Joe insists that the fifth dimension is real, but he isn’t on board with Terrence Howard’s math about 1×1=2. He knows numbers make sense, but reality isn’t just about numbers—it’s about experience. And Joe has been there. He had to go back and grab Nelly by the hand, guiding her through the threshold.
It was much like Dave Bowman’s journey in 2001: A Space Odyssey—the transition beyond the known, into the infinite. There was no Stargate, no Monolith, but the experience was just as surreal. The moment stretched and warped, colors bleeding into one another, sounds vibrating with an unearthly harmony. It wasn’t just a different place—it was a different state of being.
And Nelly—she hesitated at first, clinging to the familiar. But Joe knew she had to come through. She had to see. The world they had known was just a shadow on the cave wall, and beyond it was something so much more. He wouldn’t let her stay behind.
So, hand in hand, they stepped beyond.