Before there were kingdoms, before there were languages, before even the stars had learned their names, the world was said to be woven from an endless Loom.
Its threads were not made of matter.
Nor of light.
Nor of time.
They were possibilities.
Every creature, every mountain, every river, every song, every friendship, every storm appeared where countless threads crossed one another.
The Loom never rested.
It had no beginning.
It sought no end.
It simply continued weaving the world into ever-new forms.
Those who first beheld the Loom imagined that its greatest marvel was the threads themselves.
But the oldest Weaver shook her head.
"The threads are not the mystery," she would say.
"The mystery is that they never cease finding new companions."
One morning a traveller climbed a familiar hill.
At its summit stood a small house where an old friend had always welcomed strangers with warm bread and strong coffee.
But when the traveller arrived, the house stood empty.
The fire was cold.
The windows were shuttered.
The garden had begun returning to wildness.
Nothing had happened to the hill.
Nothing had happened to the sky.
Even the path remained exactly where it had always been.
Yet the traveller descended the mountain differently.
Every future journey through that valley had quietly changed.
The Loom had crossed its threads another way.
Far away, a great flock circled above the sea.
No bird commanded.
No bird obeyed.
One wing turned slightly toward the wind.
The others followed—not by imitation alone, nor by hidden messages carried through the air.
The entire sky rearranged itself around a single new possibility.
The Loom smiled.
Another crossing.
Deep beneath the forest floor, a single drop of rain reached a sleeping seed.
The rain carried no instructions.
The seed contained no tiny tree waiting to unfold.
Yet together they awakened a path neither possessed alone.
Roots reached downward.
Shoots reached upward.
The forest quietly became possible again.
The Loom accepted another thread.
One day a young apprentice watched the Weaver work.
He frowned.
"I cannot see what you are adding."
"I add nothing," replied the Weaver.
"Then what do you move?"
"Nothing."
"What changes?"
The Weaver invited him closer.
She touched the Loom with one finger.
Immediately countless threads shifted—not by breaking, but by greeting different neighbours.
The mountains remained mountains.
The rivers remained rivers.
The birds still sang.
Yet every path leading onward had become subtly different.
The apprentice stared in astonishment.
"So the world has changed?"
The Weaver smiled.
"The world has continued."
The apprentice pondered this for many years.
Eventually he returned carrying heavy books.
"They all say the same thing," he announced.
"They say that messages travel through the world."
The Weaver laughed softly.
"Do they?"
He opened one volume.
"Letters."
Another.
"Signals."
Another.
"Codes."
Another.
"Data."
The Weaver nodded.
"Those all travel."
"Then they carry the world's changes?"
She gently shook her head.
"They carry themselves."
She placed her hand once more upon the Loom.
"What changes..."
The threads shimmered.
"...is what the world can now become."
From then on the apprentice watched more carefully.
A poem was spoken.
Nothing entered the listeners.
Yet new roads opened inside their lives.
A law was proclaimed.
The parchment changed no one.
Yet villages began living differently together.
A child learned the name of a bird.
The sound itself was small.
But the forest would never again greet the child in quite the same way.
Everywhere he looked, the same quiet miracle appeared.
Nothing passed from thing to thing like water poured between cups.
Instead, the crossings of the Loom were endlessly rearranged.
Possibilities greeted new possibilities.
Old paths faded.
Unexpected paths appeared.
The world became otherwise.
At last the apprentice asked one final question.
"Master... what is this endless rearranging called?"
The Weaver rested her shuttle.
"It has been given many names."
"Which is the true one?"
She smiled.
"Whenever the world learns that it may continue differently..."
"...the sages call it information."
The apprentice expected this to be the end of his learning.
Instead, the Weaver stood and placed the shuttle into his hands.
"There is one lesson still to come."
"What lesson?"
She looked not at the Loom, but beyond it.
Beyond even the endless weaving of possibilities.
"We have spent many ages learning how the world is woven."
The apprentice followed her gaze into a horizon he had never before noticed.
"But every weaving has its own hidden music."
He listened.
For the first time, beneath the crossing of every thread, beneath every becoming, beneath every possibility, he heard something quieter still.
Not another thread.
Not another pattern.
But the grammar by which every pattern could arise.
The Weaver smiled.
"The Loom is not the end of the story."
"It never was."
"It is only the beginning of learning how possibility itself learns to weave."
And so the traveller descended the mountain.
The birds still crossed the sky.
The rain still found the waiting seed.
Friends still met.
Books were still written.
Children still watched birds upon old fences.
Nothing in the world had changed.
Except that those who had learned to see the Loom could no longer imagine reality as a collection of things.
They saw instead an endless weaving of organised possibility—
forever becoming,
forever reorganising,
forever opening new paths through the same inexhaustible world.
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