, present, and future intertwine in uneven loops. Once constructed, the spiral shows how each “time plate” connects to the next, forming a path that is both cyclical and progressive.

It also exposes why linear timekeeping requires corrections like leap days: our movement through time is never perfectly measured. Each plate can be imagined as a seasonal cycle, while the transition between plates reflects ageing, growth, and the gaining of wisdom. Following the spiral path allows us to picture a body moving through time in a way that linear time cannot capture. In this model, beginnings and endings are not fixed points but shifting positions along an ever‑unfolding curve.

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Screenshot from Mekorama

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