The Musings of Jaime David
The Musings of Jaime David
@jaimedavid.blog@jaimedavid.blog

The writings of some random dude on the internet

1,117 posts
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Tag: Time

  • The Myth of the “Right Time”

    The Myth of the “Right Time”

    There is a phrase that floats through almost every human life, a soft and reasonable sounding excuse that disguises itself as wisdom. “When the time is right.” We tell ourselves we’ll start when the timing is better. We’ll speak when the moment feels safer. We’ll love when the conditions are clearer. We’ll leave when the ground beneath us is steadier. We’ll create when the chaos settles. We’ll change when we feel ready. And in all of that waiting, in all of that quiet bargaining with the future, we slowly trade our lives for a promise that may never arrive.

    The idea of the “right time” feels comforting. It implies order. It suggests that somewhere ahead of us, hidden in the calendar or in fate or in some cosmic alignment, there exists a perfect window where everything will finally make sense. A moment when fear disappears, uncertainty fades, responsibilities loosen their grip, and clarity arrives like a gift. It’s an appealing fantasy. It gives us permission to delay. It gives us an explanation for our hesitation that sounds thoughtful instead of afraid. It makes inaction feel responsible. But the longer you live, the more obvious it becomes that this “right time” is less a reality and more a story we tell ourselves so we don’t have to confront how terrifying choice actually is.

    Because life does not pause to become convenient.

    There is always something in the way. There is always a bill, a deadline, a crisis, a distraction, a fear, a doubt, a voice in your head telling you to wait just a little longer. There is always another reason to postpone what matters. There is always another condition that could be improved. Another variable that feels unresolved. Another emotional knot that doesn’t quite feel untangled enough yet. If you are waiting for a moment when nothing interferes, when nothing hurts, when nothing distracts, when nothing scares you, you are not waiting for a time that exists in reality. You are waiting for a time that belongs only to imagination.

    And yet, almost all of us fall into this trap at some point.

    I did.

    For a long time, I convinced myself that patience was wisdom. That restraint was maturity. That delaying big feelings and big risks and big decisions meant I was being careful. Responsible. Strategic. I told myself that once I had more stability, more clarity, more confidence, more certainty, then I would finally act. Then I would finally say what I meant. Then I would finally pursue what I wanted. Then I would finally allow myself to become who I felt I was supposed to be.

    But what I didn’t realize at the time was that every “not yet” was quietly shaping my life anyway.

    Time does not wait for permission.

    While you are preparing, the world keeps moving. While you are hesitating, relationships shift. While you are planning, people leave. While you are waiting for the right moment, moments are passing. You are aging. Others are aging. Circumstances are changing. Opportunities are appearing and disappearing in ways you often don’t even notice until they are already gone. The future you are waiting for is not standing still and patiently holding space for you. It is constantly being rewritten by forces you do not control.

    And eventually, if you live long enough, something happens that shatters the illusion.

    You lose someone.

    Or you almost lose someone.

    Or you get sick.

    Or you watch time run out for somebody else.

    And suddenly the phrase “there’s still time” no longer feels as solid as it once did.

    Loss has a way of clarifying things in the most brutal and honest way possible. When someone you love disappears from your life, whether through death, distance, estrangement, or circumstances you cannot undo, the fantasy of endless tomorrows collapses. You realize that there were conversations you assumed you’d have later. Feelings you assumed you’d express eventually. Apologies you thought you could offer someday. Gratitude you meant to show when things slowed down. And now, that later no longer exists.

    Regret does not usually come from the things we did wrong.

    It comes from the things we never did at all.

    It comes from the words we swallowed. The risks we refused. The love we never admitted. The truth we kept hiding from ourselves and others. The paths we didn’t explore. The art we didn’t make. The boundaries we didn’t set. The life we postponed.

    What hurts most about regret is not that we failed.

    It is that we never even tried.

