Tests in Time: Part 2

Jose Zuniga

The reality is that not all planets will be round in different galaxies because although the universe is a reflection of itself, it can not account for the consequences of reflection and time.

The impact of reflection on us comes with pictures because a "reflection" is a systematic neuron-paralyzing machine. When we look at the concept of life standing still, it has a stunning effect. Those effected were stunned (forever in a picture) and those seeing it are impressed. This is how bad rumors about taking film of the sun inside the hulls of a spaceship get started. However, reflection is where the answer lies. In some clandestine meeting among scientists (although the doors were open and some maids were about, but no one wanted to come in anyway) they discussed this very topic. Can the sun can be photographed up close, can you make space and time agreeable through incoherent theoretical approaches? How about, can we get a reflection of the universe? Pictures are a thing of the past but reflection is a futuristic approach. If we could capture a reflection of the universe, a shadow of it, it would make a lot more sense to us who think about distances and space-related properties (though generally a unique way of thinking means the whole concept of trying to map the universe is nothing but propaganda or, as more improper people say, a load of crap). However, it's interesting to note the obvious, once you have a reflection of something all you have to do is look up and there it is? Generally, true but how?

Time is the answer and because we have an uncertain concept of the connection between time and the universe, well, its all at a loss, right? Not exactly. If we come to accept that time travel is probable, we get closer to a solution. Well, one old guy said as I stepped out of a pub near New Jersey, "That's dangerous ground you're steeping on" and he wasn't referring to the dog-poo under my feet. We must learn to thread on the impossible before we can understand the possible. Anyone can jump off a building; not everyone will survive the impact (surviving the fall is generally expected; its the landing that gives people trouble).

The problem with time travel is fear of repetition. If the universe were in a state of chaos, it would be inappropriate to call day "day". You could blame gravity for the rising of the sun but the real culprit is time because gravity can't be blamed for a variable consistency. Gravity has been known to pull objects to its own ends and time has no ends for which to pull things. This is why it's a reflection. No matter what point in time you go back to, you run into the problem of being "reflected" into what you were in the past but then your run into the issue of memories from your future. Do they stay in the future or travel with you to the past? For this answer, we have to examine the person because the only example that can be given is that which happens to people because we are people and people are the only other things we know (well, you can do it with monkeys but then you'd have to have an extensive knowledge of a monkey's history and we haven't got volumes of books on that. The other part is, also, that you'd have to be a monkey and, for the most part, people are people or they aren't monkeys, well, most of them).

The fabric of the universe isn't reliant on how many stars are aligned to galaxies at a certain moment in space; it's reliant on what course of action one moment has to take before the next one occurs. This time-fabric is, however, twistable and corruptible because reflection implies two instants in time, one where the person does exist and one where he or she doesn't. The easiest way to see it is like when you turn a light on and off. When the light travels to off, where does it go? Is it still traveling? Let's say, it reaches the dimensions of space, so the common eye can't trace it and it's so fast that it can get back as soon as you flip the switch. Maybe, it knows you're going to blink and last a few more seconds out in space. The way to time travel is to follow this light into its "off" state (into space) and change its return direction. The way the universe is shaped is a theory in itself because it gives you a "map" into time traveling (this implies that points in time are directly related to "direction" but time is directionless or in a state of one-way consciousness. It only travels forward. This concept is later introduced and so is a makeshift map for future time-travelers). I guess it's because of this that one can say that time and the universe exist within each other. You can't upset one without upsetting the other.

Published by Jose Zuniga

I'm an English Major attending California State University, Los Angeles. Currently, writing in bulk in the poetry and fantasy genres.  View profile

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