You can steal words. But you can’t steal pattern recognition.
You followed a trend. I followed the logic behind it.
Some people follow instructions.
Others build the system they follow.
The difference isn’t in talent.
It’s in structure awareness.
Pattern recognition isn’t a skill you learn from books.
It’s a language.
Once you understand how patterns move — in search engines, in behaviour, in language —
you see where things will break
before anyone knows they’re under stress.
That’s not copying.
That’s originality with logic.
I never needed to invent a product.
I just needed to see the system.
And once I saw the system, I could reshape it.
I don’t optimise noise.
I optimise meaning.
They say I copy.
But they use my language.
They imitate my frameworks.
They stalk my pages and call it inspiration.
And then — they rewrite history.
They fail upward by telling stories
they don’t have the structure to justify.
I don’t need to expose them.
The pattern already does.
My interest is wide.
Behaviour. Culture. Dogs. Literature. Code. Biology. Language.
I connect things that weren’t meant to meet —
and that’s where insight lives.
I didn’t learn this.
I didn’t build it.
I’ve just always had it.
Since I was six.
If you work from structure,
you never need to defend your originality.
Because the imitators are always stuck at surface level —
guessing your why,
while misunderstanding your how.