    And this is the part no one likes to say out loud: waiting for the right time is often just fear wearing a polite disguise.

    Fear of rejection. Fear of failure. Fear of embarrassment. Fear of loss. Fear of change. Fear of being seen too clearly. Fear of wanting something too badly and not getting it. Fear of discovering that the life you imagined might not actually fit you. Fear of learning that the dream you held onto might dissolve once you finally touch it.

    So instead, we tell ourselves stories.

    We say we’re not ready.

    We say the timing is off.

    We say we need more information.

    We say we need more money.

    We say we need more healing.

    We say we need more certainty.

    And sometimes those things are true. Sometimes waiting is necessary. Sometimes patience is wise. Sometimes caution protects us. Not every impulse should be followed. Not every desire should be acted on immediately. There are real responsibilities. Real consequences. Real limits. I am not arguing for recklessness or impulsivity. I am not saying that every moment of hesitation is wrong.

    But there is a difference between wisdom and avoidance.

    And most of us know, deep down, which one we are practicing.

    Avoidance has a particular feeling to it. It feels heavy. It feels repetitive. It feels like the same internal conversation looping endlessly without resolution. It feels like constantly moving the goalpost for when you are allowed to begin. It feels like life happening around you while you remain suspended in preparation mode. It feels like safety slowly turning into stagnation.

    And stagnation is not neutral.

    It costs you time.

    It costs you experiences.

    It costs you growth.

    It costs you connection.

    It costs you yourself.

    The cruel irony is that the conditions we are waiting for rarely arrive because the very actions we are postponing are often what would create those conditions in the first place. We wait to feel confident before we act, when confidence is usually built by acting. We wait to feel worthy before we speak, when worthiness often comes from being honest. We wait to feel ready before we change, when readiness is usually the result of choosing to change. We wait for clarity before we move, when clarity is often born from movement.

    Life is not something you solve before you live it.

    It is something you understand by living it.

    And the longer you delay participation, the more disconnected you become from your own unfolding.

    There is also another uncomfortable truth hiding inside the myth of the right time.

    It assumes that you will always have another chance.

    It assumes that people will remain accessible.

    It assumes that health will remain stable.

    It assumes that circumstances will remain reversible.

    It assumes that doors, once closed, can always be reopened.

    But anyone who has lived long enough knows that some opportunities are not repeatable.

    Some people leave and never come back.

    Some relationships change in ways that cannot be undone.

    Some windows close quietly and permanently.

    Some versions of yourself only exist for a short season of your life.

    And when that season passes, you cannot simply return to it.

    This is not meant to be morbid.

    It is meant to be honest.

    The finiteness of time is not a threat. It is a teacher.

    It reminds you that your life is not a rehearsal.

    That this is not a draft.

    That you do not get infinite revisions.

    And that waiting too long does not protect you from pain.

    It often guarantees it.

    Because here is the part that no one prepares you for: the pain of regret is usually heavier than the pain of action.

    Failure hurts, yes.

    Rejection hurts.

    Embarrassment hurts.

    But those wounds tend to heal.

    You learn from them.

    You integrate them.

    They become part of your story.

    Regret, on the other hand, is quieter and more persistent.

    It shows up at night.

    It appears in memories.

    It whispers in alternate timelines.

    It asks you who you might have been.

    It lingers in unanswered questions.

    It stays long after the moment has passed.

    And unlike most pain, regret offers no resolution.

    There is no redo.

    No apology.

    No confession.

    No second chance.

    Only acceptance.

    So at some point, after enough loss, enough near misses, enough almosts, enough maybes, something shifts.

    You stop asking when the time will be right.

    And you start asking whether you are willing to live with the consequences of never trying.

    You realize that courage is not the absence of fear.

    It is the decision that regret is worse.

    You realize that readiness is not a feeling.

    It is a choice.

    You realize that the right time is rarely a moment of perfect alignment.

    It is simply the moment you decide to stop waiting.

