Sounds like it might be a "chaotic system"
Such systems like double pendulums are very sensitive to initial conditions and their movements can amplify in unexpected ways.
This is the "butterfly effect" the idea being that a butterfly's wing beat in New York can trigger a storm in London.
A classic example is a double pendulum - see this simulation:
http://www.physics.usyd.edu.au/~wheat/dpend_ht ml/dpend.gif
It goes back and forth a couple of times and then flips over
You'll probably not do it again though
Look at this simulation
http://www.physics.usyd.edu.au/~wheat/dpend_ht ml/dpend2.gif
Two identical pendulums are super imposed their starting position is a thousanth of a degree different
At first you only see one and then quickly their movements seperate and very soon they have very very different patterns despite having started in almost the same spot