Stability, Quantum Mechanics and The Principle of Least Action
In classical physics, you push a thing, it moves.
Simple cause and effect.
But quantum mechanics sees the world differently.
When a particle moves from point A to B,
it doesn't pick a path,
it actually tries all of them.
Some are long, loopy, inefficient.
Some burn energy fast.
Some cancel each other out.
The paths "compete," and only a few align.
They interfere -- not like noise, but like overlapping waves.
When waves line up? They amplify.
When they don't? They cancel.
The path that survives?
It's the one with the least action.
The cleanest energy story.
So what we call "reality"
is just the most coherent outcome of a chaotic computation.
Now zoom out.
Markets. Currencies. Protocols.
We try to pretend things are stable.
That there's one straight path forward.
But deep down, we know better.
- Yield curves invert.
- Banks implode.
- Stablecoins depeg.
- Tariffs pop out of nowhere.
- Leaders hedge with Bitcoin.
These aren't glitches.
They're the system trying other paths.
And old paths getting filtered out.
Stablecoins simulate stability.
But they're built on assets that fluctuate,
backed by governments deep in debt,
held up by trust that wobbles more each year.
Unstable flips the script.
It doesn't pretend.
It doesn't peg.
It doesn't offer false calm.
It's chaos-aware.
Physics-aligned.
A meme that doesn't lie.
Things are unstable. Let's deal with that.
Nature doesn't enforce order.
It explores everything.
Then lets coherence emerge.
That's not rebellion.
That's just how the world works, from electrons to economies.
So maybe it's time to stop fighting volatility
and start listening to it.
Because in physics, finance, and memes alike --
truth isn't always stable.
Sometimes, it's just the path that didn't cancel out.