    This does not mean life suddenly becomes easier.

    In fact, often the opposite.

    Choosing to act usually makes things more complicated, at least in the short term.

    You disrupt routines.

    You risk relationships.

    You expose vulnerabilities.

    You invite uncertainty.

    You step into territory where outcomes are unclear.

    But you also begin to live more honestly.

    More fully.

    More consciously.

    You stop deferring your life to a hypothetical future version of yourself who is braver, calmer, stronger, wiser.

    You become that version by acting now.

    And slowly, something remarkable happens.

    You begin to notice that the chaos you were waiting to disappear was never going to vanish.

    That life is always unfinished.

    Always imperfect.

    Always in flux.

    And that meaning does not come from perfect timing.

    It comes from presence.

    From choosing to engage while things are messy.

    From loving while things are uncertain.

    From creating while things are unstable.

    From speaking while things are risky.

    From becoming while things are incomplete.

    The people you admire most are rarely the ones who waited until everything was ideal.

    They are the ones who moved while afraid.

    Who spoke while unsure.

    Who loved while vulnerable.

    Who changed while unready.

    Who acted while conditions were still flawed.

    Not because they were reckless.

    But because they understood something essential.

    That waiting forever is its own kind of decision.

    And often, the most dangerous one.

    At some point in my life, after enough grief and enough reflection, I made myself a quiet promise.

    I would no longer let fear disguise itself as patience.

    I would no longer postpone the words that mattered.

    I would no longer assume that time was abundant.

    I would no longer trade honesty for comfort.

    I would no longer wait for permission to be myself.

    This does not mean I rush everything.

    It does not mean I ignore consequences.

    It does not mean I abandon discernment.

    It means that when something matters deeply enough, I refuse to bury it beneath the fantasy of a better tomorrow.

    If I care about someone, I try to let them know.

    If I need to apologize, I do it sooner rather than later.

    If I feel called to create, I create now, even imperfectly.

    If I sense a truth rising inside me, I speak it while I still can.

    Because I have seen what happens when people wait too long.

    I have seen conversations that never happened.

    I have seen love that was never confessed.

    I have seen forgiveness that arrived too late.

    I have seen lives narrowed by caution.

    I have seen dreams quietly abandoned.

    And I know, with painful clarity, that someday my own time will also run out.

    Not dramatically.

    Not with a warning.

    Just one ordinary day when there are no more tomorrows left to postpone things into.

    So no, I do not believe in the right time anymore.

    I believe in this time.

    This flawed, inconvenient, complicated, imperfect moment you are living in right now.

    Because it is the only one that actually exists.

    Everything else is imagination.

    If there is something you need to say, say it.

    If there is someone you need to love, love them.

    If there is a truth you need to face, face it.

    If there is a path you feel drawn toward, take a step.

    Not because it is safe.

    Not because it is guaranteed.

    Not because the conditions are perfect.

    But because your life is happening now.

    And someday, sooner than you think, now will be gone.

    And I, for one, refuse to look back on my life and realize that I spent most of it waiting to begin.

  • A Few Days In: What the New Year Actually Feels Like Once the Noise Dies Down

    A Few Days In: What the New Year Actually Feels Like Once the Noise Dies Down

    A few days have passed since New Year’s now, which means the champagne metaphors have gone flat, the fireworks are long gone, and the artificial drama of the countdown has already started to feel vaguely embarrassing. The year has officially begun doing what years always do: continuing. No grand reset. No cinematic transition. Just the same world, the same self, slightly more tired, slightly more aware, slightly less interested in pretending that January 1st is magic.

    I’ve always thought the days immediately after New Year’s are more honest than New Year’s itself. The moment itself is too loud, too performative. Everyone is busy announcing resolutions, declaring transformations, promising reinvention. A few days later, the declarations start to dissolve into reality. The gym photos slow down. The word “manifest” quietly disappears from sentences. The year stops being symbolic and starts being practical. This is the part I trust more.

