In our world, humans exist and so do emotions.
In the mind of one 21-year-old woman, a conversation begins.
"What if everyone suffers the same? Not in the way it looks, but in how it weighs." Right Brain murmured quietly.
"You think suffering is distributed equally?" Left Brain responded, curious.
"Not exactly. It shows up differently, but somehow, the weight feels matched. Each life carries its own version, but the measure, the total might be the same." She explained.
"So you’re saying pain is a constant? Personalized, but not unequal?" He asked.
"Yes. Like different shapes, but the same gravity." She nodded slowly.
He considered her words, eyes thoughtful.
"That means suffering is universal unique to each, yet balanced across all."
"Exactly." She sighed, voice filled with wonder. "I see it everywhere. Different stories, but the same toll."
"If suffering is constant, there must be a counterbalance." He suggested.
"Yes." Her voice grew hopeful.
"Joy, healing, peace, positive energy to balance the negative."
He smiled, intrigued.
"An emotional equation, negative plus positive equals zero."
Something like this," she said, her eyes lighting up as she recited:
"Negative energy, suffering, plus positive energy, healing and joy, equals zero, an equilibrium."
"Negative (suffering) + Positive (healing) = 0."
"So life’s endurance depends on maintaining this balance," he said slowly.
"And if the equation doesn’t hold?"
"Then life ends. The balance breaks." She whispered.
She looked away, pondering.
"So survival isn’t just biology. It’s a dance of energies holding the balance."
"It’s a pattern in chaos."He added.
She looked back, vulnerable.
"But who would listen? I’m tangled in my thoughts."
"Your voice matters." He reassured.
"Truth needs courage, not credentials."
"Help me ask the question that opens the door." She pleaded.
"What if suffering is measurable?" He offered.
"What if life follows a hidden law and ends when balance breaks?"
She smiled faintly, relief in her eyes.
"That’s it. That’s what I’ve been trying to say."
"You said it well. I helped it find its home." He replied gently.