Walking through Manhattan after reading Asymmetry, one becomes acutely aware of the city's relentless pulse, its capacity to both connect and isolate. The Upper West Side brownstones, where Alice and Ezra shared quiet moments, seem to whisper of intellectual intimacy and unspoken power dynamics. Further downtown, the bustling streets echo the frenetic energy of Amar's world, a world of global connections and urgent dispatches, a stark contrast to the measured pace of Alice’s life. The city itself embodies the book's central themes: the imbalance of privilege, the chasm between perceived realities, and the quiet, persistent hum of lives unfolding in parallel, each oblivious to the profound influence they exert on one another. Even a simple walk across Central Park, a space shared by all, becomes a meditation on the invisible boundaries that separate us, a tangible reminder of the asymmetries that shape our lives.