    So this isn’t a “fresh start” post. It’s not a resolution post. It’s not a vision board disguised as prose. It’s a check-in. A few days into the year, when the adrenaline is gone and what’s left is the quieter question of how it actually feels to be here, continuing forward with the same unfinished thoughts and unresolved contradictions.

    What strikes me most, sitting here now, is how little I feel like a different person. And I don’t mean that negatively. If anything, it’s grounding. There’s a strange pressure every New Year to perform personal evolution on command, as if growth must align neatly with the calendar. But growth doesn’t work like that. Growth happens when it happens, often invisibly, often inconveniently, often without your consent. Expecting to wake up on January 1st as a rebranded version of yourself is a recipe for quiet disappointment.

    Instead, I feel like myself. The same curiosities. The same sensitivities. The same questions that didn’t get answered last year and probably won’t get fully answered this year either. And that’s okay. I’m starting to believe that being unresolved isn’t a flaw. It’s just a state of being human.

    The past year, when I think about it now, doesn’t compress into a single narrative. It doesn’t resolve cleanly. It feels more like a collage of moods, efforts, false starts, and small internal shifts that don’t photograph well. There were moments of momentum, moments of stagnation, moments of genuine joy, moments of exhaustion that felt bone-deep. There were days when I felt aligned with myself, and days when I felt like I was watching my life from a slight distance, unsure how I ended up here or where exactly I was going.

    And yet, I kept going. That sounds simple, but it’s not nothing. Continuing is an underrated achievement. Especially in a world that constantly tells you that if you’re not accelerating, optimizing, or visibly improving, you’re somehow failing. Most of the meaningful work I did last year didn’t look impressive from the outside. It looked like thinking. Reconsidering. Sitting with discomfort. Letting certain illusions quietly die without replacing them immediately.

    A few days into this year, I’m noticing how tired I am of pretending I have a clear plan. I don’t mean I have no direction at all. I mean I’m done pretending that direction has to be rigid, linear, or publicly legible. There’s something deeply exhausting about constantly narrating your life as if it’s a pitch deck. Goals, milestones, timelines, outcomes. Sometimes all you have is a sense of what no longer works, and that has to be enough for now.

    Creatively, that tension hasn’t gone away. If anything, it’s more pronounced. I still feel pulled between wanting to create freely and wanting to create purposefully. Between writing because I have something to say and writing because I feel like I should be saying something. A few days into the year, I don’t have a manifesto. I have a quieter intention: to keep writing in ways that feel honest, even when honesty doesn’t feel productive or marketable or clean.

    Looking back, I realize how much of last year was spent negotiating with myself. Not dramatically, but constantly. Negotiating energy levels. Negotiating expectations. Negotiating how much of myself to give to the world versus how much to protect. There’s a version of me that wants to be louder, more visible, more assertive. There’s another version that craves retreat, depth, solitude, and slow thought. I don’t think either of them is wrong. I think the friction between them is just part of who I am.

    A few days into the new year, I’m less interested in resolving that friction and more interested in understanding it. Not everything needs to be smoothed out. Some tensions are structural. Some contradictions are permanent. Maybe the work isn’t to eliminate them, but to learn how to live inside them without self-contempt.

    There’s also a strange relief in admitting that the year doesn’t feel “new” yet. It feels ongoing. It feels like a continuation of conversations already in progress. I’m still thinking about the same themes I was thinking about months ago: identity, belonging, creativity, fatigue, meaning, the pressure to define oneself in a world obsessed with labels and outcomes. If anything, the repetition itself is revealing. The fact that these questions persist suggests they matter, even if they resist resolution.

    Emotionally, the start of the year feels muted rather than euphoric. Not sad. Not joyful. Just muted. A low, steady hum instead of a spike. And honestly, I trust that more. Big emotions burn fast. Subtle ones linger. This feels like a year that will unfold quietly, not announce itself loudly. A year of accumulation rather than revelation.

