Showing posts with label Time. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Time. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 21, 2018

The Maze


I’ve lost count of how long I’ve been in this maze, but it feels like forever. Every turn I make seems like the wrong turn but I just can’t tell. However, one thing is for sure: I want to get out. At the beginning, it was fun and easy, but now it feels like hard labor. Over time I’ve noticed a pattern: It seems that the more I roam this maze, the more difficult it gets. This explains my increasing want to give up, but I can’t. My mother would always tell me that giving up is like allowing yourself to drown, and my father always told me that the maze might feel tedious, exhausting, and painful at times, but it prepares you for what’s to come. As inspiring as my parents were, it was these thoughts and many others that have infested my head since the day I was born. No matter how hard I try to concentrate, thoughts, ideas, inventions and more keep jumping into my head, distracting me from the task at hands. But it’s different now; now it is life or death.
Today I found a door with “You are nearly there” carved into it. I enter the room beyond the door. Inside there was a watch—situated on a pedestal directly opposite the door I came through—and four more doors, each with a different theme. I walk up to the watch, to discover that there is a timer set for 60 minutes. I pick it up from the pedestal and the timer begins. Seconds later, the four doors open, some of which look fun and others that don’t. I make a quick decision and go straight through the door with “Multi” engraved into it, assuming that there are multiple routes to reach the end. As I anticipated, I see many routes with light at the end of all of them. I make a wild guess and run through the middle one. I reach the end of the middle route and find a button and a riddle “Haste and you will make mistakes, time is limited as the button is illuminated, complete for there is no retreat.” Naturally, I press the button, and the button instantly illuminates. Just then I realize that I need to complete all four routes to exit the maze. So I decide to worry about the riddle later, and without hesitation, I bolt down the route to get back to the room with four doors.
I completed the next three doors without making mistakes. I thought I was done until I got back to the room from the fourth door. The door to the room had words engraved into it, which was bizarre because it didn’t beforehand. However, what was more bizarre was what the engraving said: “Time. Survive. Exit.” Just then I remember the watch I took from the pedestal.
Sweat begins to run down my skin, for there are 15 minutes left. Water starts to enter the room from the door, so I kick the door open and run. The route is different than before but I don’t care. The only thing in my head now is the last engraving. I run as fast as my legs can take me, and after 5 minutes I reach the end of the route, water up to my hips, to find two buttons, one says “Mistake” and the other says “Haste.” Between the two buttons is a door with: “Haste creates mistakes, and mistakes create haste,” engraved on it.
“I don’t understand,” I say, “I just don’t understand.”
The water was up to my neck, tears running down my eyes because I know he is waiting there with his scythe. I don’t know how to accept death, and I never did.
“I don’t want to die,” I say, “I don’t want to die alone. I know I’ve made many mistakes in the past, but I was an impatient kid, and I grew from those mistakes, I swear! And they made me stronger! Please, I just don’t...wait...that’s it!”
The timer is at its last minute. I take my last breath, go underwater, and swim over to the button which says “Mistake.” I press it, and the water begins to lower. I am done, I tell myself. It’s over. I gasp for air, and look at the watch—one second left—and so I said, “just on time.” The door opened; class is over. I’m finished with my first ever timed-writing test in English, and now I can breathe.

Friday, February 16, 2018

The Clock in My Heart

       
Created By: John

        A clock, with its ever moving hands, weaves a tapestry of time and death, its constant cry screams a slow countdown.

        Tick-tock-tick-tock-tick-tock

        It was deathly quiet save for the constant tick-tock of the clock.

        A bead of sweat fell from Peter Hollis’ brows and landed with a plink on the metallic surface of the table. He shifted uncomfortably in his seat; the man seated opposite of him grinned, showing a set of rotting teeth.

        “Shall we begin?” asked the man, the grin never leaving his face.

        Hollis let out a raspy sigh and took out a handgun from his leather briefcase; his eyes locked on the man before him.

