Posted on April 27, 2025
Are Black Holes Glitches in Time? A New Way to See the Universe
Most people think of black holes as cosmic monsters — dense, dark places devouring everything nearby.
But what if black holes aren’t just about gravity?
What if they’re actually a glitch in the flow of time itself?
This is my own theory.
I believe that black holes are formed through a deep paradox happening at the moment of a star’s explosion — a paradox where time splits into two different paths at the same point in space.
Here’s how:
When a massive star collapses and explodes, particles inside it behave very differently depending on where they are:
- Particle 1, located deep in the dense center of the star, experiences extreme gravity and moves outward at very high speed because the explosion starts from the core.
- Particle 2, sitting near the surface of the star, is still waiting for the explosion to reach it and is much less affected by gravity.
Now, because of two combined effects — high density and high speed — time for Particle 1 slows down massively, almost to a stop.
Meanwhile, time for Particle 2 (on the surface) moves much more normally.
From Particle 2’s point of view, when looking at the center, Particle 1 appears frozen — it’s stuck in time and not moving outward.
But from Particle 1’s own perspective, it is moving outward very fast, and it actually passes Particle 2 during the explosion.
This creates a time paradox:
- From outside, Particle 1 looks stuck at the center, frozen.
- But from its own reality, Particle 1 has already shot outward, way ahead.
This makes time look like a “Z” shape at that point:
- One branch goes into the past (Particle 1 still being seen at the center),
- One branch goes into the future (Particle 1 already out, having exploded away),
- And both exist approximately at the same time from different perspectives.
Because of this paradox, Particle 1 disappears from regular spacetime:
- From the outside world’s view, it isn’t really there anymore.
- It’s lagging infinitely behind the normal flow of time — or jumped infinitely ahead — depending on how you look at it.
This is why black holes appear black:
It’s not just that light can’t escape.
It’s that the very particles themselves are stuck in a warped, impossible timeline — a Z-shaped glitch — where from one side they should be there, and from another side they already aren’t.
A Bigger Idea: Maybe Our Whole Universe Is Inside a Black Hole
Taking this theory further:
What if our entire universe is inside a black hole — formed by such a paradox?
- Our universe is expanding.
- Black holes stretch space and slow down time infinitely.
- From inside a black hole, if you survived, it might feel like everything around you is expanding outward.
- Just like we observe in our own universe.
Maybe what we experience as “the Big Bang” was actually the inside view of a black hole explosion from another reality — another universe.
In this view:
- Black holes aren’t just the end of stars.
- They are the seeds of new realities.
- Every black hole could birth an entirely new universe inside its own warped timeline.
Final Thoughts
This is my personal theory:
Black holes aren’t just dense pits of gravity.
They are cracks in time, where timelines bend, collide, and break —
where the rules of “before” and “after” don’t make sense anymore —
and where entire new universes might be born.
When you look into a black hole, maybe you aren’t just seeing the death of a star.
Maybe you’re looking at the birth of another world — hidden behind the glitch of time itself.