Archives For January 2013

“It’s going to go fast,” my dad said to me on the eve of my high school graduation.  And like a typical teenager I didn’t believe him. How could I?  Judging by the experience of my first 18 years, I expected the next 18 to feel just as long.  There was plenty of time to waste.

But of course he was right and I was wrong.

I’ve found that the second half of my life has been no where near the length of the first.  And now I expect the next 18 years to pass quicker still.  At some point we each begin to feel that time is speeding up with age.

The question I now have is just how fast my life is going to pass?  How much time or more accurately the feeling of time do you and I have left?  If the theory of time speed-up discussed in my last two posts (here and here) is at all correct the answer is a jaw-dropping less than we want to think.

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Why We Feel Time is Speeding Up

There are a number of good explanations for why time feels to be speeding up with age.  But the most objective and therefore measurable is found in the ratio of time to life.

As a percentage of our life, each new moment is less than the one before.  For instance a year when we were 1 was the whole of our life but at 2 it was half, 3 a third and so on.

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But unlike what the multiple charts above might suggest we don’t equally rearrange every passed moment to accommodate for the new.   Newer moments are simply compressed to a greater degree.  Like a car shortening the intervals between the lines on the road, this increasing compression is what gives us the perception of time’s acceleration.

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See my post Why We Feel Time is Speeding Up for more.

Time Speed Up Over a Lifetime

A pie chart of this change over 99 years and overlaid by the familiar marks of the clock shows us how the transformation applies directly to our lives.

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You would think an 18 year old who’s guaranteed to live to the ripe old age of 99 would have great deal of time left to live.  But not when adjusted for experience.   They have slightly less than 20 minutes left.  2/3 of their experience has passed between birth and the age of 18.

Again I’m not saying that time is literally speeding up.   The number of things you can accomplish during a day is always the same.  At the age of 60 you’ll still be able to brush your teeth in the same amount of time as you did when you when were 20.  And depending on the traffic it will still take you the same amount of time to drive to work.

It isn’t that the clock is speeding up.  It’s the declining proportion you feel in each new experience.

Look at the clock.  The same “5 minutes” of life is experienced in the

  • 4 years between 7 and 10
  • 6 years between 11 and 16
  • 10 years between 17 and 26.
  • 14 years between 27 and 40
  • 23 years between 41 and 63

It simply takes longer and longer to match the experience of youth.  And time is simply running out.

Where We Are On the Final Count Down

The 99 year old was over the hill at the age of 8.   The first 7 years of time experience was equal to the last 92.

Count the pieces and find where you’re at.  If you live to 99, how much time do you have left?.  Chances are you won’t like what you find.  But it’s good to number your days (Psalms 90:12).

When as a child I laughed and wept,

Time crept.

When as a youth I waxed more bold,

Time strolled.

When I became a full grown man,

Time RAN.

When older still I daily grew,

Time FLEW.

Soon I shall find, in passing on,

Time gone.

O Christ! wilt Thou have saved me then?

Amen.

Time Paces by Henry Twells

This post is the third in a three part series.

Part 1: Why We Feel Time Speeding Up With Age

Part 2: How to Compare Time Speed Up Between Ages

Post-It Notes (1/25)

January 25, 2013 — Leave a comment

The Myth of the Widows Mite

This passage is not for us. We are not to emulate this woman who is being taken advantage of. If anything it’s a warning to us that we do not do the same, and put not our trust in broken systems that enslave us to works righteousness and the law…

7 Strategies to Become a Better Public Speaker

A common fear among many people is the fear of public speaking. The idea of standing in front of an audience to persuade or present often causes worry and anxiety, but it doesn’t have to.

BBC probes Johnny Cash’s vague interest in redemption

The late Johnny Cash was a lot of things at the same time, which has often left journalists a bit confused about the sources of his remarkable passion and creativity.

I first saw Cast Away in a theater in San Diego with my best friend Jason.  It was in the summer opt 2001 and after all that Tom Hanks had done in the 90’s I really looked forward to seeing this film.  After seeing, however, I was struck with the fact that God is surprisingly absent from the film.  Stuck on an island for 4 years, Chuck Noland doesn’t even say a prayer.

I’ve changed my mind about Cast Away, however, after watching several more times.  A film that names its central character Chuck and is titled Cast Away instead of castaway is worthy of careful consideration.  God is surprisingly present in the film even though Chuck Noland never transparently acknowledges it.

The isolation the film makers cause you to experience on this island is fascinating.  Without music, without a bird, and without bugs there is no music until Chuck finally gets off the island.  Just the powding of the surf.  Chuck can’t make fire.  He tries and tries but he can’t do it.  That is until Wilson comes into his life.  Once Wilson arrives he can do it.  Look what I have done.  I have made fire!  Chuck cries out.  Chuck thinks he can do whatever he wants to do.  But in the end he acknowledges that he came to an end of himself and wanted to kill himself.  But the log broke the tree instead and received a warm feeling that he could go on.  He acknowledges that he couldn’t get off the island until he found the sail to harness the wind just suddenly washed up on shore.  It was angel wings that he puts on the sail.

