Do you know what can travel faster than anything else in the whole wide world? The whole universe, for that matter. You may know that the answer is light.
How do you know?
Do you know how fast light travels no matter what?
Put it this way: the speed of light can traverse a distance equal to the circumference of the earth about 7.5 times in a single second.
Text messages can travel around at that speed, too.
We’ll put this many ways throughout.
Have you ever read anything at all? That’s cool, I guess. It came from the past. Don’t let your perception of light make you think it’s instantaneous. The scale we perceive naturally doesn’t allow us to see that.
Things are a bit different on the astrophysical scale. For example, a beam of light cannot traverse a galaxy as fast as it can illuminate a room. In fact, a photon needs about 100,000 years [a.k.a. “light years”] to skedaddle across The Milky Way. That’s roughly equal to 30 kiloparsecs, a measurement of distance/time that is useful when looking at the whole picture of our universe.
1 kpc equals 1.917e+16 miles.
Fairly safe conclusion: our universe is big.
The entire world really does need to get on the same page in terms of how things are measured, recorded, and reported. The metric system seems like the way to go. It’s cleaner, makes more sense.
If we can’t even agree on how to measure everything, then how can we expect to agree on anything?
When you wish upon a star, the light you see was actually emitted a long time ago.
You can see the light from stars that predate the sun—the galaxy, even!
When you look up at the night sky, you are basically looking into the past.
Should our sun fall to magical deletion in the middle of the day, we would not realize it until 8.333333333333333333333333333333 [ish] minutes later.
Light sets the pace of our time, but it can’t teleport as is, nor is it telepathic, per se.
In other words, there isn’t anything in existence that can travel faster than light.
In still more words, light makes time go crazy.
That’s not a lie, joke, guess, hypothesis, or theory. That’s a proven fact.
But light is also something else.
The word “light” also means light, i.e. not heavy.
The lighter something is, the faster it can move.
In other words, it’s a thing and it’s not weird.
The heavier something is, the more it weighs.
Ever been slowed down by weight?
Wait, what equates with weight again?
You probably know the answer to this one.
Gravity.
Still.
Gravity and light, bookending peas in our pod of existence, spiraling ever-wildly out of control.
When it rains, man, it pours.
Boy, does it ever.
Connected any new dots yet? Mapped any new correlations? I see a new one every day lately.
A body can resemble the human form, a lake, a planet, or an organization. Light can describe weight or brightness. Deep can indicate a hole or thought. Force and matter can be nouns or verbs.
There must be one dominant power in the universe that explains every single item on every list contained on this site, a single relationship that matters most (or makes the most matter).
What’s the most abundant element in the universe?
Do you know?
Why doesn’t everyone know?
Shouldn’t we all know?
Think about it.
Of literally ALL THE THINGS EVER, the abundance of but one element sits around 75%.
In 3 out of 4 things, a single atom repeats.
Do you know what it is?
Hydrogen!
Doesn’t this fact seem kind of important?
It should because it is.
Or, again, maybe I’ve got it all wrong.
So let’s straighten out the facts.
Hydrogen is the lightest and smallest of all elements. Hydrogen is the element most commonly found in the cosmos. Hydrogen is the only element that lacks a neutron chilling out in its nucleus. Hydrogen’s name alone seems to forecast the generation of the molecular powerhouse known as water.
In other words riddled by intentionally moronic inaccuracy, who’s your daddy?
In all seriousness, I am of the urgently strengthening opinion that any fact concerning hydrogen should be grouped in the top tier of that which constitutes “common knowledge.” Why isn’t it?
We probably need to reconfigure our approach to education every so often. Drastically. Clearly!
I highly suspect that budding intellectuals are being taught most of the right stuff, but not with proper emphasis, and all out of sequence, to boot.
Do kids still learn that “Christopher Columbus discovered America in 1492”?
Why?
After all, the statement is shamefully false.
In other words, that’s not real.
When you teach a kid lies on purpose, what should we expect to see in return?
Name something that grows without investment.
Don’t feel bad; I can’t either.
Only when we share our perspectives may we understand one another.
Never hesitate.
Step into our mental dojo.
In other words, always feel free to come inside.
Now.
Go outside and play.
☀️
Welcome back.
When you think of the term wavelength, what do you imagine? Perhaps an image not unlike this one:
What the hell is a wavelength anyway?
In other words, what are we doing?
Wavelengths illuminate frequencies.
Unlike mechanical waves, electromagnetic waves are always perpendicular/vertical (transverse).
Light is an electromagnetic wave; its energy is produced by the vibration of charged particles.
An electromagnetic wave doesn’t need help to travel—it serves as its own fuel and can even do so in the vacuum of space.
The existence [pulse] of gravity causes the vibration [nether-regional desires] of particles.
(Admittedly, I get funky with parenthetical interjections from time to time.)
The other stuff amounts to matter [energy at c2] that hasn’t figured out how to stay alive without needing to eat. And without dying. Hmm, I wonder if those two problems have the same solution.
Whoops, derailed again.
Should we get back on track?
Sound is a prime example of a mechanical wave.
In terms of waves, “mechanical” means that it cannot exist in a vacuum and therefore requires a medium [meaning some form of matter] through which to travel.
Sound waves are always longitudinal. Water waves can be either.
Your voice is a mechanical wave.
Say something aloud.
If you did, then congrats, because you just waved, mechanically speaking.
The fact that we can talk at all is a freak accident thanks to evolutionary entropy and genetic mutation.
Summon your voice from within.
The frequency of a wavelength determines its shape.
Frequency.
Occurs frequently, or not.
Light zips along at 299,792 kilometers per second (186,282 miles per second).
Per second.
Infrared is the lightest light, which means that it has the lowest frequency, i.e. least curvature.
Highest frequency [which means most weight, not coincidentally] manifests behind the electrified veil of the invisible living color that we coolly call ultraviolet.
Spacetime actually bends by the weight of the star that anchors our solar system. It has been observed, measured, and documented. And our sun is “only” average—meaning green, fair, balanced.
The higher the frequency in a wavelength, the farther light has to travel back and forth [parallel] to cover the same distance [perpendicular].
“Frequencies” occur on/along/across/within/throughout “wavelengths,” and therein lies the differences between them.
Sound travels at a much slower pace than light.
The speed of sound varies depending on temperature and elevation, but on average it travels at about 1,234.8 kilometers per hour [343 mph].
To put it mildly, sound’s relationship with light naturally complicates matter{s}.
Earth falls within the green wavelength of the sun’s heat/light.
To reiterate, green epitomizes balance, as it occurs directly in the middle of the color spectrum.
In other words, green is the color where{in/-upon} life can happen.
