My shackles are made of Time.  At a time in my life, I didn't have
enough money to do what I wanted to do, but now I have not enough
time.  I have three children who's science fair projects are due on
Friday.  I have a seat that I need to occupy 5 days a week from
7:30-4:30, or else.  I have 7-10 days to hammer out a warplan to
occupy a soon to be purchased 120 year old home (suffering from the
effects of time).  I have two days a week to tackle large projects
that need to be done, SOON. I have given myself 5 years to accomplish
something important, that I am proud of.

I need to stop typing now, I can feel my blood pressure spiking, and
my pulse rate increasing.

On Apr 1, 5:40 am, Slip Disc <[email protected]> wrote:
> We know that time exists, at least for us, here, within our awareness,
> unless you are one of those who deem time as an illusion. However,
> even if time did not exist, one could watch a speck of dust fall and
> measure that interval and perceive it as time but its existence is not
> the point. Time is like a commodity which we use, trade and measure.
> We can spend time, waste time, bide time, utilize time, consume time
> and even do time, among the numerous applications of time.  Aside from
> the chronological measurement of time we also have the quality of time
> where something can happen at the right or wrong time or you could
> have the time of your life, what the Greeks called Kairos. Then there
> is space time, time dilation, quantized time, relativistic and
> Newtonian time etc.  Time is something we tend to view as acquiring in
> the form of accumulated time, as in I have a lot of time right now.
> Personally I haven't had much time lately and haven't been able to
> respond to many reply posts, so I think now might be the right time to
> apologize to some of you, I guess you could say, in a timely manner.
> Ordinarily I try to avoid time as much as possible and only get caught
> up in it when interacting with someone else who lives by time, which
> is as of late in a coordinated project.  I rarely know what time it is
> and if asked what time I want something done I usually reply,
> "whatever time is good for you". Because I have mostly freed myself of
> time constraints, I can sleep till I'm no longer tired, eat when I'm
> hungry and simply beat my own drum. This is not easy within a society
> that operates on global synchronicity. One could measure the
> durability of something simply by observing the outcome through the
> test of time.  I don't really find much that stands the test of time
> these days but ultimately the earth and all its wonder certainly has,
> and sometimes love.  The question is, do we really need time?  Could
> we live without it?  This is something that has been the subject of
> many philosophical discussions since, should I say?, the beginning of
> time.  If time has a beginning shouldn't it have an end?  I guess it
> does because we seem to confine ourselves within time segments and set
> forth various rules of time management, living by the clock, not just
> within a day but for some, every second, perhaps every millisecond
> counts.  Oops, I'm running out of time!  lol
>
> So does time matter for you?  How much are you affected by time?
>
> Please take time to answer, if you have the time and if you don't then
> just make time.
>
> At least give me the time of day!
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