Lying down inside a machine every day that makes buzzing
noises and flashing lights makes you (well…me) think of scientific things…like death
rays…or protons and electrons. It’s protons that are being shot into me with
their “search and destroy” mission, but electrons are just as interesting. Both
of these particles get what scientists call “entangled,” and both of them do
what Einstein called “spooky action at a distance.” Don’t you love the
language? It’s as if these things know each other really well and can predict what
the other will do.
Mikael and Elai started showing their budding “entanglement”
at the shower—in the shoe game. They each held a shoe in each hand, one of
their own and one of the other person’s (they were both black sneakers, so we
had to identify them by the laces), and when Carolyn asked a question like “Who
is more romantic?” (Mikael), or “Who is more creative?” (Elai), they had to
raise the appropriate shoe. Funny thing was, they answered identically almost
every time, right down to the hesitations and the times they raised both shoes.
Pretty good for beginners, I’d say. Hope it grows to perfection.
Like electrons...which can appear in the universe already paired—already
married, so to speak. These paired electrons always have opposite spins. If one
spins up, the other always spins
down, no matter what, because they are mirror images of one another. They are entangled. If you split these entangled
(married) particles apart and send them far away from each other, they stay
connected somehow. They communicate telepathically, faster than the speed of
light, and nothing can travel faster
than the speed of light. Einstein called this spooky and tried very hard to
disprove it. The experiment that annoyed him goes like this. If you split married
electrons and send them down different paths, and you randomly change the spin of one of the electrons,
guess what happens to the spin of the other electron? Yes, it will still be the
opposite of its pair. You can measure it at the same instance you change the
first one, and it will always mirror its fellow, even when there was no time
for the change to be communicated. How does it know?
And protons do something similar. If you split a proton in
two, sending half of its light to one lab and the other half to another lab,
and then you try to detect where the photon traveled, Lab A or Lab B, you’ll
always only ever detect one photon.
It might be in Lab A or Lab B, but never both. It’s described as a wave
traveling to both labs, but when you
measure it as a particle in one or the other, you find that photon particle somewhere and the wave collapses in the other lab. It disappears. You only ever
find one photon even though the wave went to both labs. How does that wave know?
Spooky action at a distance and entanglement happens
everywhere, as if a God who is One is giving us lessons. In humans,
psychologists see it in mirror neurons. That’s what makes you yawn (go ahead)
because someone else is yawning. It makes you react when things aren’t
happening to you directly. When something happens to someone you love, someone
with whom you have been paired or entangled, your neurons fire exactly as
theirs fire. You feel their disappointment, their joy, their anger. You react. Even
when they are far away. You don’t necessarily get telepathic messages when
someone you love is in trouble, (though God prompts you to pray sometimes, and
things happen, and Einstein would call that “spooky”). What I mean is that
there are ties between us that surprise us. They make us do strange things like
drive to Michigan in the middle of the night or choose just the right gift. We
can predict each other’s actions and be affected by them even over
distance. We’re more tied than we think.
We’re practicing for the time when we are “One, even as the Father and I are
One,” the ultimate entanglement, the source of all “spooky action at a
distance.” Marriage, and everything that we do because love “pairs” us, is a
preview. Someday we’ll be playing the shoe game as one body and getting every
answer right because we will know as we are known. And we will all laugh
together. We will “be of one mind.” Finally. The wedding will be breath-taking
and the pairing finally perfect. Better, even, than electrons.
We should be taking notes and practicing.
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