Now I see how and why our number system works!
In other words, color illuminates why math features 9 digits.
We need to be green.
While we’re here, we should touch on the other four waves in the electromagnetic spectrum.
Radio waves are vital to our connectivity since they can carry our voices and images along with them. We’ve been beaming them into space ever since we started broadcasting about a hundred years prior to the assembly of this sentence.
At some point, even billions of years from now, if there’s intelligent life out there, then in theory they could detect us {assuming they’re listening}.
Spooky.
You’re very familiar with the waves some of us call micro.
Microwave ovens cook specifically by targeting water molecules in food.
In other words, microwaves cook like the sun.
In another word, radiation.
Misconceptions abound concerning this type of heating method; however, not only is it perfectly safe (unless the interior is dirty or the food’s container is made of plastic, for instance [because it can bind unsavory chemicals to your grub]), but also the shorter cook times result in the preservation of more nutrients. Yeah, microwaves can be good for you!
X-Ray radiation, due to the measurements of its specific wavelength and unique frequency, passes through matter that isn’t too dense.
Bones are dense, generally.
Skin is thin, usually.
That’s how X-ray imaging works, in a nutshell.
Curious side-note: both microwaves and X-rays were accidental discoveries.
Lastly, gamma rays are produced at the nuclear level, whether by fission, fusion, or a type of decay.
In medicine, gamma rays are used to fight cancer.
In the universe, no event has been observed to be more luminous than a gamma ray burst. Scientists believe these events signify the formation of neutron stars or black holesdark orbs. Yikes!
It all depends on how the math shakes out.
The difference between each wave on the spectrum (of which there are 13 in total, luckily, I suppose) comes down to the frequency within the wavelength.
Radio waves display the lowest frequency and the longest wavelength. In other words, the path is straighter but with observable undulation.
Gamma waves reveal the highest frequency and the shortest wavelength. In other words, the path is more squiggly.
By the way, if your imagination isn’t running wild, then you should let it.
Unmolested, light’s wave looks like a straight line. In a vacuum, an electromagnetic wave moves energy at a speed of 3.00 x 108 m/s, a value commonly shown in math by the symbol c, the variable that represents the speed of light in Einstein’s famous equation.
Though light cannot escape an event horizon, the gravity of a black hole dark orb itself cannot consume light because the fight is evenly matched, meaning each does its own thing as well as the other does the opposite.
In other words, gravity and light are a match made in heaven.
Science has proven this via calculated observation on a proverbial loop.
In other words, the science of observation has proven a the whole lot.
E = mc2
Energy equals matter [or mass, if you like] at the speed of light (squared).
I prefer “matter” because it makes more sense in my head. Without matter, there can be no mass with which we can interact.
For now, just consider the fact that, essentially, Einstein’s equation indicates—given an absurd (c2) amount of time—that energy (E) equals (=) matter (m).
Matter becomes energy.
Energy becomes matter.
Matter and energy become one.
As the nerdy tee states, “You matter, until you multiply yourself by the speed of light twice, then you energy.”
the speed of light = c
No matter how you slice it—as long as you do in fact sliceit—the variable c represents a measurement of time.
Light sets the bar for speed while time ripples in its wake.
c
=
miles per second
186,282
kilometers per second
299,792
meters per second
299792457.82816
span of whole universe
>13.8 billion years
OMG
Is there a more absurd amount of time than none at all?
How about time that goes backward?
Hold that thought.
The speed of light is one of three key factors in one of (if not the) most current, renowned, revolutionary contributions to science, the General Theory of Relativity. Einstein’s theory basically observed that gravitational waves and material interference determine the pace at which time ticks by wherever you (or anything else in the universe) might be, and the only thing exempt from this constant truth is light.
This explains why as we go faster, time slows down.
Einstein first published his theory of Special Relativity in 1905, updated to its General form ten years later to accommodate Isaac Newton’s law of gravitation.
Long story short, the primary adjustment was based on the realization that spacetime is not flat, but rather curved.
We’ve not been the same since.
The primordial force of gravity actually bends space and time, creating an array of trajectories and pathways for movement.
In other words, water spirals down the drain.
Seemingly, when bending yields breakage, we get those galaxy-gobbling monsters known (heretofore inaccurately) as “black holes” that, for all intents and purposes, are trying to rewind time by slurping up all the things and stuff in the universe.
I never said gravity was smart, okay?
No wonder light’s in such a big damn hurry to get the hell outta dodge.
Like a kid, toy, top, clock, heart, atom, sperm, nucleus, cell, sun, planet, moon, creature, toddler, whatever else you can think of, if you wind it up, then by golly, it’ll go!
But it will not go at the speed of light. It will not because it cannot. It isn’t physically capable. The laws of physics have highlighted this fact without exception since folks began trying to observe and record said physical laws. The speed of light sets the edge of reality, the space where time stops.
How much more irrevocably irrefutable can one fact be?
What might all this suggest happens when the speed of light doubles? How about an absolute reversal of time? What can you imagine that could suck worse than that?
Imagine it.
All of time. The history of starlight.
Approaching 14 billion years of all this chaotically dispersing energy fueling oceans of hydrogen, the formation of galaxies, stars, planets, moons, oxygenating seas for all matter of carbon, collapsing dust, rising ash, nurturing development, breaking and sliding, shifting and braking, billowing ash toward all manner of life, evolving, discovering, creating, encompassing and permeating every last fraction of recorded history.
All of it.
Imagine everything there ever was.
Now imagine it gone.
Snap, blink, poof.
Goodbye, forever—at the same time, hello again—all in an absurd instant that times out upon reaching the kind of speed only accessible in dreams.
Remain calm. We will make sense of all this. Assuming we get lucky.
Now what can you imagine that might suck worse than all of existence glitching out and requiring an instantaneous reset? Nothing, perhaps? The speed of light is already plenty absurd, but multiplying itself by itself!? How square.
The word “square” has over 50 definitions, by the way.
Squared, opposite of split.
Multiplication.
Times.
X.
Consider everything that can happen by splitting anything squarely.
(You gotta do some of the work here.)
When enacted upon an occurrence of circular motion, straight lines have this super weird way of dividing up then being unsure about whether to veer left or keep right. Pardon me for saying so, but that’s exactly what I think must’ve happened before the first atom ever was formed. Miss Zero was sad because she couldn’t count. That sucked. Then, in an enlightening moment of staggering clarity, she realized that she’s a goshdarn circle, an intensely infernal inferno, a supernatural sorceress capable of hurling a level infinity fireball.
Science, physics, math, language, civilization, religion, philosophy, art, music, food, everything I’ve ever seen, smelled, touched, heard, felt, wanted, needed, or thought about supports every sentence held together by these digital pages.
