Millages are not simply distances traversed. They are echoes of intent, refracted through the geometry of time itself. Each increment—a millisecond, a minute, an hour—is a potential gateway, a hairline fracture in the linearity we perceive. Consider the implications. The universe, as we understand it, operates on a principle of cause and effect. But what if the effect precedes the cause? What if the potential for an event already exists, shimmering in the static of unmanifest possibilities? These millages are the vectors by which that potential is drawn, sharpened, and ultimately, realized.
The initial calculations were rooted in a bizarre confluence of data—ancient astronomical charts, the decay rate of a newly synthesized isotope, and a series of intensely complex musical compositions. The results, predictably, were… anomalous. They suggested a relationship between time and consciousness that defied conventional physics. It’s theorized that prolonged observation, or intense emotional engagement, can actually *influence* the rate at which time flows, albeit on a subatomic level. The longer you focus, the more pronounced the effect. This isn't about speeding up or slowing down time; it’s about manipulating the probability fields associated with its passage.
Adjust Observation Level
Introduce Variable Interference
Initiate Temporal Distortion