What is time, really? When you are diagnosed with a terminal disease like cancer or leukemia, your perception of time changes.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
I am not an expert on time, or on cancer, or on life itself.
Time plays a role in almost every decision. And some decisions define your attitude about time.
Time for me is double-edged: every day brings me further from the low of my last cancer relapse, but every day also brings me closer to the next cancer recurrence - and eventually, death. Perhaps later than I think, but certainly sooner than I desire.
Time heals everything. Time corrects everything. Time is the solution to every problem, I believe. A lot of things can happen with time. All that has to be there is the intention.
I'm trying to understand how time works. And that's a huge question that has lots of different aspects to it.
Once illness strikes, you realize there's not a lot of time for you to do what you really need to do. And there's no time like the present.
I have a strange relationship with time. I'm not aware of it passing.
I have never been able to grasp the meaning of time. I don't believe it exists. I've felt this again and again, when alone and out in nature. On such occasions, time does not exist. Nor does the future exist.
Time perspective is one of the most powerful influences on all of human behavior. We're trying to show how people become biased to being exclusively past-, present- or future-oriented.
I think I have a strange relationship with time. I'm not really aware of that time passing. I don't feel that I'm wasteful with time. But I'm not aware of it passing.
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