the.com/follow

To trail behind someone, voluntarily, hoping they know where they're going.

means To move or come after a person or thing, in space, time, logic, or social media.

from From Old English folgian, to accompany or pursue, sibling to German folgenmillennia before it meant clicking a button to receive someone's lunch photos.

Logic twistIt follows means a conclusion is unavoidable.
Social flipFollowing now signals fandom, not physical pursuit.
Sheep labelFollower once meant loyal retainer, not crowd-pleaser.
Hidden orderFollow-up keeps unfinished business politely chasing you.
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