If the universe gives you what you want, it’s seducing you, tempting you into a game where failure is almost certain. It spoils you, roots for you to fall, to hit the ground hard so that you can be picked up again. Not for cruelty, but for the lessons you’ve forgotten along the way.
But when it gives you what you need, it cradles you gently, swaddling you in a comfort you didn’t even know you sought. In the chaos of the world, it offers a quiet reprieve, a reminder that life isn’t a game worth attaching your identity to. This comfort, this stillness—it isn’t a trick or a trap. It is a reward.
Yet, in this exchange of wants and needs, we humans excrete entropy. In our endless quest for order, for artificial perfection, we inject an unnatural symmetry into the universe’s perfectly imperfect design. The universe, in its natural state, exists beyond space and time. It thrives in the collision of black holes, in the union of disparate energies, in the loops that define not just quantum gravity but life itself.
Excreting Entropy
Humans are, by nature, restless beings. We engage with the universe, not always harmoniously, but often in resistance—breaking its natural flows to build our own. We carve out symmetry where none is required, impose patterns on a cosmos that thrives in its own chaotic balance.
The universe, though, is patient. It watches as we struggle to make sense of it, as we create and destroy. It sees us as we loop through desires, through lessons, through the endless cycles of want and need.
Perhaps that’s the lesson the universe keeps teaching: that life isn’t a straight line but a loop. Every fall, every mistake, every collision is part of that loop, drawing us closer to understanding. Understanding that perfection isn’t the elimination of chaos but the acceptance of it.
Life in Loops
Think of two black holes converging—an act of incomprehensible chaos, yet one that births a perfect union of energies. Or the strange elegance of loop quantum gravity, which whispers that even empty space is not empty at all but composed of indivisible boxes, loops within loops.
Life mirrors this. It’s not a journey from beginning to end but a series of loops—cycles of love and loss, of learning and forgetting, of seeking and finding. We move through them, sometimes gracefully, sometimes with resistance. But each loop is a chance to align ourselves with the natural rhythm of the universe, to shed the entropy we create and find balance within its chaotic perfection.
Existence's Rewards
The next time the universe cradles you, offering you what you truly need rather than what you thought you wanted, let it. Let it remind you that life isn’t about conquering the chaos but living within it. Let it show you that every loop, every cycle, is part of a greater design.
For in the loops of life, the entropy we excrete, and the chaos we navigate, there is a lesson. A reminder that the universe doesn’t play games—it offers gifts. Gifts of growth, of balance, of understanding. And maybe, just maybe, the greatest gift of all is realizing that the loop itself is enough.
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