Time

Professor Andrei Pimenov and associates at the Institute of Solid State Physics at the Vienna University of Technology recently discovered a way to directly measure the fine structure constant that relates to the strength of electromagnetic fields. Their method involved interacting a polarized laser light with a thin film. They determined that the thin film rotated the polarization of the laser light in quantized angles exactly equal to the fine structure constant.

This research shows that this rotation in the physical world is not smooth and continuous but rather happens in a series of tiny angles, the way a movie is not continuous movement but rather a sequence of still images. But what transmits the quality of rotation from one angle to the next? In a movie, there is a mechanism that turns off the image, selects the next image, and paints the next image on the screen. Taking a conceptual quantum leap, this suggests that in our world, everything at the quantum level is like this, a series of static moments of reality connected in some way from the past moment to the present, then to the next moment in a series of tiny quantum leaps.

If so, what transmits the information defining the present moment to the next moment of time? Something fluid and invisible happens between each moment and the next and seems to be related to consciousness. Intuition suggests that if we could insert ourselves into that fluid interval between one moment and the next, we could alter reality more profoundly than if we just watch life passively like the audience for a movie. Our physical bodies and senses always lag behind reality by the few tenths of a second it takes our sensors and nerves to transmit to the brain and process the information. We are always reacting to the past. Our deeper consciousness that we call the Soul does not seem to have this limitation.

In meditation, we are told we can access this dynamic fluid moment between each quantum of static reality. In Buddhism, we call this “catching up to the present moment” or “going with the flow.” It takes mental stillness or “no thought” to be in this mental state. It’s what we call wow or aha moments that are difficult to achieve and even harder to maintain for any length of time. When we can do this, magic happens. When I try to conceptualize this process, my brain gets boggled and shuts down. But intuition let me write a poem about this:

When we live within our heart,

We dwell within the cracks of time,

Between the tick and the tock, 

Where anything is possible. 

This idea of fluid moments connecting quantum leaps is a bit rough and speculative, but aligns with what advanced meditators say to be true.  It feels like here may be a key to understanding reality, if only I had the intelligence to put the pieces of the puzzle together. What do you think? Can you clarify, expand, or refute this?