Humans are architects of the ethereal, constantly drafting blueprints for ghosts because we cannot endure the cold, hard geometry of the void. There is a peculiar arrogance in our humility when we look at the stars and sigh of "mysteries." We dress the cosmos in the velvet robes of the occult because our eyes are too small to hold the light. The "mystery" is a cataract on the human lens.
The immensity of the cosmos is a mathematical brutality that the human psyche is simply not wired to digest. To look into the throat of a vacuum that stretches across billions of light-years is to feel the ferrous plates of the ego begin to fracture. So, we reach for the sedative of the mystical. We take the terrifying, silent indifference of physics and name it "wonder." We take the complex, unyielding laws of entropy and call them "fate." It is a coping mechanism of the highest order—a psychic insulation against the biting chill of our own insignificance.
Mystery is the fiction the mind creates when it lacks the metabolic strength to process non-fiction. It is the literary skin we graft over the raw nerves of the unknown. When the data is missing, and we cannot digest a vacuum; we fill it with a story. We are a species that cannot breathe without narrative oxygen. We live inside stories like hermit crabs in found shells, clutching to the walls of a myth until the reality of a new discovery forces us to crawl, naked and shivering, into the next.
The "mysteries" of the universe are no more or less objective than the folklore we used to bind the trees and the forest. Once, the forest was a cathedral of spirits because we did not understand the quiet chemistry of photosynthesis or the fungal networks beneath the loam. Now, the forest is biology. Once, the lightning was the temper of a god whereas now, it is a discharge of electrostatic energy. We have stripped the forest and the sky of their divinity, yet we cling to the "mystery" of the deep cosmos as our final redoubt. We create our own myths daily, spinning them out of the gaps in our current archives, ensuring there is always a dark corner left for the imagination to inhabit.
In truth, what we call mystery is merely an objective fact that has not yet been introduced to a name. It is a simple truth waiting for its baptism in the waters of human nomenclature. The universe is a statement written in a language we are still learning to alphabetize. There is no poetry in a pulsar, only rotation and radiation, the poetry is the spillover of our own desperate need for meaning.
Until the day we can map the final coordinate and weigh the last atom, we will continue to tell these dreamy stories. We will point at the dark matter and the expansion of the void and call it a "mystery," treating our ignorance as if it were a sacred quality of the object itself rather than a limitation of the observer. But let us be honest: mystery is just the guest lobby for the mundane. It is the ornate, heavy curtain we hang before the window because we are not yet ready to look at the plain, unadorned light of what actually is. We prefer the shadow-play of the myth over the sterile clarity of the fact, living comfortably in the fiction until the non-fiction inevitably breaks the door down.