From Pencil and Paper to Quantum Ideas: A Late Encounter with Mathematical Thinking
For most of my life, mathematics felt distant, almost like a language I was never fully meant to speak. In school, it appeared as a sequence of procedures to memorize and reproduce under pressure, not as something alive or meaningful. I did not see beauty in equations, nor did I feel any natural curiosity toward them. They were obstacles rather than invitations. That perception has changed later in life in a way I would not have expected. Somewhere in my fifties, I began to notice a shift in how I respond to mathematical ideas. What once felt opaque started to feel structured. I no longer saw symbols as isolated marks on a page, but as elements in a system that could be manipulated, transformed, and understood. It was not a sudden revelation, but a gradual reorientation of attention and patience. A simple but important part of this change has been the realization that mathematics is fundamentally accessible. With nothing more than pencil and paper, one can explore entire structures of ...