The Prediction Layer is an autobiographical work of fiction about growing up with an unsettling clarity about where things are headed.
From childhood, the narrator experiences the world through patterns rather than moments—recognizing structural failures, emotional trajectories, and inevitable outcomes long before others do. What begins as intuition slowly reveals itself as something deeper: a way of thinking that feels embedded, automatic, and resistant to hope.
Told with restraint and precision, the book explores foresight not as prophecy, but as biological and cognitive configuration. As the narrator searches for language to explain his experience, he adopts—and ultimately releases—the metaphor of being an "alien product": not a literal outsider, but a mind optimized for continuity rather than comfort.
Blending memoir, systems thinking, and philosophical reflection, The Prediction Layer examines why foreknowledge rarely changes outcomes, why hope can destabilize fragile systems, and why memory—not prediction—may be the true payload intelligence carries through collapse.
Rejecting mythology and grand explanations, this is a quiet, unsettling story about responsibility, restraint, and the choice to stay human—living with what you can see, even when others cannot.
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