The result of flipping a coin is determined by chance and it can either land heads-up or tails-up.
Now, let's proceed to flip our coin:
In the first flip, we unanimously saw that the coin landed heads-up. It can be any coin - a penny, a nickel or a dime. But the result is that it lands showing the head.
Moving on to the second flip, with the same force and randomness, we flipped the coin again and saw that this time it landed tails-up.
So, to sum up, when we flip a coin twice the first flip results in heads and the second flip gives tails. The sequence of results is - 'heads', 'tails'.
It's important to keep in mind that these flips are independent of each other, meaning the result of the first flip doesn't influence the result of the second flip. Each flip has an equal probability of landing heads-up or tails-up.