Monday, June 13, 2011

Nagmuni-muni on a Monday

"Life isn't fair.  We just have to play the cards we've been dealt." 

I've been thinking about this quote for some time now.

Yes, it is true, it does seem that way when you look around.  The rich gets richer, the poor gets poorer.  Honest, pure-hearted individuals doesn't get a break while the ones committing harm towards their fellowmen prosper.

Kind souls struggle, evil doers bask in pleasure.

People with strong religious faith would argue that in the afterlife, the good will be rewarded and the bad, punished.

What was my point?..  * . . .  I lost my train of thought.

Ah!  Yes!

I think the above quote is incomplete.

Life isn't fair, but only in the "middle".  You were born, you live, you die.  Circumstances between birth and death does make it seem unjust, but all in all our "equation" is the same.

Don't know where I'm going with this thought.  Just thinking out loud.

Monday, February 7, 2011

Missing

Nasaan ka man ngayon, I honestly and wholeheartedly wish I've known you better.

...

Saturday, January 15, 2011

Beer-Choose

Wisdom
Compassion
Trust
Self Sacrifice
Charity
Self Sacrifice
Contentment
Respect
Courage
Courtesy
Perseverance
Patience
Discipline
Peace
Patience
Obedience
Gratitude
Honor
Hope
Modesty
Love
Kindness
Justice

Sunday, January 9, 2011

How I Met Your Maker

I think, if there was a hell, this is how it would be like; an INFINITY OF NOTHINGNESS.  Just you.  There's no devil, no sea of fire, no nothing.  Just an endless void.  If void is colored white, hell would look like this (click image for a larger view):


You'll still be able to feel.  All your senses still functional, as if you're still alive.  But you're all alone, no speck of dust, no crackle of sound, no wind breeze, no food, no water.  For eternity.

Oh!  One more thing.  You have severe toothache on all your molars.  FOREVER.
 







That's hell.

Monday, October 4, 2010

I Like How the Universe Works

My youngest brother and I have been following the Cathay Pacific Signature Series about How the Universe Works on the Discovery Channel every Sunday.  Watching the program rekindled the geek within me and made me remember how I loved learning about the universe, galaxies, planets and the Big Bang.

Using CGI, phenomenons on theoretical physics are presented in amazing details and vivid videos.  I find recent discoveries on astronomy very exciting and mind boggling. 

The show is narrated by Mike Rowe (of Dirtiest Jobs, also on Discovery) and subjects are explained by famous astronomists and physicists such as Michio Kaku, Lawrence Krauss and Phil Plait.  From black holes to the Big Bang, galaxies to solar systems, you can't help but to get hooked and be fascinated.

Amongst the list of mind blowing facts that the show presented, the subject that I found most amazing is how scientists deduced the age of our universe starting from the Big Bang.  It's a fact that the universe (sometimes called cosmos) is still expanding, and it's from this expansion scientist are able to measure how long ago the cosmos was once a singularity.  Experts believes that our universe is at more or less than 13.75 billion years old, based from astronomical observations spanning decades.

13,750,000,000 years old!!!  WOW!  What a mind trip!  That's from the Big Bang, to when the universe was just a huge cloud of smoke, to present.  To put it in perspective, the Earth formed about 4.54 billion years ago, and the anatomical modern human just appeared 200,000 years ago.  Quoting Neo: "WOAH!".

I crunched the numbers (bobo ako sa math, paki-correct kung mali), and created a simple visual aid:

What I took away from watching that particular episode is: Life is TOO SHORT, very, very, very short.  Compared to the age of our own planet, our time on Earth somehow seems insignificant.  And it's with this knowledge that gives me more desire to make each day count


Nobody knows why the Big Bang happened.  No one knows how and why the universe started.  No one knows how could everything came out from nothing.  We are alive now because only of chance; billions of years of cosmic growth - from cluster of gas clouds in one part of the universe formed the Milky Way galaxy, within that galaxy a star was born, orbiting that star planets evolved and a solar system was born.  It just happened that in one of those planet, conditions was perfect to support life.

It's a fact that every beginning has an end.  The universe will surely end.  Might as well do things that matter while we're here.

I recommend this program to everyone.  Sunday nights at 8:00PM on Discovery, or watch it on YouTube.

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

New Blog

Welcome to my new blog.

Topics about technology, photography, andvances in science, feel-good-news, and positivity shall be what this site be all about.

For those following my other blog (and I find that hard to believe), expect the usual rantings about politics, dumbass news, and overall stupidity at http://boyet-balinnang.blogspot.com/.

Hope you'll follow this new site.  PEACE & LOVE.