The essence of quantum physics and how the world (including yours) really works
- JAN SWERTS
- 2 days ago
- 3 min read

Quantum physics describes how matter and energy behave at the smallest level—the realm of atoms and subatomic particles.
The word quantum literally means a reasonable amount of electromagnetic energy and refers to the fact that energy does not flow continuously, but occurs in small packets (𝘬𝘸𝘢𝘯𝘵𝘢). This insight has profoundly changed our worldview: reality is not as “fixed” and “material” as it seems.
When matter is reduced to its smallest components, it turns out that everything ultimately consists of energy—vibration, movement, potential.
The so-called “solid” world is actually a dance of energy and information.
In a sense, we live in a kind of holographic reality, in which each particle contains a reflection of the whole.
Scientists are investigating this idea in the holographic principle: the possibility that the information of the universe is present everywhere on a subtle level.
These insights are not entirely new. Ancient spiritual traditions already spoke of an interconnectedness between all things. The Buddhist Sutras, for example, speak of Indra's web: an infinite network of jewels, in which each jewel reflects the whole.
This image closely resembles what we would now describe as a holographic universe. Every thought, emotion, or action causes a vibration in that web—a ripple in the field of consciousness that permeates everything.
The ancient Greeks, for example, called that field “Ether,” the fifth element. In modern spiritual language, we speak of Universal Consciousness or God Consciousness — the living fabric that connects everything.
Scientifically speaking, this is no longer called ether, but the idea of a “field” that fills space (such as the quantum field) remains.
Reality as experience
A striking metaphor is a film: a film consists of separate images that are shown in rapid succession. Our eyes really do see each image separately, no matter how fast it goes.
Our brains connect those images and interpret them as movement and story—as if it were continuous.
This is how we experience reality: every thought, emotion, or experience is a snapshot in a larger continuum of energy and consciousness. Every event, thought, feeling, or emotion is an electromagnetic event that is perceived as a movie.
Because everything is connected, every inner change affects the whole. That is also the core of manifestation: what we carry within ourselves is sooner or later reflected in our outer reality because it already exists as a possibility in different dimensions or realities.
Consciousness and collective change
Research shows that intention and attention influence human behavior and even social cohesion.
When groups of people meditate, there is a measurable calm in their environment — an effect that some researchers are trying to understand in terms of collective consciousness. It only takes 0.1% of people to bring about change in the world. That means, for example, that when 100 people meditate for whatever reason, this is felt by 10,000 people (unconsciously). You collectively change the “web.” Those 15% of people who are doing the right thing, who are awake, conscious, spiritual, doing something for others, keep the collective in balance (approximately, I think).
Whether one approaches this scientifically or spiritually, the message remains the same:
If you want to change the world, start with yourself.
When we cultivate inner peace, clarity, and compassion, we contribute to a healthier collective reality.
Selftransformation is the key to changing the world. That's how I see it.
And that is why I am doing everything I can to help. I bring you everything that already exists as a possibility. I don't do that myself, because you do that yourself. I only provide the opportunity, the door that I open.







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