If this theory is true, it means that the electrons in our bodies are
the same electron, the only difference being that my electrons are, say,
billions of years older than your electrons. If this theory is correct,
it also helps to explain a fundamental principle of chemistry: that all
electrons are alike. (A modern-day version of this theory would be to
have a one-string universe.)
Imagine ... the act of creation. Assume that out of the chaos and fire of
the Big Bang came only one electron. This electron moves forward in time
for billions and billions of years until it arrives at another
cataclysmic event - the end of time, or Doomsday. This shattering
experience, in turn, reverses the direction of the electron and sends it
back in time. When this same electron arrives back at the Big Bang, its
direction is reversed once again. The electron is not splitting up into
many electrons; it is the same electron that zigzags back and forth like
a Ping Pong ball between the Big Bang and Doomsday. Now, anyone sitting
between the Big Bang and Doomsday in the twentieth century will notice a
large number of electrons and antielectrons. In fact, we can assume that
the electron has traveled back and forth enough times to create the sum
total of electrons in the universe. (Of course, an object traveling back
and forth in space cannot create more than one copy of itself.
However, an object going back and forth in time can indeed have
copies of itself.... In principle, this effect of going backward and
forward in time can be repeated an arbitrary number of times, thereby
creating an infinite number of carbon copies in the present.)
Michio Kaku, Beyond Einstein