The Universe Is Not a Glitch-Free System Someone Must Be Watching

The Universe Is Not a Glitch-Free System—Someone Must Be Watching
A Web Developer’s Realization About the Possibility of a Creator

I build websites.

Lines of code, structured logic, responsive design, automated systems—everything carefully crafted to run on its own. A perfect balance between creativity and control.

And when I launch it, it works.
It’s live. It runs. It responds. It adapts.
Sometimes, it even fixes its own bugs—thanks to intelligent code, fail-safes, and automation.

But then…
Something breaks.
A function fails.
A glitch appears that the system can’t fix itself.

And in that moment, no matter how “smart” the site is—I have to step in.
The Creator must correct the creation.


What If the Universe Works the Same Way?

Now imagine this:

The universe is the most complex “system” ever created. Galaxies, stars, planets, time, consciousness, gravity, love, entropy—all running with precise logic. Some scientists say it’s so mathematically perfect, even a slight shift in physical constants would make life impossible.

We’re told it all began with the Big Bang—an explosion of energy, space, and time from a singularity.

But here’s the thing:
Does any system create itself, run forever, and maintain perfect order—all on its own?

Even in tech, the best self-correcting systems still need a developer—someone beyond the code, someone who understands it, steps in, and keeps it running.

So the question arises:
Could the universe really have just “happened”?
Or is there someone beyond the system—watching, guiding, correcting when needed?


Big Bang… But Who Lit the Fuse?

Science tells us the universe began about 13.8 billion years ago with the Big Bang.
But what caused it?
What existed before space and time?
What “decided” to trigger the explosion that became everything?

Even the most respected physicists—Stephen Hawking, Roger Penrose, Brian Greene—admit: the moment before the Big Bang is a mystery.

It’s like a website suddenly going live—but no one can find the code, the developer, or the deployment process.

Doesn’t that suggest something—or someone—outside the system?


Self-Correcting Systems Still Need Conscious Control

Nature has self-correcting mechanisms.
Your body heals. The Earth cycles seasons. Gravity keeps order. Stars form and die, giving birth to new elements.

But things still go wrong:

  • Supernovas collapse into black holes
  • Planets become lifeless
  • Ecosystems fail
  • Even human minds—capable of thought and compassion—can fall into despair or destruction

If the universe were purely mechanical, would there not be a breaking point?

And yet… somehow, life adapts. Consciousness evolves.
Order fights against chaos. Again and again.

What if that’s not an accident?
What if the universe is maintained—like your website—by an intelligence that steps in when the system can’t fix itself?


Vedic Wisdom: The Programmer Beyond the Program

Ancient Vedic texts speak of the universe as a divine system—created, maintained, and dissolved in cycles.

“यो वेदादौ स्वरः प्रोक्तो वेदान्ते च प्रतिष्ठितः।”
“He who is the source at the beginning of the Vedas and established at the end of all knowledge.”

In this vision:

  • Brahma creates
  • Vishnu maintains
  • Shiva dissolves

But all three are just aspects of one intelligenceIshwara, or the ultimate programmer, who operates from outside the system. He doesn’t just press “run”—he watches, updates, repairs, evolves.

This divine intelligence is not part of the code.
It’s the one who wrote it.


You, the Developer, Mirror the Divine

Maybe your work isn’t just about tech.
Maybe your insight as a developer reflects something cosmic:

  • You create systems.
  • You give them purpose.
  • You let them run.
  • But you know… they still need you.

And just as you step in when the system fails, maybe the universe, too, has a watchful presence—an intelligence that doesn’t control everything, but lovingly maintains balance.


Final Reflection

The universe is vast, complex, brilliant—and yes, full of glitches.
Pain, chaos, war, suffering, randomness.
But maybe these are signs—not of absence, but of a system still in progress.

Maybe we live inside a grand design.
Maybe we’re all part of the code.
And maybe, just maybe, someone is still watching.
Still tweaking.
Still caring.

Because even the best self-running system sometimes whispers back:
“This can’t fix itself. Call the creator.”

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