        The man looked old and aged, a rare sight to behold these days, yet somehow, the man invoked a sense of fear, a mad desire to know the unknown. Perhaps it is the hollow eyes that seem to cry with sadness but never let out a tear, that invoked such a fear; or perhaps it is the grin that is turned upwards, seemingly suspended in time.

        “Time is passing, friend.” The man spoke again, the words echoed in the enclosed room.

        “There is no need to rush,” Hollis replied.

        “Perhaps not for me, but I feel that you may need the extra time. After all, time is precious.”

        “Is it? The federation had already given us a cure for it; no one ages, no one is constrained anymore, scholars could spend an eternity learning and teaching, and life could be taken by the throat and throttled by any man or child. Time is gone, destroyed by human intuitions.” Hollis replied slowly, cocking his gun.

        A moment of time passed before the man spoke again.

        “Look at the clock, it was made to measure a concept that men do not control; it was made so that what is known could be used to explain the unknown. How little we know about time and how much we longed to understand and control it, much like how we control the beasts on land, the fishes in the seas, and the birds in the air. But men will never control it; instead, they take it for granted; they lavish their lives without a care in the world and waste their energies on fickle disputes.”

        Silence settled between the two men.

        “Do you believe in God?” the man asked, breaking the silence.

        “Of course,” Hollis replied, “The God of the Federation and of the people.”

        “I believe in a god as well. One who destroys both the gods and the divine, one who destroy worlds and universes; all things answer to him and to him alone.”

        The man continued.

        “A long time ago, there was many gods in the world, a Christian god, a Jewish god, a Muslim god, the gods of the Hindus, the gods of the Buddhists; gods who are great and powerful in the eyes of man. But where are they now? Drawn and broken in fictional novels, taught in schools as ancient mythology. Why did they disappear? Why were they forgotten and lost?”

        The man leaned forward, “Time. It is time; time is what rules the world of the present and the worlds of the past and of the future. Time my friend. It forgets, forgives, heals and kills. Life is nothing without time.”

        The man settled back in his seats.

        Hollis stared hard at the creature before him, nothing he said made sense yet somehow everything rang true; time was abolished many cycles ago, the Federation declared it as a terrible evil that must be eradicated and the masses rejoiced. Following close behind, the federation issued the Proclamation of 2251 which created the standard measurements of cycles. The Federal Cycles and Alterations Administration was created soon after. People were happy, life was good, aging was slowed almost to a complete halt, time was no longer a problem at home, work, or school. How could this be any better? How could something uncontrollable be good? Was it not in the best interest for everyone to abolish such a monstrosity?

        Horris grimaced, a silver spike lodged deep in his occipital lobe vibrated, resulting in flashes of lights that danced across his eyes. The Federation has warranted the man’s death; the verdict: blasphemy. The man looked at Horris and smiled. It was a strange smile, the lips lifted into a curl but never reaches the eyes. Sadness perhaps, or maybe it is pain. Or maybe it is a combination of the two. But it doesn’t matter, nothing mattered anymore for this man.

        Horris lifted the handgun and pointed it between the man’s eyes, the same eyes that spoke of madness now sparkled with sadness.

        “Friend,” the man spoke for one last time, “Remember, you cannot buy a single second back even if you offer the gods in the heavens and the devils in hell each a piece of your own soul. Cherish what is here and not what will come. God, if only I knew...”

        Two shots. It was all it took and where there was once a living man, now lies a broken body.

        It was quiet, deadly quiet. Except for the ticking of the clock. Horris narrowed his eyes, no it was impossible. But.

        Tick-tock-tick-tock-tick-tock-tick-tock

        The clock was shattered, broken into a million pieces from a bullet that passed through the man’s head. And yet.

        Tick-tock-tick-tock-tick-tock-tick-tock-tick-tock-tick-tock-tick-tock

        Horris clutched his heart, his eyes wide open with fear. “Oh god,” he whispered.

