Light and Shadow
When light from higher dimensions, perceived through a dimensional membrane, grows excessively strong, its influence is not confined to higher realms. It casts discernible shadows into the three-dimensional world. This phenomenon suggests an intense interdimensional exchange, driven primarily by a powerful upward pull from higher dimensions. When objects leave the three-dimensional world, they do not pass as solid matter but transform into light as they cross. At the same time, light also emerges in the opposite direction, descending or leaking from higher dimensions. These crossings are not symmetrical, yet they remain connected through the membrane. Within the three-dimensional realm, the appearance of shadows functions as physical evidence of this exchange. Through these shadows, one can sense that a gateway toward higher dimensions is widely opened, made visible not by light itself, but by the absence it produces. Thereby perception confirms dimensional passage without direct illumination or form in human experience.