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If I had a time machine…

From the days when man was a ape to the modern day, our species has won many battles, reached newer heights, conquered the whole earth per say and achieved more than what any other animal (or plant) on our planet could ever imagine (if they had the brains to).

In this race to excel, we’ve overcome the barrier of physical distances (at least on earth if not across planets) to a great extent. However, the fourth dimension – time – still remains untouched. Time keeps running at its own pace, we can’t stretch it or shrink it, rewind or forward it. I don’t want to commit a mistake by saying it is impossible to conquer time, because we never know what the future holds for our civilization.

Anyways, this is not a scientific discussion. Its about a simple question – If I had a time machine, what would I do with it? The cursor kept blinking on the question mark for quite a while before I could think of an answer. I literally had a really speedy flashback of my entire life.

The first instinct to this question is to think about our mistakes and accidents, all the mishaps that occurred in our lives. Which one should I go fix? The day I got this scar near my eye; the day I had a bitter fight; the day I did something wrong; the day I killed a baby squirrel; the day … well, a lot of private stuff.

Psychologically speaking (this is purely my theory, although I’ve zero knowledge of the domain), if you’d want to go back and correct an event in your life, perhaps it means that you’ve not completely accepted and internalized it. You still have some grudges, regrets, feelings (related to that event) left deep within you, perhaps suppressed even.

Then it occurred to me, what about the happy moments of my life? I cherish and remember so many of them. Wouldn’t it be fun and thrilling to live them again? My childhood days and all the mischief I did; my school days; that playing in the rain without any tension; catching baby sparrows and playing with them; my college days; … and again a lot of private stuff.

If you want to go and live your happy moments, perhaps it means that the present isn’t so wonderful. You want to run away from the present and live the (so called) golden days of the past. It clearly highlights the dissatisfaction with your present life.

I don’t want to deny that I’ve grudges with my past life or the fact that perhaps it was much better than the present day. However, on the whole, I feel there is no single thing that I’d want to go back and change. The mistakes that were committed taught me something useful, the happy moments I lived are safe in my heart and make me smile each time I remember them. The present is awesome too, and I’m trying to make it better each day.

Anyways, before I conclude, just a small random scientific funda I came up with.

Time is a tricky thing. We think we could just go and visit the past happily, and alter it as we want. However, just like the three dimensions of distance, time is something beyond comprehension of our minds. The biggest justification that we cannot change past is the fact that it has not changed already. If we were to go back in time, and change something using a time machine, every time you live today’s date, the past should be consistently the same. What we’re living today is the sum total of the past and the alterations made by us in the past using a time machine. Hence, this is the only past that can ever be, none other would ever occur.

Adios.

2 more minutes please!!

Our life is finite, it ends one day. Male or female, Indian or American, born in the 20th century or 15th, they all have to die one day. Imagine that life is a big game you’re playing, and everyone’s final age is already fixed. God is standing with a timer, one for everyone.

One day he will come, and blow a whistle, and shout “Time up!”. As usual (like we always do in competitions, races and exams), we’ll say, “God, just 2 more minutes please!!!”. If you’re lucky, perhaps he will give you those two minutes.

Can you imagine what will you do in those two minutes?

Disclaimer: Perhaps death will just come, without warning.

PS: Not looking for a really philosophical or emotional answer, just something plain and simple.

PS2: Someone said, I’ll snatch God’s stopwatch and run!

Chronologically elongated

Time has slowed down today, if not halted completely. It feels as if I am Spider-man, seeing the world in slow motion.time I spend hours doing something only to realize that its been a few minutes. I sleep near morning, still manage to wake up on time and don’t feel sleepy. I finish my work before working hours are over, and the night just doesn’t come so soon whatever I do.

I have no idea whats happening to me. It feels like I am in love, the only problem though is that there is no one but me.

Am I going to meet someone new soon?

And your time starts NOW!

StopwatchEvery morning, I wait at 3 traffic signals for my turn to go through. If I’m very lucky, the signal is green when I approach. If I’m lucky, the queue is short. If its a normal day, I’ve to wait for two or more times for it to turn from green-to-red-to-green. There is nothing I can really do about time wasted at traffic signals (except getting up at 6 am, and leaving for office at 7).

Whenever I decide to take up a task – eating dinner, reading a book, sending an email, starting work, anything – I first look at the time, select the next 30 minute slot, and then return to what I was doing before. Something like, oh its 1:04 pm, lets begin this thing at 1:30. More often than not, I end up wasting those 26 minutes, without any fruitful activity. I see the time, oh its 1:31, damn I missed the time slot, lets begin at 2:00 pm. Finally, I “actually” begin at 3 pm, wasting 116 minutes!

This way of doing things is really something internal to me, and its hard to get away from it. Instead, I decided to change the round-off interval. What if I round-off at 10 minutes or even 5? At 1:04 pm, I’d decide the first time slot to be 1:10 pm. Though, I’d still “actually” begin at 2:00 pm, but it’ll help me save some 60 odd minutes in my life.

The hardest part is to train yourself to think in 10 minute slots instead of 30. And the second hardest part is to remember to check the time every 10 minutes. I’ve been lagging at both at the moment. My aim is to reduce this slot duration to 1 minute, so that I can begin doing the task as soon as I decide to, when the motivation levels are the highest, when the thought is fresh and in my short term memory.

This is something Amit and I have been working on since a couple of weeks. He has already moulded himself to think in 15 minute slots, and shorten it to 5 minute slots if he misses too many of them. Really awesome! I need to pull up my socks and make it happen. Does anyone want to join us?