        Tick-tock-tick-tock-tick-tock-tick-tock-tick-tock-tick-tock-tick-tock-tick-tock-tick-tock-tick-tock-tick-tock-tick-tock-tick-tock-tick-tock

        “Oh god, no, please, no, oh god, oh god, oh god,” Horris screamed as he pulled at his uniform, clawing at his ticking heart.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The following manuscript was taken from the Federation’s archives. It is a recording of a phone conversation between the Secretary of State, James Richardson, and leading computer scientist, Xin Ye Zhang.

        Zhang: “Sir, the Federation AI has completed the final initialization test and is ready to deploy at a moment’s notice.”

        Richardson: “How much time do we have?”

        “A few hours at most.”

        “Goddammit, how did we reach this point where technology is advancing faster than life itself. It doesn’t seem fair that the machines we created will now create the creators.”

        “It is the only way for man to stay ahead of the other machines.”

        “To become a machine and stop time, huh? Doesn’t it seem strange that the only constraint of the human race is time?”

        “Time is certainly an advantage that the machines have over us. But I think it is only natural for one race to hand the figurative baton to another. One that is better suited.”

        Silence.

        Richardson spoke again, a soft voice that carried all of man’s worries and troubles, a voice that quivered with frantic doubts about the future.

        “Sometimes I wonder -- I wonder if my grandson will know. I wonder if he will ever find out about his ticking titanium heart, his compound quantum brain -- I wonder if they will know. If they will ever know -- that -- that they are not human.”

Thursday, January 22, 2015

Greatness


Russel, Sean. "How To Achieve Greatness | A Guide Anyone Can Follow." MenProvement. MenProvement, 19 Nov. 2013. Web. 23 Jan. 2015.

“He will be on the verge for greatness,” the man said with assurance. Issac, who was listening through the small opening between the door and the wall, was to remember that moment for the rest of his life. Not knowing who said that to his father, Issac was forced to leave the scene as soon as possible and head back to his room so his father would not find out he was still awake. The man had knocked on the door out of the blue, late at night to talk to Issac’s father. Issac showed up near the end of their conversation when he heard what was said.

A year and a half later, Issac noticed a rapid progression in his technical skills. He decided he needed to improve his physical attributes to become superior to everyone else. He worked and worked and gave his all to become superior. He wanted to become the best and he soon realized he could achieve this goal. Soon enough, bigger and greater opportunities came knocking on his door. When those opportunities came he had to make some difficult decisions to become a great. He made the decision and it was to change his life and inspire others.

Issac continued to work hard every day to further improve himself and this affected others around him; it inspired them. They noticed the change in Issac and how he was on track to be the greatest ever. They now believed hard work could achieve anything. The others were to never be as great as Issac, though. 

There he was four years later. Issac had finally become “a great.” He was forever thankful for overhearing what the man said to his father five and half years earlier. Issac still wasn’t satisfied. He wanted to become the greatest of the greats. The following year another individual was to become even greater than Issac and remained so for the next 14 years to come. Something happened to Issac that caused a downfall in his performance. His father had died from a shuttle crash in space and this affected him. But his father’s death only affected him for a year. He was to never give up on hard work until one day that person who was greater than Issac was to be overtaken. Issac was to break through that barrier of being a lesser great. He was going to finally become greater than he had ever been before. He was to gain his confidence back and become the greatest of all the greats. He was to be known as the greatest cosmic footballer that had ever lived.

Friday, October 17, 2014

Time Stopper



"Apple Watch." Apple. Apple Inc, 9 Sept. 2014. Web. 17 Oct. 2014.


