Divine love is usually spoken of in the language of prayer, myth or philosophy. In “Just Love Her”, Raz walks that same territory, but he does something more daring: he treats love almost like a field of reality itself, something closer to a quantum fabric than a private emotion.
If modern physics speaks of entanglement, superposition and the observer effect, “Just Love Her” speaks of soul images, divine love and lived mystical experience. Read side by side, they sound like two dialects of the same truth.

This article weaves those quantum inspired ideas with concrete passages from “Just Love Her”, with page references, so everything stays anchored in the book itself.
Divine love as the underlying field of existence
The quantum view of reality suggests that what looks solid and separate is actually patterns of energy and information. “Just Love Her” mirrors that intuition in the language of the heart.
On page 15 Raz moves from ordinary words to something much deeper:
“Words are also spoken in silence. The echo of feelings mixed with the vibration and frequency of thoughts in your mind are perceived telepathically by others, no matter the distance. What gives absolute power to any word in existence is not the word itself but the soul that releases it with the meaning behind the name fuelled by feelings. The accurate word for my soul is love, which means to exist as a deity in an absolute and infinite state.”
(Just Love Her, p. 15)
This is not just romantic language. It mirrors the idea that reality is not only particles and forces, but also meaning and consciousness. Where quantum theory describes the universe as built from invisible fields and probabilities, Raz suggests something parallel: the true field is love itself, released through the soul.
He then gives love a foundational role:
“Love is the source of everything and is the ‘blood’ of our souls and existence itself.”
(Just Love Her, p. 15)
Physics might say that fields and energy underpin matter. In “Just Love Her”, love underpins both soul and world. Divine love is not a mood. It is the ground of being.
Entanglement and soul images: the non local embrace
Quantum entanglement links two particles so that a change in one is reflected in the other, regardless of distance. Thinkers often use this as a metaphor for cosmic interconnectedness. Raz writes the same phenomenon from inside a single love story.
On page 11 he describes the beloved in terms that read like a lived version of entanglement:
“When I look at Her, I feel her with my heart as part of it. With every breath in and out, my brain is aware of her inner touch. Our souls are connected in one because only her soul image is inside. My soul is breathing love through her existence. That is the only feeling my brain perceives from her reality inside my heart: divine love, or at least the closest word that can describe this feeling.”
(Just Love Her, p. 11)
“Souls are connected in one” sounds like non local correlation spoken from the chest instead of the blackboard. It is not theory. It is physical sensation, breath by breath.
Later, the quantum imagery becomes explicit. In Seoul, reflecting on love and destiny, Raz writes:
“Maybe not in this reality, present or future, not shadowing the past lives, but certainly in a quantum realm entangled by the feelings and moments of divine love for Her in this life. Our souls existence will connect our soul images realities beyond any laws and constants of a possible destiny.”
(Just Love Her, p. 165)
Here the metaphor comes full circle. Divine love appears as an entangled realm that ignores distance, linear time and even a single lifetime. Entanglement is no longer about electrons. It is about souls.
Superposition, destiny and the right time
Superposition describes a particle existing in multiple possible states until it is measured. Some spiritual writers have borrowed this as an image of pure potential. “Just Love Her” turns that into the mystery of timing, destiny and choice.
On page 38 Raz openly refers to quantum thought:
“In the future, science will prove that we are way more things and forces than our bodies and that life will exist for love and enlightenment. Steps for this future have already started with quantum realm discoveries. The right time is like in Schrodinger’s cat paradox, where a cat is dead and alive until someone opens the box to find out. Until it happens, nothing is for sure. It could occur if both souls are in ‘the box’. If one soul is outside the box, it can free up another. Love is the key to breaking out of the box. Divine love reflection awareness is knowledge about the clue. Divine love is the creator and energy contained in the whole process.”
(Just Love Her, p. 38)
Here “the box” is not a lab device. It is the liminal space between two souls and their possible futures. Both souls “in the box” means both captured in uncertainty and potential. One soul “outside” hints at awareness, freedom or a shift of consciousness.
The quantum idea of many possibilities waiting to be realised becomes, in the book, the felt sense of “the right time” in love. Love is the agent that both inhabits and breaks the box.
Observer effect, silence and telepathic love
The observer effect shows that the act of measurement influences what becomes real in a quantum experiment. Spiritual readings of this often suggest that consciousness participates in reality. “Just Love Her” offers a quiet, intimate version of that thought.
Again on page 15 Raz writes:
“Words are also spoken in silence. The echo of feelings mixed with the vibration and frequency of thoughts in your mind are perceived telepathically by others, no matter the distance.”
(Just Love Her, p. 15)
The observation here is not a physical instrument. It is inner attention. When one soul silently holds love, another can perceive it, even far away. Conscious focus becomes a kind of spiritual measurement, collapsing silent feeling into shared reality.
The quantum heart article treats this as a metaphor: by consciously engaging with compassion, the wave of potential love becomes action. “Just Love Her” echoes that by insisting that love is not a theory but a lived sacrifice, often wordless, radiating its own invisible signal.
“Love is God”: inverting the equation
Many traditions say “God is love”. The speculative quantum view of divine love often hints that love itself may be more fundamental than the images built around God. One of the most powerful lines in the book is the suggestion that divine love is not just one attribute of a distant deity, but something woven into reality itself. “Just Love Her” states this idea bluntly by flipping a familiar formula: “God is love” becomes “Love is God”.
On page 11 he reflects:
“My mind tried to conquer these feelings like ‘God is Love’. My heart intuitively created a space in my mind for the inception of the idea that ‘Love is God’.”
(Just Love Her, p. 11)
Instead of starting with a fixed God who kindly offers love, the book starts with love itself as the primary reality. God becomes the name given to the purest state of that love.
He goes further on the same page:
“Love is the Goddess from my heart beyond any religion, although all faiths praise its presence. When divine love inside takes form through a ‘soul image’, it is not something I thought. It is a gift for my soul.”
(Just Love Her, p. 15)
Where quantum inspired essays speak of divine love as an intrinsic property of reality, Raz personalises it as a living Goddess in the heart. It is the same move in different language: love is not a side effect. Love is the centre.
A bridge between science, religion and the human heart
Some reflections on quantum spirituality suggest that the new physics hints at a more unified picture of existence, where separation looks less convincing and relationship becomes central. “Just Love Her” names that bridge directly.
On page 27 Raz writes:
“All societies should have the same goal. Not power, nor greed, but love. Love is the bridge between everything, science, religion, nature and people. You name it.”
(Just Love Her, p. 27)
That line can stand as a thesis for the whole quantum heart vision. Quantum theory tries to unify forces and particles. Theology tries to unify creation and creator. Mystical experience tries to unify heart and world. Raz simply says: love is the bridge between all of them.
In that sense, “Just Love Her” is not only a personal diary of longing. It is a manual for living in a universe where divine love behaves very much like a field:
- It entangles souls beyond distance (p. 11, p. 165).
- It holds potential futures until the right time opens the box (p. 38).
- It travels silently between minds like an invisible signal (p. 15).
- It underlies science, religion, nature and human relationships as a single bridge (p. 27).
Closing thought
The quantum heart idea asks whether divine love might be an intrinsic property of the fabric of reality. “Just Love Her” quietly lives that answer. It does not try to turn quantum theory into doctrine, but it borrows some of its images to hint at something older and deeper: a universe where love is not a reward, but the ground of being itself.
Seen through this lens, the quantum heart is not an abstract concept. It is the lived reality of a soul who can say, with full conviction, that love is not only from God. Love is God. And in that realisation, the boundary between science, spirit and the human heart begins to dissolve.







