A Pattern That Does Not Care
In the geometry of Love, The Cosmic Dance, the pattern in the denominator—your expectation—is structurally indifferent to your perspective. That is to say, it is invariant. Whether skewed horizontally through habitual prediction, or vertically through ideological possession, the pattern itself remains unaltered. What changes is your orientation to it.
This is why we emphasize that the denominator is not a random shape. It is always a square. Always. The pattern embedded within that square is the same as the pattern in the numerator—the actual. The immutable past contains a resolved, complete pattern, and if your expectation were perfectly aligned with that pattern, reality would equal actual. You would experience no distortion. Mathematically:
Reality = Actual / Expectation = 1 / 1 = 1
This is the sacred identity. The pattern in actual and the pattern in expectation would match precisely. There would be no skewing. Reality would feel like actuality. But this is not the human condition.
Skewing Is Experience
As divine beings inhabiting the eternal now, we are not here to recite the pattern. We are here to feel it. Neither the Immutable Past (she) nor the Unknowable Future (he) can feel this love story—they are principles. But we can. We are the feelers. We live in the quotient space. We feel the divergence between the numerator and the denominator, between actual and expectation, between resolution and distortion.
When we say the denominator has variability, we are not speaking metaphorically. Algebraically, the denominator is a complex number. Its real component (habit) and its imaginary component (idea) are not static. They fluctuate. But geometrically, what this really means is simple:
The pattern is skewed.
The square remains a square. But it is tilted. Or more precisely: your view of it is tilted. You are not seeing the pattern as it is—you are seeing it through a distorted lens. A horizontally skewed rectangle corresponds to a dominance of subconscious prediction. A vertically skewed rectangle points to a life dominated by a fixed idea. Any rotation in between those extremes produces its own particular misalignment, its own skewed denominator.
Rotation as the Mechanism of Feeling
Algebra treats this as a set of values: the real number shifts above or below 1, the imaginary coefficient (the “b” in bi) becomes irrational. But geometry lets us feel it. Rotation is what makes us conscious. It is not the values of a and b in the denominator that you experience directly. What you experience is the result of being rotated away from the 90° truth of the full pattern.
Rotation is felt experience.
You may hold the full pattern in your expectation, but if you are viewing it at 37°, you will not feel coherence. You will feel distortion. You will experience a reality that feels partial, agitated, or fractured. And you will be tempted to resolve the tension by collapsing into an edge—either a full commitment to habit or a full commitment to idea. This is how most people live: edge-on, defensive, narratively certain, but geometrically blind.
The Full Pattern Is Always There
The pattern in expectation is not less than the pattern in actual. It is not a fragment. It is not a different pattern. It is the same pattern. But skewed. Rotated. Distorted by your angle of perception. And you can test this directly: take a patterned sheet of paper, hold it at eye level, rotate yourself around it. At 90°, you will see the full pattern. At 45°, you will see a trapezoid of distortion. At 0° or 180°, you will see only the edge. The information hasn’t changed. You have.
This is the architecture of all felt reality. It is not about data loss. It is about data skew.
Normalization and the Experience of Skew
We normalize the numerator to 1 because actual is resolved. It is the completed past. But we do not normalize the denominator. It fluctuates. Its variability is the source of all perception. In truth, your expectation contains all 2⁴⁰⁸ bits of the cosmic pattern. But it is rotated—therefore compressed, therefore misinterpreted. You are not lacking data. You are skewed in your view of it.
This is why geometry matters. The feeling of being “off” is the result of skewed expectation. The feeling of being “in flow” is the brief moment when, through conscious or unconscious means, your perspective has aligned with the actual. You’ve squared the pattern.
Conclusion: Consciousness Is Rotational
The pattern never punishes. It never withholds. It never reacts. It is indifferent to your distortions. It is what it is. But you, the conscious being, are rotational. That is what gives you the capacity to feel. You are the one who skews the pattern through orientation, and you are the one who can return to the square.
The variability in reality is not chaos. It is geometry.
You are not condemned by a broken world. You are not locked into a defective denominator. You are merely tilted. And every moment offers a new chance to rotate—back toward the 90°, back toward the square, back toward alignment.
Back toward love, as it actually is.
