This open letter is a raw, personal reflection written from inside the creative process of developing the Charge-Entanglement Ontology while the first papers await peer review. It explores the strange psychological state of “dual inertia” — externally frozen in slow academic time, internally burning at high clock speed (low a(T)) — and frames this tension as the Greer Tax paid by a high-clock-rate configuration. Using metaphors of snowflakes, shooting stars, layered cakes, and the Mandelbrot/Julia sets, the author contemplates the necessity of temporary structures, the ordained nature of existence, and the cosmic cycle in which every unique informational configuration must eventually return to symmetry. The piece grapples with the fear of not finishing the work in time, the vocational weight of the ontology, and the profound realization that impermanence is the unavoidable price of existence — and a price worth paying. Written during the anxious waiting period in May 2026, it stands as an honest human record of what it feels like to carry a foundational theory while the universe continues its slow, inexorable reclamation. This reflection complements the formal papers in the Charge-Entanglement Ontology series and offers insight into the lived experience behind the framework.
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John Robert Lamarr Greer
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John Robert Lamarr Greer (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a056824a550a87e60a20898 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20135915