Yes...I have been absent. In my defence I've been working like an ant. I've been reading far too much for University, wading through medical files at work, and doing a lot of writing, bith personal and for my website. Coupled with the fact that everyone at my badminton club is injured, meaning I have to play in each and every match...and before you know it, it's the 22nd of January.
Which makes me think about time. A dangerous pastime. (hoho!)
All of us wish time away too easily. The one thing that is immutably finite, and we're all too happy to see it gone. I guarantee that when your time comes, all you will wish for is more time: that extra minute to tell someone how much you love them, to smooth things over with an old friend, to forgive someone who has slighted you...
A white wizard once said "all we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given to us."
Time flies. It does.
Don't let it fly past you.
Hope you're all seizing the day
Which makes me think about time. A dangerous pastime. (hoho!)
All of us wish time away too easily. The one thing that is immutably finite, and we're all too happy to see it gone. I guarantee that when your time comes, all you will wish for is more time: that extra minute to tell someone how much you love them, to smooth things over with an old friend, to forgive someone who has slighted you...
A white wizard once said "all we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given to us."
Time flies. It does.
Don't let it fly past you.
Hope you're all seizing the day
VIEW 13 of 13 COMMENTS
do you start to get vertigo if you think about time too much? we're never still in any one of our four dimentions. telling children to keep still is therefore the most spectacularly futile instruction. they would have to be attached to a temporal Foucault's pendulum, and even then they would not be still relative to the relative (usually parent) doing the telling.
suddenly the Rat Pack's comment about lying on the floor without holding on seems a bit more sensible...