Changing the Future
December 31, 2009 in Blogs
Happy New Year. It is the time of year when those of us on the modern western “Julian” calendar give thought to changing the future, to making adjustments in our lives–resolutions, we call them, although it is axiomatic to say that no one ever seems truly resolute. I posted note to the forum a few days back about the guy who announced that his resolutions were to smoke more, drink more, exercise less, and gain weight, which he figured would have him in great shape in a few months since he never keeps his resolutions. For myself, I do not make them, at least, not in connection with the holiday. I figure it’s God’s business to change me, and to point out what needs changing, and He is not tied to an arbitrary calendar. I do see some value in having a day of reflection for such matters, but few people really use it that way, and I am not one to regard one day above another, but rather to regard every day the same.
Of course, the effort to change the future does not always work the way we hope, even when we take the steps to do it. Case in point: in my latest Examiner temporal anomalies article, Butterfly Effect part 8: the wrong fix, Evan Treborn changes his future by traveling to his past to do it, and he makes things worse for several people. He also introduces another layer of trouble to the story, but that will have to await another article.
Incidentally, for those of us in the Western hemisphere at least, we have the somewhat rare concurrence of what is popularly called a “Blue Moon” (the second full moon in a month, although that designation had a different meaning a century ago) with New Year’s Eve. Those who are superstitious about full moons should either find my Game Ideas Unlimited article on the subject or stay home tonight.
–M. J. Young