If a star is the body, then a black hole is the heart, a dense core pumping mass back inward. These aren’t separate objects, but orientations of observation. They are one thing, folded in two directions.
The membranes of Phenomena are not flat, they’re textured. Think of them like crinkled maps: flexible, wavy sheets stretched across scalar space. In Phen Theory, what we often think of as “a dimension” is really two-sided. A layered surface that can fold, pinch, and twist. Let’s focus on just one layer for now.
In the Phress section, we will explore how mass builds when tension (Phress 工) is applied to a Phenom. The more Phress applied, the more internal resistance it has. That resistance increases pull & shortens the Philter Phibres, tightening Phurlons, & drawing neighbouring Phenom inward in a chain reaction. This creates a pinch point, a region so dense with mass that even projection can’t escape. To us, it appears as a black hole. And it’s not just dark, it’s curved. If you were an ant crawling along the membrane, you’d reach a steep drop at the pinch. Not because the hole is sucking you in but because the geometry has folded beneath you. And you wont see inside because you’ve reached the horizon of curvature.
Nothing is destroyed. Nothing disappears. It’s all still there just folded in.
Now flip the membrane. From the other side of the pinch, the same location now rises into a peak. The Phenom here are the opposite: small mass, long Phurlons, low tension. Light flows freely. Energy projects outward. This peak appears to us as a star, a fountain of projection.
One side pulls light in. The other pushes it out. One folds down. The other folds up.
From this perspective, the universe doesn’t contain a scattered mix of stars & black holes. It contains a symmetric fabric: equal pinch points, some rising & some falling, randomly distributed through the Phenomena. And when either collapses like the black hole exhausts its tension, or the star burns through its projection then the pinch flattens. The region returns to a stretched membrane. Or, if the conditions reverse, the fold may invert: star becomes hole, or hole becomes star, depending on where you’re standing.
Imagine that inside every star is a black hole, not metaphorically, but geometrically. The black hole is the core, the inward tension centre. The star is the outer light that's projecting & releasing that tension. The two are connected through the pinch. The star ejects mass outward, but that projection creates the inward force that powers the black hole's compression. The black hole pulls mass inward to fuel the star’s projection. The star is what you see. The black hole is what it’s made of.
If a black hole is the belly of a stars body & sudden emissions like solar flares & mass ejections etc are like burps. Perhaps an equal an opposite action is happening & the black hole just swallowed a large amount of energy or mass. The star ejecting that energy or mass would enable an inwards push to compress the contents of the black hole belly. These processes may work in perfect tandem.