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Reflections of Time
Have you ever heard the cliche "Time Flies"?
Do you think time flies? If time flies where does it
go? The subject of time has been on my mind lately.
Maybe it is because I had two granddaughters marry this
year. I have been reminiscing when they were small children.
Where did that time go? We have had lots of loving and
fun times. Maybe it is because I will be 70 years old
in a few months. I realize that life is very important,
how very short it is and how fast it goes.
Time is defined in many ways depending on how you
use it in a sentence. In this instance, time can be
described as ones lifetime. Time is a non spatial
continuum, in which events occur in As the clock ticks
off minutes, hours and days, we may not have finished
what we are doing or what we want to do, but the clock
keeps ticking leaving us with less time. Time is
irreplaceable and it cannot be saved.
As a child, time seemed like it stopped, it didn't
go fast enough. We thought time would never pass for
us to reach the age of twenty one. By the time we
reach our fifties, we are thinking that time is going
much to fast. As time passes, it picks up the pace
and we hear "the older I get the faster time goes",
or "time really flies". We look back on our
memories and what is known as the "good old apparent
irreversible succession from the past through the present
to the future. days" and wonder where the time
has gone. Time is the most valuable resource that we
have.
Remembering those "good old days",
my grandparents lived a block from my parents house.While
growing up, I spent a lot of time there. After my Grandfather
retired, both of them stitched hand made quilts. They
used the old quilting frames they kept set up in the
dining room. They gave them to children and grandchildren.
Grandma used to say "we do it to pass the time".
They also spent many hours in the front porch swing.
They would talk about what their lives were like raising
their family. My Grandfather owned a gasoline jobber
business. The boys in the family helped out there, while
the girls helped in the house. They grew vegetables
and fruits to feed their family. We heard stories about
not having a road in front of their house when they
built it, then a mud and gravel road before paving.
There was no or little money and things were bartered
or traded. During the war, gasoline was one of the things
that was rationed. Grandpa would save his ration stamps
for my Dad. Dad lived in the big city. For him to come
home on weekends, Grandpa would give him the stamps.
I remember the smell of the blooming sweet peas growing
on the fence in the back yard. I remember the fresh
baked cookies always available in their cookie jar.
Memories remain as if time stood still. As my Grandparents
grew older, when we were ending our visit, we would
say "we will see you next time". Grandma would
respond with "Well, I hope so." She knew their
time was growing near. My grandparents have both been
gone several years, but I will always cherish the memories
and the time I spent with my grandparents. Where did
the time go?
Now, I am telling stories of the "good old days"
to my grandchildren. My parents, the years of my growing
up, marrying and raising a family, are just some of
the things we talk about. I often wonder how the past
70 years have gone so fast and I think maybe time really
does fly. In a span of 70 years there are 25,550 days,
613,000 hours, 36,792,000 minutes and 2,207,520,000
seconds. Did I use this time wisely? We can't go
back and get that time. Did I accomplish everything
that was meant for me to do? How will I pass the time
for the rest of my years? Will my grandchildren cherish
the time I spent with them? I certainly hope so.
In a time for taking stock of ones life, time can
be defined as a suitable or opportune moment or season.
I have had many moments of opportune moments or seasons.
As I look back in time, re-living those memories of
past times, can we really determine if time flies? Where
did it go? Each of us has the same twenty four hours
of a day. The days may go by slowly, but the years really
do seem to fly.
Reference: Wikipedia
Author: Margaret Mauldin
Margaret Mauldin has a web site for clocks at http://www.onestopclock.com
. For quality, affordable grandfather, mantel, wall,
and cuckoo clocks come by for a visit. Check out the
free website box at the bottom of the home page.
Keywords : time, clock, clocks, grandfather clock
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