    I don’t know what this year will bring. That’s not false humility; it’s just reality. I don’t know which plans will survive contact with time. I don’t know which parts of myself will feel familiar by the end of it and which will feel unrecognizable. I don’t know what will shift internally in ways that won’t make sense until much later. And for once, I’m trying not to treat that uncertainty as a problem to be solved.

    A few days in, what I do know is this: I want to be present enough to notice the year as it happens. Not just document it after the fact, not just reduce it to outcomes and highlights. I want to notice the small internal movements, the subtle recalibrations, the moments when something clicks or quietly unravels. I want to pay attention to what drains me and what sustains me, even when that information is inconvenient.

    This blog, at its core, has always been about that kind of noticing. Not perfection. Not authority. Just attention. Writing here isn’t about having answers; it’s about making space for questions without rushing them out of existence. A few days into the year, that still feels like the right approach.

    I’m not setting resolutions here. I’m not declaring what kind of year this will be. I’m acknowledging where I am right now: a few days in, slightly disoriented, still carrying last year with me, still unsure, still thinking, still writing. That’s not a failure of imagination. It’s a starting point.

    If the year ends up being quiet, that’s fine. If it ends up being difficult, I’ll deal with that too. If it surprises me, I hope I’m paying enough attention to notice. For now, it’s enough to be here, a few days in, letting the year begin not with declarations, but with honesty.

    Time doesn’t reset. We don’t reboot. We just continue. And maybe that’s not as dramatic as we’re told it should be, but it’s real. And real is something I’m learning to value more than symbolic freshness.

    So here’s to the year, a few days late, stripped of its spectacle, already imperfect, already in motion. No promises. No slogans. Just presence, curiosity, and the willingness to keep going, even when “going” looks a lot like standing still and thinking.

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  • Let It Be: Unconventional Takes on Classic Paradoxes

    Let It Be: Unconventional Takes on Classic Paradoxes

    The world of paradoxes is often viewed as a playground for logic, mathematics, and armchair philosophers. But what if the best responses aren’t technical solutions, but philosophical shrugs — radical reimaginings that challenge the assumptions behind the question itself? Below are my reflections on some of the most famous paradoxes, not with the aim of solving them in traditional terms, but of reframing them entirely.

    1. The Raven Paradox (Color Skepticism)
    The Raven Paradox tries to challenge our understanding of confirmation by equating the observation of a green apple with confirmation that all ravens are black. But before we even get to that logic, I raise a simpler, deeper point: what is black? What is color? If we cannot consistently define or agree on the nature of perception, how can we build logic atop it? My view turns the paradox inward — to our assumptions about reality itself. If blackness is a subjective construct, then confirmation becomes a house of cards. The paradox isn’t about logic. It’s about trust in perception.

    2. The Liar Paradox (“Just Let It Be”)
    “This sentence is false.” If it’s true, then it’s false; if it’s false, then it’s true. Classic loop. But rather than getting trapped, I propose doing nothing. Just let the contradiction exist. This is a nod to non-dualism, to Zen: some things just are. Not everything broken needs fixing. Some sentences loop because they mirror the looping nature of thought and language. What if the point is not to resolve it but to accept it? Maybe the best response is simply silence — a conscious, defiant shrug.

    3. The Unexpected Hanging Paradox (Subjectivity Acceptance)
    In this problem, a man is told he’ll be hanged on a surprise day — and concludes it can’t happen. But instead of trying to outwit the judge with recursive logic, I argue: why not accept the premise as-is? Life is full of surprises. The very attempt to outthink life’s randomness is often futile. We don’t control the timeline, and pretending we do is hubris. Let unpredictability be unpredictable. The paradox loses its teeth when we stop trying to solve it and just live with ambiguity.

