
“It is a solace to the mind when we come to understand that all limitation, from the standpoint of the Divinity within us, is unnecessary.” —Ernest Holmes
In conversations about quantum science, three ideas often come up: uncertainty, potential, and entanglement.
Uncertainty points to the fact that, at the smallest scales, we can’t know certain pairs of properties with perfect precision at the same time. Reality isn’t as fixed and predictable as our everyday minds would like it to be. And even when we do measure something, the deeper nature of what we’re observing isn’t simply “nailed down” in the way classical thinking assumes.
Potential reminds us that, before measurement, quantum systems can be described as a range of possible outcomes. That doesn’t mean “anything at all is possible,” but it does suggest that reality holds more than one pathway—and that what becomes actual depends on conditions, context, and interaction.
Entanglement means that some things are linked so deeply that their outcomes are correlated, even across distance. It’s not that “what happens in one place happens everywhere,” but that connection is more intimate than separation sometimes appears. The universe is not as divided as we imagine.
So I ask myself: What am I focused on? Where am I treating limitation as final? Where am I stuck in what I think is possible—for me and for the world?
I’ve been experiencing so many facets of life lately. Friends, colleagues, and people I feel both close to and distant from are moving through prosperity and lack, sickness and health—life in its fullness, in all its forms. And I can feel that I have a choice. When I speak with them, or even when I think about them, I can decide what I will resonate with and what I won’t.
Consciousness is contagious. My mission for my life is to keep myself in a high vibration no matter where I am or who I’m with. I don’t do this through avoidance, and I don’t do it by trying to convince anyone of my beliefs. I do it through choice—by focusing my attention on my own thought patterns, and on what helps me resonate with creativity, love, and joy.
When I feel sadness about an experience—mine or someone else’s—I work on reframing it with the understanding that each person has choice, just as I do. I am not responsible for anyone else’s decisions or life path. My field of responsibility is my own consciousness and how I show up in the world.
And this brings me back to Ernest Holmes’ quote. It is a solace to my mind to remember that within the great Allness—the eternality of every soul, the Presence we call Divine—limitation is unnecessary. Why is that a solace? Because whenever I turn my attention toward Spirit—toward the essence that is free beyond form, yet expressing as form—I remember that life can shift. The moment is alive. New outcomes can emerge.
So whatever you are experiencing right now, I invite you to sit with this: in the essence of your soul—your Divinity—limitation is not only unnecessary; it is not ultimate.
What do you want to experience now? Go deep. Listen inward. And choose.
Love and Aloha,
Rev. Dr. Rita Andriello-Feren