
In this follow-up episode of Wolves & Dragons, Fenrir the Black Wolf returns to the “one billion seconds” realization—only now the shock has faded, and what remains is the aftertaste: what do you actually do with that perspective once life goes back to normal? Fenrir breaks time into two faces—clock time and lived time—and explores how the mind compresses decades into a few emotional chapters, leaving most of life hidden in “ordinary” days that quietly shape identity.
From there, he goes deeper into attention as the real currency: time passes anyway, but attention decides whether your seconds become memory or fog. He ties this to biology—your body as a timekeeping machine—and to the rise-and-collapse rhythm of civilizations that proves how fragile “normal” really is. Then the episode turns quirky and personal: Kawhi Leonard becomes an example of quiet art—precision and discipline that can influence millions of hearts without noise, proving small actions can ripple outward.
The episode closes with a simple ritual: when your billion-second moment arrives, pause, look up, breathe, and choose what you want your next seconds to “taste like”—because life isn’t lived in years. It’s lived in grains.