    4. The Barber Paradox (Outside-the-Box Assumptions)
    The barber shaves everyone who doesn’t shave themselves — so who shaves the barber? I suggest he does it after hours, or maybe he goes to another barber. This isn’t being glib — it’s being practical. These paradoxes assume impossibly rigid systems. But reality isn’t that rigid. People break rules, adapt, cheat systems. The solution isn’t within the rules — it’s in questioning the rules themselves. Once you pop the box open, you see how artificial the dilemma is.

    5. The Sorites Paradox (Heap of One Grain)
    If one grain doesn’t make a heap, and adding one more never does either, then when does a heap appear? Instead of chasing a line, I say: there is no line unless we draw it. The idea of a “heap” is a social construct — useful, but not absolute. This paradox asks a question society quietly answers every day: by agreeing, arbitrarily, on thresholds. That’s not failure — that’s function. We live by consensus fuzziness, not perfect clarity.

    6. The Ship of Theseus (Design Continuity)
    Is a ship that has had all its parts replaced still the same ship? Most answers wrestle with identity through material continuity. I answer with design and purpose. If the ship still performs the same function, has the same design, and carries the same intention — isn’t that the continuity that matters? Real-world identity is rarely about atoms. It’s about function, memory, story. We don’t just inherit matter. We inherit meaning.

    7. The Banach-Tarski Paradox (So What If It Works?)
    This paradox shows that a ball can be broken into parts and reassembled into two balls — mathematically speaking. It defies physical reality. My response? So what. If it works within its system, then it tells us something about that system, not about the “real world.” Not all truths are intuitive. This approach — agnostic realism — accepts that mathematics might describe worlds stranger than ours, and that’s okay. Let abstraction be abstract.

    8. The Trolley Problem (Walk Away)
    Five people will die unless you pull a lever to redirect a trolley, killing one. Philosophers debate endlessly. My solution? Walk away. You didn’t create this setup. You’re not qualified to decide. Why internalize the blame for a situation manufactured by others? Sometimes the right answer isn’t utilitarian or deontological. It’s refusal. Let the absurd moral theater collapse on itself. No heroics. No logic traps. Just don’t participate.

    9. Maxwell’s Demon (Order Is Just a Perspective)
    The demon would be doing work, right? Moving particles, sorting things — but what is order, really? Sorting stuff could just be another form of disorder. What one person thinks is neat, another might find messy. The universe doesn’t care about our filing cabinets or our sock drawers. Entropy isn’t broken just because something looks cleaner. Energy still gets used. The demon doesn’t violate the laws of thermodynamics — he just tidies up in his own way.

    10. Twin Paradox (Aging Happens Anyway)
    Everyone focuses on the time dilation and space travel. But we already see people age at different rates — stress, luck, health, life choices. It’s not a paradox, it’s just exaggerated by physics. The weirdness of twins aging differently is already baked into life. Relativity didn’t invent unfairness in aging — it just formalized it.

    11. Fermi Paradox (They Don’t Owe Us a Call)
    Maybe aliens have tried to talk to us, just not in a way we can understand. Or maybe they decided we’re not worth talking to. Maybe they’re silent on purpose. Or maybe they exist and just don’t communicate. Lack of communication isn’t lack of existence. Sometimes quiet just means quiet. Maybe we’re not alone — we’re just being ignored.

    12. Newcomb’s Paradox (Just Take the Box)
    You can play mind games about free will and predictions forever. But my answer is simple: take the box. Or don’t. Whatever you decide, own it. The point isn’t whether someone predicted your action. It’s that you act. You don’t need a philosophy degree to make a choice.

    13. Bootstrap Paradox (Who Cares Where It Started?)
    An idea, a song, a book — just appearing out of nowhere? Sounds like most trends already. Who wrote it first? Maybe no one. Maybe it just exists now. That’s good enough for me. Most of life is remixing anyway. Stop needing clean origin stories.

