We separate the two events because one is the cause and the other is the result. Often with "if". "If I had wings then I could fly; I know where I would go." Flying is a result of having wings. Sometimes the cause is in the present and the result is in the future. "I am working now so that I will have some money when I'm old." Sometimes the cause is in the past and the result is in the present. "I bought a camera, now I can take pictures." Often we use this cause and result structure in conditional situations that are unreal. Me having wings for example. This grammar is advanced levels.
Regarding adjectives now in cause and result situations. The structure is: "the more (someone) + verb (can be past, present, or future) for the big adjectives and "the _______er (someone) + verb. The cause is before, the result is always after. "The more I read, the more confused I became" The more whiskey he drank, the drunker he got." Here is a famous idiom: "the more the merrier". Use more + two part words, use _______er for little words with only one part.
Good Q!