 

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V for Vendetta isn’t a great film but in some ways it is intriguing.  There’s quite a lot of themes in the movie V for Vendetta.  One of the major themes of the movie is the mysterious identity of V himself.  Who is this masked person?  I haven’t read the graphic novel but the Wachowski brothers do an extraordinary job pully together a number of allusions.

V for vendetta poster

 

1. Guy Fawkes.  Of course the mask is first foremost that of Guy Fawkes the Catholic Revolutionary who tried to blow up the house of parliament in 1605.  But the mask takes on other personas as well.

2. Villain.  This is interesting the person who ties the woman to the tracks is the classic vaudeville scene.

3. Edmond Dantes.  Which is really a code name for a whole host of sword wielding masked men.  All these role into one.  The weapon of choice is important here.  Not guns but knives and  at one point we see V practicing with a sword.  Like Zorro, v slashes a v or pints a v on stuff?  Like the Phantom of the Opera, Zorro and5.  Edmond Dantes.  The film makes mention of Edmond Dantes the hero of the Count of Monte Cristo.  The plot of the book of a man wrongly imprisoned who escapes to inact vengeance on those who imprisoned him.

4. Faust’s Devil.  V is held in Larkhill cell number “V”. A favorite Latin phrase of V’s is said to be from “Faust” but in fact was a motto of the notorious occultist Aleister Crowley: “Vi Veri Vniversum Vivus Vici” (“By the power of truth, I, a living man, have conquered the universe”. 

6. Jesus Christ.  “Jesus Christ, he’s in the house.  I new you’d come for me.”

7. Valerie.  V says he’s both Villian and Victim.  The victim in a Vadville theater is a woman.  While the mask has a mustache and beard the exaggerate features are also androgynous.  V is androgynous much like the Lana formerly Larry Wachowski brother who co-adapted the graphic novel for screen.  But V is also androgynous… a fact we will come back to later. or another woman.  While V is played by Hugo Weaving and has a male voice the entire film it is not unheard of to have another voice play an unseen person to throw of suspecting viewers.  The first time Valerie becomes an obvious choice is after Evey emerges from her cell and sees V standing in the room with long hair.  The story told by vallerie has her and her lover sharing violet roses together and later we see V showing Evey a shrine to Valliere surrounded by these flowers.  Once Evey leaves V throws away the mask and weeps in front the mirror like a woman.

About a hundred years after the gospel of John was written, Clement of Alexandria called John the Spiritual Gospel.  

In studying the gospels, I’ve been struck with John’s “spiritual” reworking of Matthew, Mark and Luke.  Is it possible that John not only knew the Synoptic gospels but creatively reworked them for a spiritual purpose?

The relatonship between Matthew, Mark and Luke is well established.  They, in contrast to John’s gospel, are called the Synoptic gospels because the stories they tell as well as the way in which each tells them can be “together” (syn) “seen” (optics) or “seen together.”  Compare the accounts of Jesus blessing the little children in Matthew, Mark and Luke.

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These similarities suggests a literary relationship rather than an oral one.  One or more of the gospel writers copied the others in writing there own.  Which leads to the question of the precise relationship between them.  This question is known as the Synoptic problem.

The answer to the “problem” is that both Matthew and Luke borrowed from Mark in writing their gospels and that either Luke borrowed from Matthew or Luke and Matthew independently borrowed from a now lost source scholars name Q.  

John, however, does not share in this explicit borrowing and thus scholars are less certain about its relationship with the synoptics.  Some think John is completely independent of Matthew, Mark and Luke while others think John had a knowledge of the synoptics but doesn’t rely upon this knowledge in writing his own gospel.  

It is true that much of John’s story is radically different from what is found in the three gospels and that lends support to the claims above.  But I think a number of examples indicate that John not only knew the synoptics but creatively reworked them in writing his own.  

The story of the foot-washing in John’s gospel is a case in point.  Neither Matthew, Mark nor Luke have the story of Jesus washing his disciples feet.  Each shares the story of how Jesus instituted the breaking of bread and drinking of wine at his final meal.  Matthew and Mark are very similar on this point.  

 

 

 

 

 

It’s well known that Matthew and Luke used Mark as a source for writing there gospels.  What isn’t as clear is the relationship between John these first three gospels.  Did John known them?  Did John use them and if he did how and to what extent?  

1. Parable of Lazarus and the rich man

2. Mary and Martha

3. The Raising of the Widow of Nain’s Son/The Healing of the Centurions’ Servant

4. The Raising of Jarius’ daughter.  

5. Allusion to Genesis 29