In other words, most likely, I’m delusional.
But have you ever heard of a cell that didn’t divide?
Any kind of cell. Any cell in your body. Any stormcell. Any terrorist cell. Anything cellular.
Anything sold.
Energy boomerangs while building momentum in a straight line.
Where lines meet, mathematical randomness takes place and creates shape.
In other words, even properly lubed gears eventually grind.
In other words, triangles come full circle.
Really quickly, take forever and think of something that fully conflicts with the following pattern.
Any mushroom cloud that ever violently arose. Anything that collects and gathers dust. Anything that ripples or makes waves. Anything that needs to be moved. Anything that goes on its own. Any bulb that ever bloomed. Any tree that ever grew up. Anything that breathes. Any division of labor. Any friction between competing parties (or bodies) that generated enough heat (or power, or pain, or pleasure) to explode. Any thing (like you and me) that ever learned to control its energy, the essence of its vitality, the source of its light.
That’s what all this is about.
(The hokey-pokey is optional at this point.)
Just hang in there, okay? I swear you’re fine.
All anything has ever been about equates with dire needs in the face of wanting control of energy sources.
Life is programmed to do whatever it takes to survive.
How many triumphant armies have been well-fed? How many wars have been fought over land? All of them.
Think of all the blood that has been shed since mankind learned how to summon and control fire.
Imagine wanting full control of fire.
Imagine profiting off a need meant to be spread evenly across humankind.
Maybe you don’t have to imagine it.
Why do people want to control more fuel than they need?
The way I see it, this highlights the root of all greed. Resource-hogging can only end badly. When you don’t need something, you cannotuse it. This is not hard, people—fuck.
Greed is the ultimate evil, if you will.
It all comes down to power.
power: energizing existence only to relinquish a fraction more or less than half its assets since forever ago
The four posts marked [in the interim] were queued in advance—cannibalized from a book meant to be a prequel—meaning we could be dead as you read them/this; hope not, though!
Alarm you?
Gosh, I don’t mean to do that, but we should brace for impact, and quickly. First, though, let us cut to the chase. Let’s slice right to the heart of the matter in question. Let’s work toward the root of the problem. Let’s dig out the meat of the situation. We need to uncover, unravel, unmask, untangle, and unbind the parts of reality we all share.
Oh, hey, how many ideas do we accept on the basis of misguided faith or blind trust? How many thoughts have we inherited from colleagues? How many opinions have we adopted from friends? How many beliefs have been absorbed by families thanks to little more than geography?
At some point (in time) sooner or later, I strongly advise taking detailed inventory of your thoughts, ideas, opinions, and beliefs.
Of all the ideas in your head, what percentage did you arrive at on your own?
We should be asking more questions.
I’ll start.
Who doesn’t enjoy a fatty, greasy, salty serving of crispy bacon?
What an incredibly pleasurable taste.
It’s even delicious cold. It’s even delicious covered in chocolate. It’s even delicious wrapped around all the foods that ever fed.
I’ve probably eaten enough bacon for a lifetime or two.
I’ll never eat it again.
And, unlike you, a natural hunger for flesh actually does twirl part of my deoxyribonucleic acid.
Hypothetically only, when presented with a mandatory choice between perfectly cooked cuts of bacon and a human hypothalamus and/or pituitary gland, assuming the dishes had already been prepared [I’d eat the burnt swine flesh over killing somebody in this instance], you may not want to know which I’d choose.
In a Siberian survival scenario in 2011, I might’ve sampled a few choice parts of a polar bear’s brain. The starving creature ambushed me while I napped for the first time in 51 hours. In those days, I slept with my warm hand extra tight on Halcyon’s cold hilt, so the poor animal was dead before either of us had time to process what was happening. That was a dark time of reckless abandon for me—I’d felt loneliness and fear before, but never simultaneously (and only after the fact)—however, the energy and knowledge I absorbed from my march across Russia might’ve kept me from dying later.
Napoleon must have been an arrogant buffoon.
To survive arctic conditions, one must possess the mental capacity to plan ahead seasonally while troubleshooting problems daily. The superficial ability to blend in with the environment [i.e. being white] helps, too.
I am very pale.
Where I come from, snow isn’t fun. It just is. Wintry weather becomes fun after you’re removed from it for awhile. Truly, I desperately miss fresh powder at high altitudes.
I’ve very rarely missed anything.
Nothing.
Ever.
Have you ever pondered the climate on the earth 10,000 years ago? What about 100,000? What about 1,000,000?
What about 1 (year ago)?
Pondering anything requires a base of knowledge and willingness to think. I suspect this is why more and more humans choose to abstain from the process. What a shame. Similar to how the reward for exploration is discovery and quite like a process of creation, thinking is an act that rewards itself—singing with your noodle burns calories for which your body/brain demands replacement. That’s called hunger. When people (in the U.S. especially) get hungry, they eat “food” that upends their potential to process thoughts—another cycle that feeds itself and worsens over time unbeknownst to almost all citizens/participants.
Fear not! Humankind’s idiotic brilliance has led to forestalling the next glacial period indefinitely.
In the past million years or so, the earth has experienced a predictable pattern of glacial periods [“Ice Ages”] that have lasted roughly 100,000 years and concluded with a time of interglacial warmth and growth that tends to last only over 20% as long.
The most recent glacial period subsided approximately 15,000 years ago.
Our most ancient human ancestors managed the daunting task of evolving through the worst part of an Ice Age.
Technically, we’re still in it, the end of its life cycle, the warmest segment.
Do you know the trick to removing yourself from the food chain? Develop the ability to create and control fire using only the sum of your body.
Wow!
I hope I get lucky enough to figure out how to choose words that properly explain (to you) how mindbogglingly insightful this should be to anyone.
Name one time of enlightenment in human history more profound than the discovery of fire.
(Can you yet?)
Folks, we evolved through a lengthy period of cold darkness on top of already dark coldness.
Piled atop that, approximately 75,000 years ago, our common ancestors survived an incomprehensibly catastrophic eruption from a supervolcano (known as the Toba caldera). Whether this event pushed humankind to the brink of extinction has been hotly contested, curiously enough, so let’s skip that debate and focus on what is known, which is that it resulted in several years of volcanic winter [like nuclear, only minus the radiation], meaning the sun was hidden behind dense clouds of dust, ash, and debris.
In other words, there was a lot more dying than living.
Also, let’s get a handle on the term “radiation” because it has gotten a needlessly bad rap. Even the words “ultraviolet” and “thermonuclear” are ignorantly feared. In language, we give up on too many terms without giving them another thought. I’ve lived long enough to know for certain that each thought deserves at least a second pass.
