A letter on turn based reality

Hello,

I watched quite a few of the Your Daily Equation series, and I really enjoyed them, though I am no expert in physics myself (I only pursued it to AP in highschool). One video stood out regarding light having no rest mass, but having an effective mass when moving at the speed of light. I understand that this is mathematically supported, but it doesn't feel like there is an understanding in the current models of why it works (how it is possible to jump from 0 to "1" effective mass). This got me thinking about a model where this transition could be logically supported, and I was wondering if I could get your opinion on the underlying concept?

Basically the theory assumes that mass is always a derived property, and that all matter is made up of light moving in standing waves in pocket dimensions. So an electron would be a standing wave of a particular form, with light contributing its effective mass x times in the same "location" from our perspective in a single "turn" or moment of time. I know electrons are a bit hard to pinpoint if you're not measuring them, and I address issues like that in a post I've written on this, but for this introductory format let's assume that a measured electron in one position is basically light looping into our universe x times in a single "turn" or moment (x being related to the mass of an electron compared to the effective mass of light). It actually lines up relativistic effects and very small effects well, from a logical perspective anyway (as you essentially have both fundamental time or "turns" and apparent/relative time involved in the same model); I have no idea about the math.  

I go over several additional points in a fairly short blog post, if you'd like me to send it to you. Or of you have any initial comments/points of feedback, I'd be very interested in examining this theory further with the feedback of someone well versed in the field.

Thank you,
Evan

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