Time waits for no man. That’s the mantra we often hear. This simple statement is a reflection of the nature of time. It’s a realization that time passes regardless of how we respond to it. If we use it wisely, or use it foolishly, it’s indifferent one way or the other. It seems determined to grant you a set amount, but it can’t grant you any more than the usual allowance. That makes you wonder: is time our friend, or is it our enemy?
Well, time is a lot like money: it’s a commodity. And just like money, it’s neither good nor bad. It’s just a matter of how you use it. The value of the time you use is a direct reflection of how you use it. Time can be spent just like money; it can be spent in frivolity, or in matters that are eternally significant and also have value in the here and now. But I would submit that time has a mystery to it that you can’t ascribe to money. Genius scientists like Einstein have studied it and theorized about it in the past, but I still wouldn’t say they have it all hammered out as to how it all works. They are still theorizing and coming up with mathematical formulas to explain it. But it’s hard to imagine a world without it.
Thanks to the theories of Einstein and the like we know that time isn’t just a static principle. It’s rate can change in relation to other universal forces. Things like gravity and the speed of an object can have an effect on time and its passage. A black hole is a singularity with gravity so great that it sucks everything into it, including light. At the center of the black hole is a point of zero size and infinite density. As an object moves away from a black hole, it slows down. But as an object moves closer to a black hole, for example, while everything would appear normal to the object, it would also appear to slow from an outside observer’s perspective. This is because the way you observe the object traveling towards the black hole is through photons (light particles) reflecting off the object into your eye. These photons get slower and slower from the greater gravitational force as the object moves closer to the black hole. In effect, it warps space-time. At the outer edges of the black hole is something called the event horizon (the last point where light can escape the black hole). In essence, it’s the point of no return. The photons at this point would essentially slow down to zero, so the outside observer would never see the object disappear. Pretty weird, huh? So, maybe time does wait for man at this point. Just kidding.
Performing a gentle massage of penis is to make use of natural viagra discount india herbs that actually increase blood circulation in the penile area and naturally leads to male enhancement. The good doctor and good clinics offer miraculous treatment that cures the problem discount viagra no prescription completely. Getting active is another great vardenafil generic way to prevent sexual problems. These medications might be prescribed for either on demand or daily. http://deeprootsmag.org/2014/05/08/mean-woman-blues/ online levitra That description kind of blows up any rudimentary ideas we have about time. And this makes eternity a difficult concept to grasp. It makes you wonder how time could go on forever. Well, in eternity I don’t think it does. My understanding of eternity has changed. I now see it as a realm where time doesn’t exist. This may make it even harder to understand and, also, introduce even another level of complexity to it. But I now believe that this realm we live in is a realm where time exists. We’re appointed to live in it to do with it what we will. And it’s what we do here within the confines of time that determines what we’ll do outside of time (eternity).
References: http://physicsforidiots.com/space/black-holes/