Go on. Think of anything that radiates.
Take any number of moments to spelunk your own memory banks.
Use your brain before a capable predator drinks it like a milkshake.
What radiates?
Insert original ideas now as your consumption of the next sentence has been delayed {with your permission, I might add} by remaining here as you anticipate the dot your periphery may glimpse ahead of its landing right about now.
Whatever thought you hatched pertaining to radiation—how many of those words carry a negative connotation?
As a human being, you can’t help but radiate warmth, which means being cold is unnatural.
In other words, you need to radiate, human reader. If you’re galacian or belanockian, I can only wonder know what you must be thinking {wink wink}.
I do(n’t )care who you are: reading this book work will only confirm what you’ve known all along.
Imagine being alive back in ancient times, living where all the snow almost melted during the hottest summer month, and there’s this amazing thing you’ve seen that you wish you could possess—a magical, bright, untouchable material that melts icy darkness.
Naturally you’d assume you can’t just make the stuff by exerting the power stored inside your body.
Now imagine the miraculous stuff in question is fire.
Now imagine you discover how to conjure it by gathering wood, kneeling down, and rubbing your hands together super fast.
Friction means heat.
I don’t wanna freak you out, but (literally) fire lives inside you.
Often, I find myself incredibly compelled {as you (may) know by surviving however many pages words preceded this one these} to rephrase and repeat certain thoughts in an effort to connect ideas with more people.
In other words [case in point], important concepts will be repeated using alternate terminology.
Language is funny like that.
Say something to people one way and listen to crickets chirp silently in their brains, but say the same thing in different words and watch their heads explode.
A male, quite like mail, is prone to taking flight and/or being sent off.
Have you ever seen anyone make fire by friction using a hand {or, hell, a bow} drill and a hearth board? If you’ve seen your author [me] do it—I dunno, on the internet perhaps—disregard that moving image because I certainly make fire-creation look far too easy; laughable, even!
Have you ever seen anyone (besides me) make fire by friction using a hand drill and a hearth board?
Golly, at a glance, it almost resembles kneeling down in prayer.
You don’t even need a visual aid.
Your brain already handled it.
I must admit, I wonder what would make anyone ignorant of the technique try it in the first place, but tell me your head would not explode when you saw smoke.
How might ancient man have stumbled upon the technique that births fire by friction? – attempting to sharpen a spear – shelter construction—trying to cram something where it wouldn’t fit – struggling to file down a troublesome toenail – making a bed rock – pure madness
Back to our hypothetical tale about your accidental discovery of fire.
Whatever you’re doing (back in the day and in this story), let’s say you’re doing it aggressively enough that the point of contact starts smoking.
Heh. Bet you keep going.
Ha! Bet you even accelerate.
“Gotta go fast,” right?
Imagine your reaction when you see a speck of light—in other words, when you become transfixed by the sight of a burning ember—before (either a serendipitous gust of wind or) exhaustion evokes a heavy breath of fate that transforms your smoldering seed into flickering flames.
It’d be like figuring out how to see the 10th color, or feeling infrasound, or casting lightning bolts from your fingertips.
You’ll freak out.
Think about it!
You bow down, rub your hands together, alakazam, now you’re a god.
No matter how you look at it, fire liberates light, the savior of ancient man, the seed of cosmic enlightenment, then shines in darkness while rising from ashes.
Almost like a brain coming online.
Or a computer booting up.
My, my, what a collection of stories that would make.
Imagine when you realized that you could think.
We’ve all done it once.
Remember that? The revelatory moment when you became aware of yourself?
I wonder why we can’t remember.
Can you imagine what it must have been like to be the first person ever to walk on two legs, or to be among the first people to open their mouths and speak to each other?
There’s a first time for everything, yes?
Imagine being the first human to carry a torch. You could walk through a jungle and keep “monsters” at bay. You could lead a group into the wild during an enduringly bleak period of time which featured big scary shapes frozen in dark ice. But, hey {again}, at least you could glow in the dark and radiate warmth to boot.
Do you see what’s happening?
You’re like a wizard with a fireball staff.
You’ll be worshipped, for Christ’s sake!
People would actually kneel at your feet.
Good job—you’ve imagined what it must be like to become a Fire God.
Now imagine seeing the sun for the first time in years once a long volcanic winter subsided.
All the while, your brain functions well enough to recall how to generate an ember.
And then imagine finally coming out of a glacial period [the most recent one, in fact].
What a difference fire made under the stars back then when our planet teemed with all sorts of curious growth and suddenly brave lifeforms.
Can you imagine? You’d get to name all kinds of new stuff.
“Psst, what should we call that thing?” “Clearly we should label it a ‘humpadub’.” “Wouldn’t ‘camel’ make more sense?” “Sure!”
What if these stories were told over and over across generations of people throughout tens of thousands of years by way of a million different grunts, gestures, syllables, interpretations, renderings on cave walls, symbols, signs, eventually spoken for hundreds upon hundreds of centuries before finally being written, deciphered, translated, and fought over time after time again and again.
I wonder if, as the years crept by and added (way) up, those tales would deviate from their original source, or, if you will [please and thank you], their “genesis”—especially the stories about learning how to use our melons, and the part about a cold, hungry, desperate man praying to the God of Frictious.
I just pulled that outta your ass.
I wonder if any such story would sort of, um, what’s the word we’re looking for here—merge, fuse, overlap, entwine, compound, exaggerate, expand, explode, spread, collide, twist and turn?
We’re only wondering, “What if?”
Have you ever played the game “Telephone,” the one where you whisper a message around a group of people and see what comes out at the end? Personally I haven’t played since the heyday of my Rocky Mountain daze, but I’ve always found the concept immensely amusing.
What starts as “planet of the apes” can end as “pet an apple, bite the snakes.”
To cite a particularly fond memory from an extraordinarily festive New Years Eve (in 1969), “Stevie smells like fish poo.” I doubt this was true, but reactions around the table didn’t do anything to discredit the declaration.
By the by, throughout this fake piece of real work, names may or may not have been changed to protect the innocent—as well as to precipitate disorientation as far as which elements are (auto)biographical.
Anyhoo, do you reckon maybe a sea could have been ever been parted by a man’s telekinesis?
I suppose that first I should have asked whether you reckon a man could possess any telekinetic abilities.
Perhaps now you’re wondering why I didn’t edit accordingly.
Perhaps next time {a.k.a. one day} you’ll know.
How else will we ever learn from each other?
No, Moses could not have parted the sea like you’ve been led to believe, but I’ll bet that a “land bridge” was crossed.
