Sunday, May 26, 2013

Two Time Frames

To elaborate on prior statement "You can slow down the speed at which you age" and make it more clear to understand first it needs to be said that the statement is not directly accurate. How can someone slow down the rate at which the body ages? There are two ways to achieve the result. Think of a car on the freeway. How can a particular vehicle travel slower than other cars? One way is to literally slow down and let other cars pass you. The other way is for other cars to speed up. They are both the same thing from different perspective.

Now let's suppose every human lives exactly 100 years. The biological clock of 100 years timed by earth's rotation around the sun. The pursuit of human beings have been to live longer and with that naturally people think of slowing down their body from aging. But what if everyone lives 100 years but some live to be 200? How can that be? Think of a car that only can role on the ground for 100 miles but ends up 200 miles from the origin. The odometer records 100 miles. But when measuring the distance it is 200 miles. How can that be? The only way is for the car to stop and be carried to a further distance. It can be done in countless ways in terms of when, how much, and how often. For every one mile the car drives it is carried one mile further for example.

Applying the same analogy for humans, in order for someone to live to be 200 years old that person does not need to slow down the speed of aging (although that's exactly how it would seem from a 3rd person perspective) but actually increase the speed at which he or she travels through time. Basically time traveling.

The key is to do this without being aware of having traveled through time in order to feel as though the person actually lived for 200 years. (200 years is only for example). If someone lived for 200 years but is only aware of 100 years of actual life it would be meaningless. So how can someone live 100 years but end up 200 years old remembering every year of his life? (except the very early childhood of course). 100% increase maybe too much but for the sake of this scenario it is easier to understand.

Within 24 hour period there are many minutes, or seconds, that each individual cannot account for or remember. Let's say you are sitting in a car waiting for red light to turn to green, waiting in the grocery store, or just sitting in the couch looking out the window. These are idle times. Even if you skipped a second here or there it wouldn't make much difference in your life nor would you feel as though you are missing any time. The goal would be to skip over these idle times as much as possible without wasting your own biological clock or disturbing your contiguous awareness of time flow. The ideal way would be to do it in smaller increments. Shorter time periods skipped over.

But what if the time period became shorter and shorter and continuous? 1/10th of a second followed by skip of 1/10th, then 1/100th followed by 1/100th, and so on and nonstop. Eventually your biological clock and physical clock would coincide and flow together. Your biological clock flowing at half speed of physical clock but in actuality you are time traveling at twice the speed of physical clock. In essence you have slowed down the speed at which you age.

Two time frames can coexist in one reality.