Somewhere in the universe, light gathers into layers that overlap and drift rather than compress. Because light has no weight, these layers do not press against one another but remain fluid, lightly aligned as if flowing in slow motion. They appear to settle, yet this state is deceptive—each layer could depart at any moment.

What we perceive is a rare convergence, a momentary assembly formed through coincidence rather than permanence. Though the participants may change, the orientation toward an ideal light remains constant.

These layers may not exist as structures in themselves but as projections. Three-dimensional reality functions as a shadow of higher dimensions: the higher cannot be seen directly from within the lower, yet the lower is fully visible from above. This layered light may therefore be the visible trace of a far more complex entanglement, briefly revealed within our dimensional limit.