Now, having been bewildered into making logical deductions, keep going!
What if our ancestors discovered such a formation of land at high tide?
What if, then, they had the wherewithal to wait for low tide?
“What is this, I can’t even…”
“Relax, for the sea itself merely parts.”
That would be cool to see.
Or what if you felt the earth quake and saw the ground split at your feet?
There’s no telling how I’d react to that if I were -50,000 years old or so. I would probably scream {the high-pitched kind—think Marv in Home Alone}.
What if an adventurous spirit led you away from the Fertile Crescent and into a Great Pyramid?
This would certainly incentivize further exploration, no?
The word genesis simply means the origin, coming together, or beginning of anything.
Kind of like, say, when two people unite and become parents.
Do you know how many possible DNA combinations can assemble between parents?
According to the invisible web both worldly and wide, it’s around 2 x 10^-8 per base pair per replication event.
You might have no idea what that means, but it seems to imply an origin point of infinite possibility, wouldn’t you say?
Besides anything, what all does the neighboring image symbolize?
Hmm.
Oh, incidentally, have you ever read a little book called Genesis?
Do you know how many different (major) religions subscribe to it?
I think you should read it (again).
I might have read it (once) before this year, but honestly I can’t remember.
In the beginning when God created the heavens and the earth, the earth was a formless void and darkness [ahem, oceans of space, seas of ice, or the mind prior to connection] covered the face of the deep [illusory shapes in glaciers], while a[solar]wind from God[light] swept over the face of the waters [melting ice]. Then God said, “Let there be light”; [receding dust cloud, blossoming warmth, gaining sense of sight last] and there was light [sunlight, or a brain before initialization]. And God saw that the light was good; and God separated the light from the darkness. God called the light Day, and the darkness he called Night. And there was evening and there was morning, the first day. And God said, “Let there be a dome in the midst of the waters, and let it separate the waters from the waters.”
It goes on and on.
Drop your guard, read, and think.
It won’t hurt.
This isn’t a dare; quite rather, it’s an earnest plea.
I need (your) help.
Think.
Read.
Think again.
You can’t miss it…
What if The Old Testament opens with “God’s” flavorful spin on “His” timely tale of language in its infancy on our planet while chronicling the budding fruit from sentient momentum within a booming tribe of early humans?
What if the mind began its journey toward awakening during an epic volcanic winter, and/or right as anage of ice began thawing?
The beginning of Genesiscan should be read as if the character named “God” is selecting words to describe basic stuff and things. If you keep reading, you’ll learn about how the earliest humans noticed the horizon and the two “great lights” in the day and night skies. Read about when our ancient ancestors found a treasure inside fruit, buried their seeds, took notice of sprouts growing in both fertile soil and bellies, as well as when they detected seasonal changes in climate and weather, observed the importance of water through farming, so on and so forth.
Has it dawned on you yet?
Consider the possibility [no one has to know but us] and ask, “What if?”
There’s a lot of truth in these words, but there’s also a lot of conjecture based (up)on the onset of facts.
We need to be rethinking archaic sources of current knowledge. There’s just no damn way we got it all right. We didn’t get everything right in the last year, or decade, or century, let alone in the last millennium. You can bet my bottom dollar that most of us screwed up yesterday at least once.
Things People Used To Do and Considered To Be Completely Normal 1) Smoke on airplanes. (1990) 2) Cure mental illness with an ice pick into the eye socket. (1946) 3) Sell heroin as cough medicine. (1924) 4) Used rocks to wipe butts. (Ancient Greece) 5) Believed that God gave a donkey the power of speech. (Biblical)
What if you could travel back to Ancient Egypt and show the people of the time a few clips of Mr. Ed on your phone? One can only imagine how they might react.
Incidentally for any young folks who might be reading this, Mr. Ed was a talking horse on a television show from the sixties. For any adults who think this elaboration is unnecessary, I’ve met kids who have never heard of Michael Jackson. Similarly, I’ve met adults who don’t know what “yolo” means.
In other words, we possess the knowhow that will allow us to bridge these troublesome gaps.
What if “God” were an ancient leader of man—the biggest, strongest, tallest [“most high”], and the brightest—an alpha male among the first tribes {if not the first} of our kind to start thinking hard enough to “talk”?
And wouldn’t it stand to reason that he was the only one around who could make fire?
How would his awestruck followers know whether others around the world had made fire before? It’s not like they could’ve seen it on Instagram. They wouldn’t even know how big the earth is, or that it’s (undeniably) round. They’d assume they were at the center of everything there is!
Of course they would.
All children start out believing that.
Most Americans (seem to) believe it now.
You should peruse the text acknowledged by Christianity, Judaism, and Islam because it seems to tell the obviously vague tale, in parts, about the very first of humankind discovering how to rise above, literally and figuratively, by standing upright and learning to reach out toward our heavenly dome of fluffy, white clouds.
Page after page chronicles the beginning of energetically vibrational communication [a.k.a. spoken language], recounting the times we figured out ways to think, look, handle, have, hold, crawl, climb, see, stand, count, fall, remember, rise, balance, walk, love, stumble, hate, plan, retry, run, explore, fire, conquer, everything, all of it—in other words, how to be a goddamned human.
In other words, it’s about people learning how to see the light in one another.
In even more words, it parallels a newborn’s emergence from the safety of the womb throughout training to walk.
And in even more other words, it reflects the time our brains booted up and, more importantly, when our imaginations escaped a long hibernation.
It also relays a story about when one of humanity’s inaugural tribes assigned labels to basic material while deciding what matters most.
Also, in a way, it describes the birth of our universe, back when light built up enough mass to escape gravity with a quantum bang that established the patterns exhibited by either a volcanic burst or an ecstatic little eruption.
Maybe we’re wrong.
About everything.
Maybe we’re missing something crucial.
Maybe I just don’t wanna die.
Maybe my head is twisting facts in an effort to make sense of the universe as I see it, scrambling blindly in a naive attempt to fully grasp my own personal reality.
But what if we are right?
When you feel a revelation bubbling up, I’ve learned that it’s best not to fight it.
For the sake of argument, let’s assume that man created God in his image.
God was the alpha among the first of mankind.
He became the stuff of legends.
God is humankind.
In other words, “He” accidentally invented tribalism and artificial selection at the same time.
In other words, intelligence is artificial.
In other words, thinking is an artform.
Together we are writing the ongoing saga of an intergalactically legendary lifeform.
You’re all people, people!
We learned how to think.
We’re way ahead of schedule {but behind the curve}.
If we’re in a simulation, it’s ours.
What we get is what we make.
Reaping equates with sowing.
I wonder if we should shape up.
We need to wake up.
Just think.
