“What matters more than anything else to all who seek to enjoy life to the fullest? Time!”

Of course, many things matter, depending on the circumstances. However, what is ultimately most important to those who want to live life to the fullest is, too often, something out of mind. That, of course, is the moment.

Aaron Fodiman suggests that time is a great healer but a bad esthetician. While it is true, that is not the most important trademark of the time.

Time has been identified as the true culprit in countless deaths. Just the other day, The Onion ran the story that Hollywood legend Kirk Douglas died at his home of an apparent age overdose at the age of 103, explaining that his body simply couldn’t handle the sheer number of years he had invested in. his system. Apparently, Mr. Douglas had struggled with a dark coming-of-age story that few of his friends or fans were brave enough to confront. Onion’s account noted that due to the passage of time, family members had noticed the slow deterioration of his body, observing that he developed the telltale liver spots, gray hair, and a haggard face that so many elderly people show.

While Mr. Douglas and most of the others across the county are well aware of the risks of time, they go on and on and on, perhaps hoping that somehow time will catch up with them.

Onion scientists expressed the hope that this tragedy would serve as a warning and warned anyone with an octogenarian in their family to seek help before it was too late.

So be careful and pay attention: what we do with our time matters much, much more than access to medical wonders and even more than a REAL wellness mindset and lifestyle.

Of course, all of the above material was hilariously written, inspired by the irreverent comedians at The Onion. Time, however, is a serious matter and a phenomenon that has occupied great thinkers from the very beginning, not of time but of the much more limited period in which humans as we know them (that is, us) developed the capacity and, of course, the hour, to reflect on the nature of time. This topic has been featured in philosophy for a long time, and more than ever since the 20th century. There are even categories for schools of thought about time, including fatalism; Reductionism and Platonism, the topology of time, the arguments about time that are named after a McTaggart, an A and the Theory of time and B and Presentism, Eternalism and the Theory of time of the Crescent Universe. Wow, it’s enough to make your head spin and, in my case, enough to cause drowsiness every time I try to make heads of all these theories.

I hope this essay was worth reading. If not, forget it. Now it is in the past and there is no going back.

On the other hand, if it’s worth it, send me some love. Or longer, if you have something to spare.

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