Imagine there is a bank that credits your account with 86,400 every morning.
It does not carry over your balance; every night, it deletes any amount you failed to use during the day.
What would you do?
You would withdraw and spend every last cent, wouldn't you? Of course.
Well, everyone has an account at this bank. The name of the bank is Time.
Every morning, a bank called Time credits you with 86,400 seconds. Every night, it deletes and marks as lost any portion of this credit you did not invest in a good purpose.
This bank does not keep money, nor does it allow transfers. Each day it opens a new account for you, and every night it wipes the old one clean.
If you do not use your daily deposit, the loss is yours.
There is no going back, and there are no credits for tomorrow’s deposit. You must live in the present with what you have today. Invest it to achieve health, happiness, and success.
Make the most of every day.
There is a simple truth that applies to everyone: time works the same way for us all, whether we are well or unwell.
The bank gives everyone the same unit of measurement: seconds.
It is how we live them that changes everything.
The problem is not reality, but how we react to it. The second passes, you do not.
The second is called a "second" because it comes after you, so that you may be the first.
@Sir_Kory These are the kind of posts I love. Learning how to evaluate key technical aspects for yourself and decide whether to invest accordingly. It would be nice to understand the basics, and from this perspective, some of your posts are particularly helpful! Grazie carissimo!
@Sir_Kory Figurati, te lo meriti in pieno 😉. Cerco costantemente di intraprendere azioni concrete che siano via via più impattanti nelle vite di coloro che hai citato!
These 3 astronaut crews are all readying to launch in the next 17 days. Amazing times we live in!
@PolarisProgram - as soon as weather allows
Soyuz @astro_Pettit - 11 Sep
@SpaceX Crew 9 - 24 Sep
In 1959, the USSR Luna 3 spacecraft returned the first pictures of the far side of the moon.
It relied on 40 frames of special temperature-resistant, radiation-resistant 35 mm isochrome film made in the USA, taken from Project Genetrix spy balloons shot down in the Soviet Union.
A new blog on https://t.co/yvFubhcLNr that talks about the shapes that trees could take on other planets. The blog is born from some reflections made a few months ago between myself and @Space_Doctor. A short read that stimulates your imagination!