    14. Schrödinger’s Cat (Two Truths, Both Real)
    Dead and alive? Sure. Why not. We already live in contradictions. You can love someone and hate them. You can feel hope and despair at the same time. Reality doesn’t wait for you to open a box. It’s already tangled. Live in the tangle.

    15. Russell’s Paradox (Okay, Sure. Whatever.)
    Does the set contain itself or not? I don’t know. And I don’t care. Maybe we shouldn’t try to map logic onto everything. Maybe the point is that language breaks when we press too hard. So let it break. Let it be weird. Walk away and make a grilled cheese.

    16. The Paradox of Fiction (Fake Stuff Feels Real)
    Why do we cry over movies? Why does fiction make us feel so deeply? Because the emotions are real. That’s it. If a fake story makes you change your life, is it still fake? The source might be invented, but the outcome isn’t. Fiction matters — maybe more than reality sometimes.

    17. The Lottery Paradox (Of Course You Probably Won’t Win)
    Saying “this ticket won’t win” for every ticket doesn’t make you a hypocrite. It makes you statistically honest. One will win. Just probably not yours. We all live in the tension between individual unlikelihood and collective certainty. That’s life.

    18. The Problem of Evil (God Allows It — Why? Who Knows.)
    Maybe God wants evil to exist. Maybe He sees something we don’t. Maybe we just don’t understand good and evil well enough. Maybe most people aren’t evil — just confused, hurt, or afraid. And maybe divine silence isn’t neglect — it’s part of the design.

    19. The Omnipotence Paradox (God Can Do Whatever, Even the Impossible)
    Can God make a rock He can’t lift? Sure. Why not. He’s God. Maybe He lifts it sideways. Maybe He doesn’t lift it at all. Being omnipotent means not needing to play by rules. Don’t force logic onto mystery.

    20. Brain in a Vat (This Is the Vat)
    What if we’re just brains floating in goo, tricked by our senses? Well, we are kind of like that already. We’re meat computers interpreting electricity in a bone jar. So what? Whether it’s simulated or not, life feels real. That’s what counts. Go live it.

  • I Only Have A Minute, Part Two (A Sequel to, and Inspired by, “I Only Have A Minute” by Dr. Benjamin E. Mays)

    I Only Have A Minute, Part Two (A Sequel to, and Inspired by, “I Only Have A Minute” by Dr. Benjamin E. Mays)

    It’s not a lot of time

    For me to say what’s on my mind,

    So I must be very wise

    To not stumble and lag behind.

    This one little minute

    May be the most historic.

    If one single minute is all that I’ve been given,

    It is up to me to make the most of it when the clock starts ticking.

  • Trains

    Trains

    Get there.

    Pay your fare.

    Train’s not there.

    It’s not fair!

  • Time: Part Deux

    Time: Part Deux

    We are always so worried about time.

    Being late, being early.

    It’s all about time.

    Sometimes, though, we need time away from time.

    We need time to not worry about time and whether or not we’ll arrive on time!

    Sometimes, we need time to have some peace of mind.

    Time’s all around us. It’s always ticking.

    While we’re alive, we’ll still be kicking.

    Sometimes we thrive. Sometimes we’re thinning!

    But if we keep our heads in the game, we’ll surely be winning!

  • Time

    Time

    It is defined as a process

    In which things continue to progress.

    People, places, and things all move along with it.

    When we reminisce, the past is what we visit.

    When we’re looking forward, the future is what we look toward.

    But there’s one state; one state that we resent.

    That so-called state is what we call the present.

    When nothing goes our way, we begin to feel real hesitant.

    We don’t know when or how,

    We’ll stop feeling like we do now.

    When things go wrong,

    Time feels long.

    When things go great,

    Time accelerates.

    One day your twenty,

    all worried about money.

    Next day you’re fifty,

    With your own kids who are fifteen.

    Time is such a complex concept.

    How it progresses is based on our percept.

    Making the best of time is a great human conquest.