
Have you ever had that uneasy feeling that something is wrong, but you can’t explain what? You can’t put it into clear words. Maybe it’s a tightness in your chest, a racing heart, or disturbing thoughts. All you know is that something feels off. Perhaps that’s what it feels like when the line between worlds grows thin, when our bodies sense a reality our eyes can’t yet see.
Have you ever felt drawn toward that strange realm beyond logic, the one people call the paranormal? Many believe in this parallel existence. Many claim they’ve felt it. These are moments that suggest there’s another dimension running alongside our own.
Science and religion have their explanations, but there are countless stories of people encountering the unknown. They point to a reality we barely understand and often fear. We instantly label “the others” as negative, for lack of a better word. But do they see us as enemies too? Do they fear us the way we fear them? Are they like us, with their own emotions and colors, or are we just two reflections in the same mirror, both afraid of what we see?
We may not get clear answers anytime soon, unless AI someday helps lift the veil between our world and theirs. The possibilities are endless. It’s humbling to realize how small we are in the larger picture. We’re told that only 5% of the universe has been discovered. If that’s all our technology can reach, imagine how much remains hidden. If we ever uncovered that hidden reality, everything we think we know about the universe would change.
There may be others sharing the universe with us. Maybe they know us as little as we know them. Maybe they feel things too. Maybe they can love, get hurt, and cry. Perhaps what separates us isn’t stone or space, but a mutual fear of a neighbor we can’t see.
I often think about the unknown and the unexplained. It’s the hidden reality we haven’t found, despite all our knowledge and technology. Yet some people speak about it with absolute certainty, and questioning them can provoke anger or even violence. It’s a strange human habit: the less we understand, the louder we defend what we think we know. For people of faith, that certainty comes from belief beyond reason. For others, it’s harder to explain. How can logic and science, which haven’t solved 95% of the universe, give us the right to judge what we can’t comprehend? People aren’t always rational.
Instead of using our beliefs as weapons, we should admit what we don’t know. Whether we look through a telescope or a stained glass window, we’re all staring into the same vast, silent darkness. We’re neighbors on a small island of knowledge, surrounded by an ocean of mystery. It’s time we stop arguing over the light and start holding each other’s hands in the dark.
Email:-------------- eyramkhan786@gmail.com
Have you ever had that uneasy feeling that something is wrong, but you can’t explain what? You can’t put it into clear words. Maybe it’s a tightness in your chest, a racing heart, or disturbing thoughts. All you know is that something feels off. Perhaps that’s what it feels like when the line between worlds grows thin, when our bodies sense a reality our eyes can’t yet see.
Have you ever felt drawn toward that strange realm beyond logic, the one people call the paranormal? Many believe in this parallel existence. Many claim they’ve felt it. These are moments that suggest there’s another dimension running alongside our own.
Science and religion have their explanations, but there are countless stories of people encountering the unknown. They point to a reality we barely understand and often fear. We instantly label “the others” as negative, for lack of a better word. But do they see us as enemies too? Do they fear us the way we fear them? Are they like us, with their own emotions and colors, or are we just two reflections in the same mirror, both afraid of what we see?
We may not get clear answers anytime soon, unless AI someday helps lift the veil between our world and theirs. The possibilities are endless. It’s humbling to realize how small we are in the larger picture. We’re told that only 5% of the universe has been discovered. If that’s all our technology can reach, imagine how much remains hidden. If we ever uncovered that hidden reality, everything we think we know about the universe would change.
There may be others sharing the universe with us. Maybe they know us as little as we know them. Maybe they feel things too. Maybe they can love, get hurt, and cry. Perhaps what separates us isn’t stone or space, but a mutual fear of a neighbor we can’t see.
I often think about the unknown and the unexplained. It’s the hidden reality we haven’t found, despite all our knowledge and technology. Yet some people speak about it with absolute certainty, and questioning them can provoke anger or even violence. It’s a strange human habit: the less we understand, the louder we defend what we think we know. For people of faith, that certainty comes from belief beyond reason. For others, it’s harder to explain. How can logic and science, which haven’t solved 95% of the universe, give us the right to judge what we can’t comprehend? People aren’t always rational.
Instead of using our beliefs as weapons, we should admit what we don’t know. Whether we look through a telescope or a stained glass window, we’re all staring into the same vast, silent darkness. We’re neighbors on a small island of knowledge, surrounded by an ocean of mystery. It’s time we stop arguing over the light and start holding each other’s hands in the dark.
Email:-------------- eyramkhan786@gmail.com
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