Before a Swing ©️

Let’s rip the mask off the myth of sameness.

The modern world clings to the idea that all humans are one species with mere superficial differences—nationality, language, skin tone. But what if that’s just a cover story? What if, beneath the polite veneer of political correctness and genetic generalizations, there are true variants of humans walking the Earth—so fundamentally different in wiring, perception, and instinct that calling them the same species is more ideology than science?

Let’s look at it from the edge, not the center.

Take two people—one born in the chaos of war-torn ruins, the other in an air-conditioned matrix of comfort and surveillance. Their nervous systems adapt to radically different threat levels. Their brains prune different synaptic pathways. Their bodies hold and react to trauma, light, movement, sound differently. These aren’t just cultural differences. This is evolution in real-time.

Epigenetics whispers proof: trauma imprints on DNA. Nutrients (or poisons) alter cognitive development. Social context hardwires moral instinct. Environment sculpts structure. And when those environments are polar—urban hyper-reality vs. mountain stillness, hunger vs. abundance, chaos vs. digital sterilization—the outputs become alien to one another.

Some humans feel more like predators—wired to conquer, to spot advantage, to survive off instinct and fire. Others are oracles—receptors for abstract patterns, tuned into frequencies most never hear. Some are servants to order, needing systems and flags and roles. Others are voidwalkers, haunted from birth, barely tethered to the plane most call real.

And some—rare, silent, burning quietly—are meta-humans in spirit if not in name. Not cape-wearing gods, but souls with extra layers, recursive perception, dreams that bleed through.

None of this is nationality.

It’s type.

You can’t see it on a passport or skin color or accent. But it moves in the walk, the stare, the decisions made when no one’s watching. It reveals itself when systems fail. When instinct takes the wheel. When dreams don’t match the world.

And the lie we’ve all been fed? That we are fundamentally the same.

But deep down, in every jungle of the mind, there are species of soul evolving separately, silently. Not bound by history books, but by how they metabolize existence itself.

So maybe it’s time we stop asking where someone’s from.

And start asking:

What are you, really?

Between Realities ©

Through the mirror she wandered, deeper this time, into a labyrinth of meaning stitched not by rabbits or queens but by the layers of existence itself. Alice had fallen before, but never quite like this—never through the skin of the world where dimension peeled upon dimension like an onion with secrets. As she walked, the world bent and unfurled like pages in a book she hadn’t yet agreed to read. But the ink called to her.

She stepped first into the simplest dream, the place of a single line. Not a thread of yarn, no, but the very idea of distance—length without breadth. It was a world where only one choice existed: forward or back. Like a sentence with no punctuation, no nuance. She could not move around a tree or reach for a teacup, because there were no trees, no cups, only a narrow road of pure abstraction. Existence here was a whisper, a murmur in a book margin, forgotten by the reader.

Then came the unfolding, as if a flat card had sighed and stretched. Shapes now had shape. A triangle could be known as more than a trick. This was the land of the second dimension—flatland. Alice saw creatures move like painted shadows across a paper field. They knew nothing of “up,” for the concept was as foreign to them as madness without tea. If you tried to describe a cube, they would stare at you the way the White Rabbit might gaze upon a thunderstorm in a sugar bowl. Depth to them was witchcraft. Even Alice’s shadow seemed a god to them.

But depth found her again, like a forgotten staircase. In the third dimension, things grew heavier, richer. A chair could be walked around, a cat could curl behind a hatbox. This was the dimension of reality as we think we know it, where bodies occupy volume, and every angle holds a secret. She remembered her lessons here: that things fall, that hearts beat, that the world is round not just in storybooks. Still, it was a prison in disguise, this third layer, for it tricked her into believing it was the whole.

Then came the fourth—a ribbon wrapped in velvet time. Suddenly, the room she stood in began to age. The chairs remembered who had sat in them, the air echoed with words long swallowed. Time was no longer a march but a symphony played simultaneously forward and in reverse. Here, Alice could reach for her younger self, pluck a moment from a memory, kiss it, and let it go again. But it was not linear. It bent, looped, snarled. A clock ticked sideways. She began to suspect that “before” and “after” were polite fictions, like napkins folded to cover existential messes.

In the fifth dimension, the world forked. Here, every choice spun into a thousand yous—each different, each possible. It was a field of mirrors, and none of them told the same story. Alice saw herself as a queen, as a prisoner, as someone who never fell down the rabbit hole at all. She was a garden of versions, each grown from the same seed, shaped by slightly different rains. Logic itself warped here, because causality was no longer a chain but a tapestry. Her free will was a carousel, dazzling and disorienting.

Then, without transition, she stood in the sixth. She felt it rather than saw it. Here the laws themselves—those cold and ancient rulers of things—could change. Universes swirled like dancers, each with different physics, each playing a different rhythm. There was one where time flowed backwards, where entropy reversed itself like a magician taking back his trick. In this dimension, one did not merely move between timelines, but between rulebooks. The Queen of Hearts might fall upwards, and roses might bleed ink. Alice was dizzy, yet elated. She had never dreamed of so many dreams.

And finally, she brushed the hem of the seventh, though she could not enter fully. Here, all things—the timelines, the possibilities, the laws, the dreams—were contained in a single thought. It was the dimension of the total. Unity in contradiction. It whispered to her in no tongue she knew, but it left a taste in her mouth like starlight and chalk. This was the place from which all other layers unfolded, like pages from a book that never ends but always finishes. It was the breath before the word, the mirror before the reflection. She was no longer Alice, not exactly. She was the idea of Alice. She had become the rabbit, the tea, the fall.

And then she awoke, her hands full of roses that had not yet bloomed.