Exactly. And we can only see a tiny tiny part of it, and the tiny part we can see is mind boggling massive. The James Webb telescope can see the existence of the HD1 galaxy that's 13.5 billion light years away, but we only see it as a tiny speck of light, a few blury pixles. Whats crazy to me is how we see it as it was 13.5 billion years ago because thats how long the light took to reach us. It may not even exist today, and for sure isn't even in the same spot that we see it at today.
For those who may want to understand scale, almost every star we see in the sky with our naked eye is a sun inside our own milkyway galaxy. There are between 100-400 BILLION suns in our galaxy alone. Then our galaxy exists in the Virgo supercluster which contains thousands of other galaxies. Then, there are thousands of superclusters with thousands of galaxies of their own with billion of suns and untold billion of planets.
Freaking nuts!