What if?
Light is god.
If opinions can rightly turn out to be wrong, then obviously so can beliefs.
I have to assume that in the educated eyes of many a scholar, fire was the most enlightening discovery in human history.
In my opinion {the value of which is debatable}, fire wins the silver medal.
I believe there was, in fact, a golden age more enlightening than that—the time we learned how to use our heads and stand on our own two feet—it was as if, oh, I dunno, a light bulb came on in our brains. Without that lucky stroke of brilliant, critical thinking, our ancestors couldn’t have reached the point of controlling fire.
She and he, who spread the warmest love amidst an age of frigid darkness.
I must believe, too, that a brand new age of enlightened clarity will take hold and fan out across the globe on its way to quickly and easily earning the gold [(poetically) in 2020].
But where there’s one thing, there’s the other.
Where there’s good, there’s also bad.
Before our ancestors started running their mouths, they developed a greedy taste for power in the face of food scarcity {understandably}, so they went a little nuts, bit by bit, striving for meaningful purpose while longing for and cultivating the fruits of our passionate labor, which, in my opinion, should definitely include taking care of our shared mother [Earth].
Genesiscan apply to all the most enlightening miracles in human history.
God has become what many of us now know as humanity.
And we may go forth with harmonic success only as one.
All together.
It’s just you and me down here.
How we doin’?
Compelling similarities exist between the dawn of our universe, the explosion of light’s time, the formation of stars, galaxies, black holes [dark orbs], solar systems, planets, the moon’s run-in with Earth, the cycle of tides stirring carbon into oxygenated soup, earthquakes and volcanoes, fluctuations in climate and weather, photosynthesis and respiration, the circle of life, the rise of mankind, a hunger for power, connections across species, differences (and similarities) between the sexes, the creation of offspring, the birth of a child, the development and advancement of civilization, and ignition of a/the human brain.
And to think that we figured religion and science couldn’t get along because of irreconcilable differences. What if it turns out that in some ways, both have been right all along?
Still, I wonder if any parts of those ancient stories might have been lost in translation.
Either way, the good ole Bible can be seen as a truly useful, brilliantly informative anthropological anthology. I look forward to reading all the new interpretations of ancient texts from various people all over the world; I am no more interested in doing all the work than I am inclined to steal all the thunder. I’ve identified inescapably essential value in sharing. Plus I’m sincerely glad that so many moral compasses and sets of belief all start on the same page pointed in the right direction—the same way that time goes.
Hurrah, congruence!
Thanks, first people to start thinking, and to figure out how to count!
Thanks, too, first lady who ever spoke and wrote, first guy who ever walked, first person who ever talked, first girl who ever sang, and the first player who ever invented a game.
Appreciate it!
This isn’t meant to ruffle feathers.
It’s really simple.
If you believe in God as an omnipotent being, then you believe in magic.
Which is fine, but we all need to stop calling spades anything but what they are. (Spades are spades.)
If you believe in magic, then you may as well assume that Harry Potter is/was real, too.
Also fine.
Seriously.
Hell, in a way, Harry Potter is real.
I neither judge nor mean to belittle any belief.
Your beliefs are your own.
Own your beliefs.
If you believe in something, then act like it.
Why would anyone begrudgingly sit through church hungover?
If you claim to believe something and act like you don’t, the logical conclusion is that you don’t believe in what you claim to believe in.
Why would people claim to believe in a cause that, deep down, they reject?
Tribalism.
It’s in our blood.
We are social creatures.
In other words, human beings need help from each other in order to progress.
Just like all life, we have to move.
We need (in order)to move.
If we don’t move forward, then we tend to fall backwards.
Just look at what social media is doing to average intelligence.
Too many people don’t think anymore; instead, they cherrypick opinions which fit the narrative threads that inspire them to sew into being.
We should not pick cherries; rather, we should let them release naturally from their branches.
Then we should gather.
For a multitude of reasons, too many people act like something they’re not.
That’s the opinion that has fallen into my lap, anyway.
Being human taxes the classic trio of “mind, body, and soul.”
We need to feel a sense of belonging.
Humans must work for a community in which they serve a purpose and through which they strive toward meaningful fulfillment.
We need to recognize this pattern or the States will eventually have to remove the word “United” from the country’s name.
Wouldn’t a unified global community be far superior to 195(-197) politically clashing countries?
If your beliefs provide your life with a helpful structure and make you a better person for it, then I think you’re doing it right. Doesn’t matter if you believe alien lizard people are coming any day now to scoop you up in their mothership and take you home to the Andromeda Galaxy. As long as you don’t convince your followers to don purple Nikes and then orchestrate a mass suicide—in another worded interruption, as long as your beliefs equate with more good than harm—you should feel no shame.
My beliefs, even my wildest guesses, are supported by more factual data than any skewed belief in an omnipotent being that compels suicide bombers.
Muslims believe in the same god that both Jewish and Christian people worship, but most of them aren’t schoolboy-rapists posing as priests. Most clergymen aren’t rapists, either, but given the frequency of occurrence there, I’m pretty sure something’s off.
Which is Worse?
A Catholic who uses the priesthood to prey on children.
A man who straps a bomb to his chest in the name of Allah.
I don’t know either.
The bigger the basket, the more bad eggs.
Like most Christians and Jews, most followers of Islam don’t believe in self-destruction in the name of mass murder.
In the name of diverging interpretations of a shared concept.
In the name of hate, fear, vengeance.
In the name of their “God.”
If your belief in the unbelievable is inescapable, then at least meet everyone else on common ground and stop being so intolerant of others.
Earth’s sandbox has enough room for all kinds of camps; She needn’t feel overcrowded.
➭➫➬
By mere definition, patterns may never exhibit any tendency if not for the flat refusal of deviation. Patterns can only deviate upon a binding oath to form a straight line pointing one (and the same) way.
Anytime you find yourself reading conceit into my carefully chosen words, just remember that you’re doing it wrong.
Far be it from me to sideswipe anyone’s (date-of-birth-related) thunder, but I’m pretty sure I’ve entered the early stages of a late-blooming mental breakdown.
I might have lost sight of what “sarcasm” means.
Heyyy, how hard is to predict which day of the year will see the most lit fuses?
Personalities multiply by themselves.
Fire works because light works better and enlightenment works best.
It empowers. It promotes unity. It permits visibility. It makes things happen.
Harnessing the currency of starlight surely must be superior to burning down the fuel stored in carbonized vegetation that can predate The Mesozoic Era.
In other words, if you could travel back in time to a swamp roughly over 250 million years ago, then you might run across coal in the form of an extinct forest before its decay {which then deposits peat on the way back} toward becoming what it is now.
