04/19/2026
I my Foto’s give you just a bit more.
Long before modern science put numbers to it, there were thinkers who quietly suspected that human perception was incomplete. They believed the eyes were not tools of truth, but tools of survival — designed to show just enough, not everything. Today, science has confirmed something that sounds almost unreal: your eyes capture only 0.0035% of reality. Everything you see — colors, faces, objects, the entire visible world — exists within that tiny fraction, while the remaining 99.9965% is completely invisible to you. Right now, waves of energy are passing through your body, radio signals are moving through the air, infrared heat is radiating from surfaces, and ultraviolet light is interacting with the world — all happening at this exact moment, yet completely undetected by your senses. This means what you call “reality” isn’t reality itself, but a filtered version created by your brain. Your mind takes in an overwhelming amount of information and cuts most of it out, keeping only what helps you function and survive. It simplifies existence into something manageable, but in doing so, it hides the vast majority of what’s actually there. Imagine living inside a massive universe but only being able to see a tiny window of it — over time, you would start believing that window is the whole world. That’s exactly what perception does. Ancient traditions hinted at this idea through concepts of unseen realms and hidden energies, and now modern physics expresses it in precise terms. Once you truly understand this, something shifts in the way you see everything. You begin to realize that your understanding of the world is naturally incomplete, that your judgments are based on limited input, and that there is always more beyond what appears obvious. This realization doesn’t weaken your sense of reality — it expands it. Because the moment you accept that you’re only seeing a fraction, you become open to the possibility that reality is far deeper, more layered, and more mysterious than it seems. So the next time you look around and feel certain about what’s real, remember this: you are not seeing the world as it is — you are seeing 0.0035% of it, a narrow, filtered version shaped by your senses, while an entire unseen universe exists right in front of you.