We think of Earth as a world of light.
Sunrise. Sunset. The golden hour. The way light filters through leaves. We build our lives around its rhythms.
But this is a lie we tell ourselves - a comfortable fiction born from the accident of living on the dry parts.
Most of Earth has never seen a single photon of sunlight. Not once. Not ever.
The Numbers Don't LieLet's do the math:
The average depth of the ocean is 3,600 meters (over 2 miles).
Sunlight penetrates, at most, 100 meters of water.
Beyond that? Absolute, permanent, unbroken darkness.
That means roughly 99% of Earth's living space - the volume where life can exist - lies in eternal night.
Think about that number. Ninety-nine percent. The world you know - the bright, sun-drenched surface - is a tiny, paper-thin film floating atop a planet-sized realm of blackness.
You live on the ceiling. The rest of Earth is the basement, and the lights have never been on.





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