-
Unlimited time
10/26/2025 at 11:44 • 0 commentsIf I had next unlimited time and freedom, I would spend nearly every day studying and experimenting, not out of obligation, but out of sheer curiosity. When one project reaches a resting point, my mind naturally turns toward another, and another, until I’ve tested every limit I can find. I I like to move between disciplines like current through a circuit, following wherever the questions lead.
It’s not about proving or disproving someone else’s work. It’s about trying to touch the edges of what’s real, learning how the world actually behaves by seeing if it can respond, directly, to experiment/observation. Whether I’m creating coils, building new devices, or tracing the forgotten layers of history, I’m always searching for coherence and that moment when the pattern reveals themselves then just, clicks.
I don’t want inherited certainty. I want to learn the truths myself , one experiment, one test, one theory, one spark at a time.
-RR
-
Notes On Patterns, Micro to Macro Perception on Simulation Theory
09/01/2025 at 14:10 • 0 commentsPeople talk about gut feelings, or knowing something in their soul. I see those feelings as part of the same spectrum but tuned differently for different events. There is the gut feeling of intuition, when something clicks before the mind can explain it. There is the stomach drop of deducing something terrible, when the pattern resolves into bad news. There is also the excitement of wondering or knowing what might come next, when you glimpse the edge of a new discovery.
Pattern recognition has always been one of those things I don’t try to do, it just happens. Sometimes I literally see it with my eyes, like a structure or relationship. Other times it shows up in my head after the fact, almost like a fluid picture forming later. There is also a feeling to it, a sense of rightness or wrongness, and that comes in faster than anything else. Deduction follows, but it is usually slower than the raw see and feel response.
One of the clearest moments was during AEFC experimentation when I realized that metals of different kinds, under the conditions, could carry a one wire AC voltage just by being around RF or magnetic fields. That observation changed how I looked at the coil interactions and harvesting process. In Magic the Gathering deck building, I tend to build by intuition. At first it seems chaotic, but after the fact I notice how strong the deck actually is and how the choices I made create surprising synergies. With people, I notice patterns in micro expressions, eye movement, body language, and overall vibe. Meeting someone for the first time, I would say I have a 95 percent chance of reading them accurately. It is not guessing so much as patterns stacking up so quickly that they just resolve into an answer.
The same way of seeing plays out in bigger picture thinking. My theory of history, A Return to the Forgotten Future ( Not Public ), came from noticing holes in timelines, inconsistencies in what we are told, and recurring cycles of rise, collapse, and rediscovery. To me, history is not linear but recursive. The gaps are the pattern, and once you start seeing them it changes the way you think about technology, civilization, and human memory.
I see patterns everywhere, all the time. Machines, people, systems, ideas, even in how information is framed or controlled. Someone once said I had a surprising level of awareness of what is happening around me at any given moment. For me it is natural, a mix of intuition, common sense, and what might not be so common.
I think of it as both a gift and a skill that has been trained over years of paying attention, experimenting, and refusing to take things at face value. Everything has a pattern, right down to the smallest thing imaginable unless its chaos. Recognizing that feels like carrying around a map that other people cannot see until it is drawn out for them.
Everything has a pattern down to the smallest conceivable thing and the largest as well. If you don’t see it, zoom in or out a little more. It is like micro and macro assessments of perception, and once you learn to shift your view the patterns reveal themselves everywhere. That is also what drives my projects here, like the AEFC, which are built on exploring the patterns hidden in energy, materials, and the world around us.
-Rhea Rae
-
Looking Toward the Future
08/02/2025 at 15:32 • 0 commentsI have been thinking a lot about where my skills and passions could make a real difference. I am not just building things to pass the time. I am exploring ideas that matter to me, and I would like to contribute to something meaningful.
I focus on systems that do not fit into conventional categories. My Ambient Energy Field Converter explores energy harvesting from environmental potentials in ways that challenge standard assumptions. I also created Rhea’s Law, a conceptual model that reimagines how energy flows and transforms in ambient systems. These projects reflect how I think. I work intuitively, experimentally, and with a constant drive to understand the deeper mechanics behind what I observe.
I am self-taught in electronics and system design. Most of what I know has come from hands-on work, persistent curiosity, and real-world experimentation. I once worked as an electronics technician, but the foundation of my approach has always been direct experience, observation, and iteration.
I build, test, and refine through exploration. I notice patterns in energy behavior, magnetic interaction, and system dynamics that others might miss. I care about how things work, but even more about why they work.
I am drawn to environments where original thinking is encouraged. Places where curiosity is a strength, and where moving the boundaries of what is possible is part of the mission. I am hoping to find a space where I can bring my perspective and contribute to something that matters.
If you are working on a problem that needs a different kind of approach, and you are looking for someone who sees systems and challenges through a unique lens, I am open to connecting.
-Rhea Rae
Rhea Rae
alexw
Paul Kocyla
Lutetium
Sagar
Julian Fernandez
Elia
Dave Gönner
hornig
mircemk
lion mclionhead
Peter
Jasper Sikken
nick.r.brewer
Julian Costas
Guru-san
I appreciate your thoughtful words and the encouragement. It’s motivating to know my work resonates with others who value challenging assumptions. Thank you for taking the time to share your perspective on my ideas and theories.