05-29-2016, 09:27 AM
that's a neat post. What do you think spurred these changes in you?
so non-attachments to these 'sub-moments' then creates the juxtaposition?
(05-29-2016, 06:59 AM)Verum Occultum Wrote: Most people agree that time is linear. Perhaps linear time is like a straight line, but often there are many changes in this straight line due to our state of being. One is joyous in a classroom while another feels utter boredom. They experience time differently, one fast, one slow. When the bored person comes out of his boredom, there is a change in the experience of time. Both the joyous and the bored feel a change in time after the class has ended, and they use their 'memory' (imagination) to make 'past experiences' proportional to their present experience. However, the bored one was "stuck", or more focused in sub-moments, thus creating more time. So there is a definitive creation of an angle in time for the bored one.
When time is a curve, core moments are juxtaposed. And when time is a circle, totalities of core moments are merged. Time is like a fractal of varying moments, and in true timelessness the matrix of the fractal is seen for its true nature. In this sense, greater identifications of core moments (and the totalities of core moments) is possible, by being in profound excitement. Ultimately, I believe the deeper awareness of the curve of time permits an individual to age less rapidly in this manner.
so non-attachments to these 'sub-moments' then creates the juxtaposition?