So, I'm following the MIT OCW lectures on 8.04 quantum mechanics by Prof. Allan Adams. I have the expression for the probability distribution of a gaussian wavepacket for a free particle situation. No initial momentum is imparted. This is a non-relativistic treatment.
$$\mathbb{P}(x,t) = \frac{1}{\sqrt{\Pi}} \frac{1}{\sqrt{a^{2}+(\frac{\hbar}{2ma})^2t^{2}}} e^{\frac{-x^{2}}{2(a^{2}+(\frac{\hbar}{2ma})^2t^{2})}}$$
Say at time $t=5$, I calculate the gaussian form. If I then ask what would the gaussian have looked like at time $t=-5$, the answer would be the same, because of the quadratic factors of $t$. Basically, as you decrease $t$ from $t=5$, the gaussian gets tighter till $t=0$, and then disperses again for negative times.
If someone at time $t=-5$ had indeed actually prepared a gaussian wavepacket of the form we found above at time $t=5$, and propagated the system forward in time, that person would have to update $a$ in the expression for $\mathbb{P}(x,t)$ and would find that the gaussian disperses instead of getting tighter.
There seems to be a contradiction here. How do I reconcile the two scenarios?