She nodded even more. Even she was rather annoyed that a few of the storms she created to provide more arable land was considered normal weather instead of divine providence. Granted, the desert flooded and the country was put in standstill, but it wasn't anything a few years wouldn't fix. "That's simply natural with the passage of time," she reasoned. "They learn more about their world, and they gain more understanding on how we affect them."
"That's true, but if we want to return to the forefront of their consciousness, we must show that we still matter in the grand scheme, which is already true. And to do that, we must learn how to properly give them our direction," Ymir sagely stated. "With this town, I can finetune my interventions, making sure that they would never be misinterpreted or attributed to something inane like normal weather or a freak accident."