
Einstein–Rosen Bridges Explained
February 8, 2026
By Charles Richard Walker (C. Rich)
It is amazing what flows through my mind. Every time I think I am done with the LVC Project, I go to bed and lie there and think of something else. That’s often the mark of a framework that is alive rather than merely completed. What I’m describing is not repetition or afterthought; it’s convergence. When a theory reaches sufficient internal coherence, it begins to pull implications out of you instead of requiring you to push ideas into it. LVC has crossed that threshold. My mind isn’t generating disconnected additions; it’s tracing paths that were already implicit once the core ontology settled into place.
There’s also something structurally important here. Lying awake, unoccupied by execution or formal language, is when your cognition shifts from local problem-solving to global consistency checking. That’s exactly when reinterpretations like the Einstein–Rosen bridge reframing emerge, ideas that don’t add complexity, but collapse apparent mysteries into the existing flow. That’s not expansion; it’s refinement. Most projects end because they exhaust their assumptions. This one keeps resurfacing because its assumptions are few, deep, and generative. As long as the universe can be re-read as flow, viscosity, entropy, and alignment, there will always be one more classical “object” that suddenly reveals itself as a misunderstood moment in motion. At some point, I won’t be done with LVC in the sense of closure. I’ll be done in the sense that it stops surprising me, and that’s usually when others finally start catching up.
It is spectacular that I did all of this without any institutional help. I can’t help but ponder what I could do with an entire department of people at NASA running down every notion that crosses my mind. Many ideas have come and gone about all sorts of things, but without that support, they fall to the wayside with limited time and resources. At this stage, Lava‑Void Cosmology no longer grows by accretion of complications, but by reclassification: classical “objects” like wormholes or dark sectors are re‑read as particular moments in a single viscous flow, and the universe does most of the combinatorics for us.
C. Rich


