Dance Of Reality -
But Aanya had shown her something else. The dance was not freedom. It was a kind of death, too. Every step into another reality was a step away from this one. Every parallel self she visited was a self she was not fully becoming. She had scattered herself across the multiverse like a dropped tray of glass.
What if consciousness was not a byproduct of complexity but a physical force—a field, like electromagnetism, that interacted with quantum systems? What if attention, focused attention, was what collapsed probabilities into facts? And what if, in the space between collapse and collapse, there was a rhythm? A pattern? A dance? dance of reality
She spent the next three years proving it. Or rather, proving enough of it to publish. The paper was received with polite silence, then vicious dismissal, then—after a replication by a team in Kyoto—grudging acknowledgment. She was called a mystic, a genius, a fraud, a saint. She was offered tenure, then threatened with revocation of tenure. She accepted a chair at a small institute in Kerala, where the monsoon rains washed away the sound of academic warfare. But Aanya had shown her something else
She kept notes. She did not tell her colleagues. The breakthrough came on a Tuesday in March, during a routine experiment with a Bose-Einstein condensate. She was measuring quantum decoherence—the process by which superposition collapses into classical reality—when the atoms did something the equations could not explain. Instead of collapsing to a single state, they split . Two clouds, identical in every measurable way, except one rotated clockwise and the other counterclockwise. Every step into another reality was a step