DocM
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Hi Justine,
In one sense, your question addresses not the concept of time specifically, but spiritual growth vs. boredom. Someone once asked George Burns what his secret was to living to 100 years old. He said something to the effect of: "just fall in love with whatevery you do, and keep doing it."
I think that we all get into a rut in the earth life system at times, when we fall into patterns and routines. The monotony and boredom can mount, no matter what we usually do.
You say that you try to act more loving and achieve a spiritual balance. This makes it burdensome in some ways, if the voice inside us tells us to keep trying to be more loving. When we act out of love spontaneously, then we are most content. Admittedly, we all have to prod ourselves to do so at times.
Each moment is real, and the continuity of earth life makes it seem that all the trillions of moments are connected, when that is just our perception. Our free will allows us to take many different directions to the same situations (and perhaps in different realities we do).
For me, its a matter of reinventing ourselves. If we are stuck in a rut; in a job we don't like, a relationship that drains us, we have the free will to change our course - difficult as it may be. In this sense, we are truly masters of our own destiny, but we must take action.
John Lennon wrote classic rock and roll music and ballads, and then, decided to get out of the madness after his time with the Beatles. He wrote in a song: "I'm just sitting here watching the wheels go round and round. I really love to watch them go. No longer riding on the merry go round - I just had to let it go." This was his explanation of why he dropped out of sight for 10 years to raise his son and be a house-husband.
Our priorities change, our manifestation in the earthly world can change too. It must be an active process - using our good intention to reinvent ourselves. Then time is not a monotonous mericiless warden, it is irrelevent. We change hats, change our focus, express love any way we can and find new challenges.
Matthew
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