The feeling of a long time passing seems to be a feeling of a kind of emotional inertia: a time where there is a prolonged sense of unfulfillment, absence or expectancy. My friend Peter Rowlands says that the measurement of gravity is really the measurement of inertia. That's a profound statement: we perceive gravity by the force exerted by our head by a falling apple. In the same way we measure time by measuring space. A long time is a slow journey over a long distance.
Emotional inertia is how we perceive "a long time". When we feel no emotional inertia, time passes very quickly. That's not to say that we can't be happy in a time of emotional inertia, but it is a different kind of feeling.
After Trump's inauguration we are beginning "a long time". I'd rather not watch the news in that time. But I'll keep an eye on the wars...
Emotional inertia is a kind of unstable stasis - does that make sense? What is impacted is the true expression of self. The self can't express itself, but it still refers to itself. But it hasn't gone. It's just waiting. That's partly because the experience of inertia is our construction of our limited perception of the universe. The universe itself knows no inertia and no time.
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