In other words, time changes anything.
The lesson in this particular instance appears to be that we should commence exclusion in borrowing solar power directly from the present source as opposed to the indirect approach of sucking out old energy from fossilized remains.
Whenever you find my vernacular to be inaccessible, I’m sorry (because it portends my demise). I can’t help it. Keep in mind: I’ve been alive for almost a century, but I occupy the body of a thirty-something {super}human male.
At any given point in time, a living being contests with a fearsome foursome of ages: numerical, spiritual, physical, mental.
As a consequence of clinging desperately to outdated methodology, we are angering our already unstable foundation by bleeding it dry.
It’s a sleeping dog, and you know it has to be there for a reason.
The dumbest person in the history of brainpower knew that, even if he didn’t—or far more frighteningly doesn’t—realize it.
Glad we finally got it cleared up, though, because now the stage has been set for elaboration.
In the few decades leading through the turn of the millennium by a handful of years, Oklahoma registered less than 20 earthquakes.
Now compare that to the 888 that were measured in 2015 alone.
Some studies seek to link the process of fracking to the underlying cause.
On cue, other studies claim that wastewater disposal is the real culprit.
How often has{/have} pointing fingers promoted solidarity?
In both cases, essentially, problems are being buried deep below the surface.
Do we need to know how much dirt can fit under any given rug? I assure you, just as every rose has its thorn, every rug has its limit. Terms excel at coming up.
Who reckons that buried problems don’t eventually come back to haunt?
What has “The Blame Game” ever accomplished beyond cramming foots into mouths by way of mutually unintentional confessions from each party latching radically onto a competing story’s dilemma in question?
In other words, when people accuse each other of sole responsibility for the causes of any negative effect, whether blinded by the heat of a moment or undeterred despite honest reflection, it’s usually an emotionally charged exchange.
How logically do you behave when flying off the handle?
Causes.
Plural.
In other words, either way in the case of Oklahoma’s recent uptick in seismic activity, some bodies are injecting shit where it doesn’t belong.
Our gut tells us that this stinks.
My brain tells me that following the money could lead to the truth.
Our hearts tell us, deep down, that you certainly must agree.
What say we abruptly pivot and head off in another direction?
It already happened. Obviously.
But I would like your retroactive blessing.
Ahh, greetings—yes, there you are. What a delight! I can almost smell your pheromones through the page.
Earth is the one and only planet we [humanity] have detected where fire can burn.
In other words, however mathematically improbable, our home turf might be the only place in “outer space” whereupon flames can ignite, let alone spread.
To exist, fireneeds a double dose of oxygen {unlike H2O, which clearly leans on hydrogen for structural support}.
In other words, O2 serves as spacetime for flames. In other words, fire needs oxygen to breathe.
Math is funny like that. It has a fondness for inversion. If you mess with one side of an equation, something tends to happen on the other.
Fire, water, ice. Rock, paper, scissors. Fire, the hottest thing since ice. Water, the undeniable answer to fire, which melts ice. Ice reflects light, which makes embers. Triangular relationships abound. Life abides.
Let’s not forget water’s gassy form, a.k.a. vapor {or water on the way up}. Though you may not see it, it’s always around you, reflected in a measurement we (might) call humidity.
And it’s all fundamentally integral to the cycle of life on the “pale blue dot” known in some circles as “Earth.”
The key arrow points toward a prismatically mirrored image of the three-headed spirit animal watching over the cosmic population bound to race against the clock that matters throughout our indefinite suspension of both time and disbelief.
Does that sound kinda kooky or nah?
As I may or may not have mentioned by now—honestly, in our non-linear plotline, it’s nigh impossible to keep track—he is not a human. He’s neither a galacian nor a belanoc, either. But he is a he.
We’re the only ones of our kind{s}.
In other words, I’m (a) lone(r).
My birth mother, Liana Rex, was {before her defection} the one and only Galacian Princess. To draw her affectionate attention, my father must have been a quiet but gifted human with a sharp, dry wit—a diamond in the rough, as I’m sure she saw him.
Evidently T ‘N A were the happiest accidents in history.
I can’t begin to tell you how crazy it is that “our people” knew about the belanoc decades before catching wind of The GE.
Clearly, since I began telling you, I may have misled you.
It’s actually not crazy at all. The inverse order of discovery would’ve been “crazy” because whether thinking back or trudging ahead, we can best learn sequential steps in (the correct) order.
Think of the belanoc as the more emotional members of galacian society—the prison population, as it were in truth—and now they enjoy their freedom while slowly fanning out and drifting south along their path toward adaptation to ultraviolet radiation.
Genetically, you see, galacians are ill-equipped to tolerate prolonged exposure to UV rays. That’s the reason they prefer extremely cold weather, low altitudes [they can barely get enough oxygen at sea level], and why they (generally) only come out at night.
Yes, these surely are the living creatures that inspire vampire mythology.
However, I can confirm from {reliably instanced reports of innumerable} firsthand experience, that should you ever encounter a galacian in the wild—particularly a hungry sort—you’ll wish it were only a vampire. Galacian/belanockian fangs have evolved to administer the most paralytic toxin on earth, and unlike “vampires,” g/b don’t care about your blood beyond spilling it by the pint. They only want to eat your brain, and ultimately (in order to optimize the redistribution of energy) they aim to begin feasting while you’re alive.
Most of us can relate: food is better fresh.
Let’s change the subject!
Here’s a fun couple of facts: the color spectrum is an example of a wavelength, and wavelengths reveal frequencies (of matter).
Within frequencies, patterns can be observed!
Given time, patterns will repeat.
(We’ve all seen history repeat itself.)
Seems to me that man got a taste for power after learning to create light by stumbling upon the solution to setting a fuel source ablaze while using his own body to harness energy through circular motion.
In other words, somebody got a big head when he figured out how to cook.
Us
To equip temporary power means to want everything indefinitely.
To want nothing you don’t need means to wield indefinite power.
Power means very little without anything of substance between the top’s bottom and the bottom’s top.
Willful ignorance of this reality might make a lot more sense if our concept of a pyramid were flipped, but as it stands tilting, it amounts to an abysmal lack of structural integrity.
See, this is why I think I know that the collapsing energy of existence starts its own cause known as gravity.
This could mean a lot of stuff and things.
Causes effect, effects cause.
Weird!
Gravity anchors and consumes, fire(light) vrooms and blooms. It’s just what they do. And we can’t do squat without either.
Extrapolating from this reality, you might say that we’d be well-advised to search for our collectively sole soul.
Energy instills the guts, light provides the nerve, and we need the combined power of both to move.
Every creature on the planet knows it.
We all know it.