The day had finally come, the day Apple was releasing the Apple Watch. I had arranged for it to arrive at my sister’s house in New Rochelle and I convinced my brother-in law David, to come visit and bring the watch straight to Israel. The UPS man arrived with the delivery at 11AM. By 5PM David had boarded his ELAL flight for Israel.
The flight started like any other– dinner, movies, and a nap. Then, suddenly in the middle of the night, the plane was hit by lightning while flying over the Atlantic Ocean. David felt the plane lurched forward. The engine screamed out at full throttle. The lights repeatedly flickered on and off. David had no idea what was going on. People were yelling. The pilot hurriedly announced to the passengers to immediately fasten their seatbelts. There was a sharp flash of light in the pitch black sky. The cabin was lit up like the middle of the day. And then, silence, as if nothing had occurred.
The one strange thing was, David’s iPad that he was watching a movie on seemed to have lost time (right in the middle of the movie he was watching). Everything seemed to disappear. It did turn on, but it was as if it was brand new. Everything was erased. My brother-in law was annoyed, but he figured he would see me in a few hours and I would be able to fix it. At noon, five hours later, his flight landed in Ben-Gurion airport. I was so excited I insisted on skipping school that day and went with my dad to Ben Gurion to meet him. After waiting an hour, David emerged from Customs. David was excited to be here, and while as I was happy to see him, what I really wanted was what he was carrying – MY Apple Watch.
For the past three weeks I had been working with the new Apple Watch SDK (Software Development Kit) developing a new watch app. I couldn't wait to actually try it on an actual device.
My dad couldn't drive fast enough on the road back to our apartment in Tel-Aviv. He dropped David and I off in front of our apartment and then went to go park the car. I rushed up stairs, went into my room, and opened the box. I couldn't believe it was finally mine. I took out the watch, and connected it up my computer to load my new app. I started playing with the controls. Suddenly, immediately after I turned the Digital Crown counter-clockwise, everything in the room stopped, like it was suddenly frozen. Everything, that is, except for me. Our TV froze. My dog Charlie who had just been running around in my room froze. I couldn't understand what was happening. I could move, but everything around me stopped. This was just a watch, right? I stood there, wondering whether I was dreaming. Could this be real?
The only thing moving, was a stopwatch that was running on the watch. It was counting down from 30. When it got to 0, everything began to move again. Everything returned to normal. I was shocked. I wasn't sure what to do. I was waiting for my dad to come back to tell him what had just happened.
Finally he came back. I told him the story and he looked at me like I had hit my head. “How is that possible” he said? I said “Here I’ll show you”. Once again I turned the Digital Crown counter-clockwise and everything froze – including my dad. The watch counted down from 30 again and then everything returned to normal. I said to him: “See what happened?” He looked at me and said: “What are you talking about? Nothing happened. One minute you put your hand on the watch and then took it off and asked me if I saw what I thought.”
Then I had an idea. I looped my hand around his arm so we were physically connected and I turned the Digital Crown again. This time everything seemed to stop in the house, except this time my dad saw it too. We both watched as the watch counted down from 30, after which things returned to normal. We looked at each other with wide eyes: “What on earth could this be? However magical the Apple Watch is, how could this watch seem to stop time?”
I mentioned the fact that I heard from my brother-in law that during his flight to Israel some strange things happened to the plane. Had that given the Apple Watch special powers? How could we take advantage of this special watch? My first thoughts were to pull some pranks on my sister and friends. Maybe I could use a marker and draw a mustache on my sister during those 30 seconds when time froze. Or maybe I could disable the computer of one of my “favorite” teachers.
My father said: “This is an amazing thing, but we must make sure we use it for good.”  I wasn't sure what to do, but I figured ideas would turn up. Later that afternoon, I was walking to a restaurant and saw an old man crossing the street. Suddenly, he began to trip. Instantly, I turned the Digital Crown and everything stopped. The man who was falling stopped short as he was about to fall. As the clock counted down, I ran over to him, and straightened him out. I walked away before the 30 seconds were over and the man continued walking as if nothing had happened.

“WOW” I said to myself, how many people can I help in 30 seconds? At that moment, I understood the Jewish proverb that “saving one life is like saving an entire world.” The watch, (this very, very strange watch), had not turned me into a superman, but it had given me 30-second windows to help people. Somehow, I felt that if I continued helping people the unexplained power of the watch would remain. I wondered what would happen if I used the watch to do something bad (Like lifting some money from a cash register.) I decided I never wanted to find out the answer to that question. So instead, I vowed to only use this amazing watch for good.