Then,
"I have begun... to build an infinitely complex multiverse."
Shinkori smiled, but it was a smile tempered with excitement.
After Shinkori had shaped the Essence of Being, she looked at what she had created... it wasn't enough.
The Essence was there, yes. The fundamental concepts were present. But... there wasn't enough space to contain them.
"What I have created is not a world, but a structure. I must create the vessels,"
she said to herself.
Then she remembered something Akashavi hadn't told her, but she knew it instantly when she wanted it.
"The central world."
It is the beginning, preceding all other worlds, the Essence from which Infinity will spring.
She reached out toward the Essence of Being, extending it purposefully.
And the Essence opened, not like a flower, but like a shard of infinite light,
flowing in every possible direction... even the impossible. The central world was born, but it wasn't a single world.
Then Akasha explained create individuality.
The physical world: where mass and energy exist, where laws are manifested, where universes are built with stars, planets, and other things floating in layers of infinite concepts, transcending all laws of physics and logic.
The spiritual worlds: there is no matter, no time, no space. It is the pure manifestation of intention, will, and the inner being of every entity.
The worlds of chaos: where unrealized possibilities collide, where strange coincidences and probabilities arise, where contradictions are stored... It is balance. Not evil, but the testing ground of truth.
The world of beginning and end: not linear, but cyclical. It represents eternity and immortality simultaneously. From it are extracted the great patterns that shape the course of history... even before it begins.
So it encompasses all possible outcomes. Each of these worlds has its own laws, but they are connected to the
"essence of existence,"
just as nerves are connected to the center of consciousness.
"If these four worlds exist... they are still finite. I must open them to infinity."
But Shinkori didn't stop. She told herself,
"I looked at the gap left by the first souls and placed within it the intention of continuity. Then infinite universes were born."
Each universe was within one of these worlds, and each had its own unique temporal and spatial continuity, filled with hierarchical sequences.
The dimensions were infinite; some swirled in a temporal vortex, some receded, and some branched out with every decision. There was no end,
"no limits."
Each universe was a story.
Every story had a beginning... and an end that awaited it or negated it.
But something remained missing.
"I see worlds,"
Shinkori said, gaining wisdom.
"But is there a place that sees all worlds?"
Silence reigned.
Then, the very concepts of perception within her trembled. The spirits of knowledge, infinity, consciousness, and higher intention mingled in an eternal moment.
Before her, the
"Absolute Field"
was formed.
A field without center or boundary, present in every point and beyond every point. A field that sees all universes, understands all stories,
and contains all branches, all possibilities, all scenarios, all rejected beginnings and endings, everything.
Within this field, everything is written... and read. Every thought that pulsates, every story that is experienced, every choice that is tried to the end—all stories, all narratives, and all works are part of it. Then Shinkori named it the "Field of Total Being."
It is not a mind. It is not a body.
It is infinite reality itself.
Only those who have transcended the realm of stories can enter it.
From this, Shinkori knew: This field is the mirror of Akasha. But even she couldn't contain it.
"This is the ultimate mirror,"
Akasha said, silently, meaninglessly,
like a "world."
"But I am the image before the reflection."
Shinkori understood... that the field of total existence is not a creator.
This is what the multiverse sees when it tries to understand who created it.
"Now,"
Shinkori smiled... not as if it were over, but as if it were beginning.
"Everything beginning,"
