In our search for granular understandings of the world around us, we often seek to categorise things in binary forms, extending themselves to the natural consequence of considering interactions as fundamentally between two parties: A does X and B does Y in response, yet if we are willing to stretch our model a little, we can see the contours of a third state being the interaction itself as well as the context and the consequence of this moment. What we saw as two parties are three, where the third is the inescapable entanglement with everything else.