Jan Sikes

#WednesdayWords – #Time

Let’s have a little fun today with the word TIME.

According to what I could find on the internet, the first recorded time was around 2900 bc by the Sumerians in Mesopotamia.

Author Jacqui Murray reveals how prehistoric man kept track of time in her Dawn of Humanity trilogy.

Time is elusive.

There can never be more time created, yet we cannot see, touch, or feel time. We can only feel the effects.

Dictionary.com says this about Time: The system of those sequential relations that any event has to any other, as past, present, or future; indefinite and continuous duration regarded as that in which events succeed one another.

That’s the physical definition.

From the spiritual viewpoint there is no such thing as time in the way that man has come to regard it.

Courtesy Canva Photos

Here’s a little poem that expresses the duality of time.

Time flies

Time crawls

Time stands still

Time marches on

Time to go

Time to stay

Time to flow

Time to play

Time to laugh

Time to cry

Time and a half

Time to die

Time for you

Time for me

Time review

Time to be

I’d love to hear your thoughts about time!

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