The “Double Slit Experiment” is another piece of quantum-physics, and I’m going to share it with you to widen your eyes in preparation for the final reveal. Also known as “Young’s Experiment,” Merriam-Webster.com defines it as: “An experiment in which light diverging from one slit passes two narrow slits very close together and then falls on a screen so that a series of parallel bands are observed on the screen because of interference of light from the two slits.” This definition is lacking in specificity. The implications of that definition is that waves of light can act like particles, but although that is a big deal, it’s not the important part. When matter is fired through two slits, it leaves two bands on the back wall, but waves hit each other on the way out and create an interference pattern of many bands. They slowed things down to one particle at a time an they continued to get that interference pattern of many bands that could only come from other light particles, that aren’t currently present. That means, long story short, 1 particle became a wave of potentiality, simultaneously going through just one slit, just the other, both and neither all at the same time, and it interacted with itself. They attempted to observe the slits so they could quantify which slits it was going through, and the particle went back to behaving as a particle instead of a wave. The act of observing changed the particles behavior, and this was a groundbreaking revelation of mind to science, because it shows some aspect of our being can collapse a wave function simply by observing it. The purest takeaway of this is that our minds really do affect the world around us. Believe it. I first learned about this while reviewing the work of Nessim Haramein.