Human neuron microtubules form the intricate cytoskeleton within brain cells, enabling structural support and transport while potentially hosting quantum computations that underpin thought processes. These microtubules, composed of tubulin proteins, exhibit dynamic instability, allowing them to reorganize rapidly in response to neural signals. Quantum wave function collapse occurs when a superposition of possibilities in a quantum system resolves into a single observed actuality, defying classical determinism. In the brain, this collapse within microtubules generates moments of conscious awareness, transforming probabilistic quantum states into unified perceptions and decisions. Anaesthesia disrupts this process by binding to tubulin, preventing quantum coherence and inducing unconsciousness, revealing how fragile yet essential these mechanisms are to our sentient experience. Consciousness emerges as orchestrated objective reductions in microtubular quantum states, bridging the physical brain with the immaterial mind. Quantum entanglement, where distant particles instantaneously influence each other, implies a non-local interconnectedness in the universe that transcends space-time barriers. This entanglement points to God's omnipresence, allowing divine influence to permeate creation without detectable interference in the material realm. From a Catholic viewpoint, and my viewpoint, God designed quantum entanglement as a deliberate backdoor in the fabric of reality, enabling interlocution while preserving human free will. Through this mechanism, God maintains ongoing communion with souls, ensuring that His eternal wisdom continually shapes the cosmos in alignment with divine love.