That’s why we get hungry and eat food, or feed ourselves, or fuel our bodies, or gas our tanks, or charge our batteries, or energize our cores, or however you wanna express it.
Energy [everything] is the one thing anything needs [craves] more so than even nothing [perfect, if unfathomably boring, state of balance].
In other words, using energy yields a waste product commensurate to necessity.
In other words, shit happens.
At least we can still breathe with a closed nose.
Our cumulative brainpower might be too tangled up and twisted to make sense of it all right now, but eventually the knots will untie.
Whether we’re talking about wasting away, pigging out, getting busy, or sawing logs, we can all relate in one way or another.
You know that friction generates heat, and that heat rises. That’s physics, and no matter how much you claim to know about physics, you are dead wrong.
You know more.
You’ve felt the force in your body.
You can feel it right now through the power that keeps your feet on the ground.
In adverbial essence, we are nothing if not highly evolved, wildly fragmented, increasingly chaotic, intrinsically electrified energy.
We are what we eat, and yet here we are eating more and more obese cows.
All the sugar in almost anything you find packaged on a shelf.
All this modified wheat.
In other words, we stuff our faces with toxins on purpose.
It’s bad for you. It’s bad for the planet.
In other words, believe it or not, what’s poisonous may poison us.
Funny how that works.
What’s good for you is also good for Earth. Lose/lose when it could (and still can) be win/win. The opportunity to recalibrate exists, but have you ever heard of a chance that didn’t eventually pass if not taken? Humans need to eat daily at most but should not graze like cattle.
Galacians eat once a month {as close to the new moon’s darkness as possible} unless they’re hibernating, in which case they could sleep for a thousand years before waking up, knocking off the cobwebs, and then returning to dreamland.
Belanoc are all over the map. Even under the bright blanket of a full moon on a clear night in highly reflective winter wonderlands, they will hunt. They can’t afford to care about your feelings—like us, they face a steep climb to avoid extinction.
Once targeted by either a galacian or a belanoc, not even the world’s fastest human (on steroids) could escape. The only difference between these two apex predators is that you’ll likely never see the galacian coming; whereas, a belanoc inconvenienced by a marginal hunger pang will charge straight at you because it knows you can’t do anything to stop the one-sided, fatal dinner date you’re about to experience {most likely without your permission}.
In school I learned that belanoc feed about 3 times a month. Indeed, some of them do, but the farther they stray from a cold, dry environment into wet, warm air, the more energy they must burn, meaning the more craniums they have need to puncture.
Food chains are a natural part of life on Earth.
Here’s an example you might (not) find disturbing. I tracked a six-pack to Chicago in the dog days of 1995 during a record heatwave. The temperatures truly were miserable. Heat indices rose beyond 120°F [felt much hotter in the middle of the city]. 739 heat-related deaths were logged in a span of five days. The belanoc were killing 10-20 people per day—mostly at night, but as the days went by, they got started earlier and earlier in the late afternoon underground. I found them inside a derelict subway station around midday when I was reasonably sure they’d be out like logs.
Halcyon hadn’t seen any action in months, but in those days I was still quite dedicated to my sharpening routine(s); thus, 3 of their heads had been separated from their bodies before mama bear popped up shrieking like an insane banshee; the alpha kept snoozing in spite of the commotion. Wasn’t even a fair fight, to be honest. I almost felt a tinge of guilt.
I haven’t been challenged physically in combat since 1979. Another subway story—this one particularly tubular; it’s how our enemies learned of my existence. It’s how I lost the only father figure I’ve ever known. It’s why I had to abandon my “family” [notably the woman who raised me—I saw her as my “grandmother”—along with her son, my “best friend”] and go into hiding alone. It’s why I’m here. It’s a tale for another time (and possibly in another medium).
the mic that wouldn’t drop (until it did/does/will)
A question, I have. It’s coming. At the end.
About midway through the summary of my copy [and I suspect many others] on a paperback edition of Carl Sagan’s heretofore tragically undervalued gift to humanity, directly following a comma that succeeds Neil deGrasse Tyson’s name, it reads (and I quote):
“…Cosmos retraces the 14 billion years of cosmic evolution that have transformed matter into consciousness…”
Cosmos [back cover], 2013, Ballantine Books
Now, while that does sound accurate, based on my recent (and very disorienting) grasp of the universal fabric in which we’re all wrapped up and therefore bound to share—and for which Thierry’s {and NdT’s [don’t worry about me]} tremendous work has been largely (if not chiefly) influential, would it not make a wee bit more sense—and, in slightly more important fact, would it not also lead to the long-awaited reconciliation of astrophysics with quantum mechanics and, by extension, ahem, the past-due marriage of science to religion, if we were to realize not that atoms somehow magically morph into thoughts, but rather instead that another factor in the equation, the one that’s tangled up in anything we’ve ever seen, could seed our collective awareness?
You might not get it at first, but, regardless, I shall explain.
The left side of the equation, thus, is pretty darn straightforward. E becomes emotion. It hits hard and fast, and it just is. It tells us what we need. Easy. Glad we got that outta the way.
Right of the equal sign, however, is where things and stuff clearly can get a lot more complicated. What if we’re giving atoms too much credit? What about the other variable on the side that isn’t left?
c:
the especially speedy variable
the one which blooms, radiates, and colorizes
the one that sometimes gets cast aside for ease of understanding
the one tangled up LITERALLY in anything we’ve ever seen
the one that simply must permit our (2020) vision
Photons interact with our big bright round glassy eyes and filter through our stupidly complicated mental prisms before emerging {occasionally} as thoughts.
No matter the scale, whether galactic, solar, or even personal, any body may grow, amassing strength during the sustained, escalating revolution of matter, and it does so only by borrowing energy in an effort to resist gravity.
But a body, the mind is not. And the mind—our mind—is something else.
A lone individual doesn’t amount to much beyond these fleshy bags of water we have to haul around in order to exist. As a single organism, you are made of matter. (In)significantly, you do matter. But, all together now, we embody the other thing, matter’s weightless cohort, that which parents time. As one, we are light. Once we {decide to} awaken and unify across the globe, we could, would, should, and will be faster. Yes, together, we can be faster than light.
As you (may {not}) know, in Einstein’s legendary equation, c stands for celeritas [meaning “swiftness”]; it also stands for color, technically, and poetically enough. Ahh, the lowercase letter c: the reliable constant we’re physically incapable of catching. To me, the solution to our puzzle has become painfully obvious:
Consciousness must be a step (upon which we currently find ourselves stuck) in the evolution of light.
In other words, light evolves, too, through its miraculously chaotic dance with matter across the prismatic tapestry of our precious time.