Liora first heard the word real spoken with unusual care.
Not in conversation, but in correction.
“That isn’t real,” a man said sharply, as though closing a door.
She turned to see what he meant.
Two figures stood before a long, narrow structure built of pale stone. Its entrance was dark, its walls smooth and unmarked. Above the doorway, carved with almost excessive precision, were the words:
WHAT REMAINS
The second figure hesitated.
“It seems real enough,” they said.
The man shook his head.
“It only seems that way because you are still inside it.”
He gestured toward the entrance.
“If you want to know what is truly real,” he said, “you must pass through.”
Liora approached the structure.
The air near the entrance felt different—not colder, not thinner, but… cleaner, as though something had already been removed.
“What is this place?” she asked.
The man looked at her with quiet satisfaction.
“A chamber,” he said, “that strips away everything that is not real.”
Liora glanced into the darkness.
“And what remains?” she asked.
The man’s expression did not change.
“Reality,” he said.
She entered.
At first, nothing happened.
The passage was narrow, the walls close. Her footsteps echoed softly, then less, then not at all.
After a few moments, she noticed the first change.
The colours of the world—subtle at first—began to fade.
Not disappear, exactly. They lost their variation, their nuance, until everything settled into a narrow band of pale tones.
She stopped.
“What is happening?” she asked.
A voice—calm, disembodied—answered from nowhere in particular.
“Variation is a product of perspective,” it said. “It has been removed.”
Liora looked at her hands. They were still there—but flattened, simplified, as though detail itself had been considered unnecessary.
She hesitated.
Then continued.
Further in, the second change came.
The sense of distance began to collapse.
Objects that had seemed near or far no longer held their positions. The space between things loosened, then tightened, then ceased to function as before.
“What has been removed?” Liora asked.
“Relation,” said the voice. “Position depends on relation. It is not fundamental.”
The walls of the chamber no longer seemed to enclose her. Not because they had expanded—but because “inside” and “outside” had begun to lose their distinction.
She walked on, more slowly now.
The third change was harder to notice.
Not because it was subtle, but because it did not present itself as something missing.
Instead, things began to lose their persistence.
A shape would form, hold for a moment, then fail to stabilise—not dissolving, but never quite becoming definite in the first place.
“What is being removed now?” she asked.
“Stability across instances,” said the voice. “What you call ‘things’ depend on repeated construal. That has been withdrawn.”
Liora reached toward one of the shapes.
Her hand passed through something that neither resisted nor yielded.
It did not feel like touching nothing.
It felt like touching something that could not hold itself together long enough to be touched.
She stopped walking.
“This isn’t revealing reality,” she said. “It’s undoing it.”
The voice responded without hesitation.
“It is removing what is not truly real.”
Liora stood very still.
“Then what will be left?” she asked.
There was a pause.
Then:
“That is what you came to see.”
She continued.
Now, even her own movement became uncertain.
The sense of “before” and “after” thinned. Steps no longer accumulated into a path. Each moment failed to connect fully to the next.
“What has been removed?” she asked again, though her voice felt less anchored than before.
“Continuity,” said the voice. “Temporal relation is not fundamental.”
Liora closed her eyes.
For a moment—if it could still be called a moment—there was nothing to orient herself by. No stable position, no persistent form, no unfolding sequence.
Only the faintest residue of… something.
Not a thing.
Not an object.
Not even an absence.
Just the failure of anything to appear.
She opened her eyes.
Or thought she did.
“Is this it?” she asked.
“Everything that depends on construal has been removed,” said the voice. “What remains is what is truly real.”
Liora listened carefully.
There was no ground.
No space.
No distinction.
Nothing that could be pointed to, held, or even contrasted.
And yet—
The voice was still speaking.
“How can you say that?” she asked, though the act of asking felt unstable.
“How can you say what remains is real, if nothing appears?”
The voice did not respond immediately.
When it did, something in it had shifted.
“It is what is left when all mediation is removed,” it said.
Liora considered this—or tried to.
“But you are still speaking,” she said. “And I am still… here, in some sense.”
Silence.
Then, quietly:
“Yes.”
Liora did not move.
“You removed variation,” she said. “Relation. Stability. Continuity.”
“Yes.”
“But to say anything at all—to call this ‘what remains,’ to call it ‘real’—you have to bring those things back.”
The silence deepened.
“You cannot show me what is real without using the very relations you removed to show it,” she continued. “You cannot even identify it without construal.”
The chamber did not respond.
Or perhaps it could not.
Slowly, almost tentatively, something returned.
Not imposed. Not added.
Allowed.
A faint distinction.
Then another.
A trace of relation.
A suggestion of form.
The world did not snap back into place.
It re-emerged—unevenly, partially, as though remembering how to hold itself together.
Liora felt the ground again.
Not as a given, but as something achieved.
She turned.
The passage behind her was no longer a tunnel, but a shifting threshold.
When she stepped out, the air felt thick.
Not impure.
Dense with relation.
The man was waiting.
“Well?” he asked. “Did you find what is truly real?”
Liora looked at him.
Then at the chamber.
Then at the world, which now seemed less like a layer covering something deeper, and more like the only place anything could ever appear.
“I found what happens,” she said carefully, “when you try to remove everything that allows anything to be.”
The man frowned.
“That is not what I asked.”
Liora considered him for a moment.
“You asked what is real,” she said. “But what you meant was: what would remain if nothing depended on anything else.”
“Yes,” he said. “Exactly.”
She shook her head.
“Nothing remains,” she said.
He opened his mouth to object, but she continued.
“Not nothing as a hidden substance. Nothing as in—there is no ‘there’ there. No way for anything to appear, be identified, or be distinguished as real.”
She gestured toward the chamber.
“That place does not reveal reality,” she said. “It removes the conditions under which reality can exist at all.”
The man turned back toward the entrance, uncertain.
Liora did not wait.
She stepped past him and back into the world.
Things held.
Not perfectly.
Not absolutely.
But consistently enough to persist across her movement, her attention, her shifting relation to them.
She touched a wall.
It resisted.
She stepped forward.
The ground held.
She looked at the horizon.
It remained, even as it changed.
“Real,” she said softly, as though testing the word again.
Not what remains when everything is stripped away.
But what continues to take form—
Behind her, the chamber stood unchanged.
Still promising.
Still empty.
Still waiting for those who believed that reality must be what survives its own removal.

No comments:
Post a Comment