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The sun will only burn for another 5 billion years?

  The sun will only burn for another 5 billion years

sun

We are often reminded that the Sun will only shine in a way that can support life here on Earth for only about another five billion years. Sensing the eventuality of a cataclysm.

we were easily inclined to express our concern, together with our sympathetic misfortune for those distant people who would be standing on the ground when old Father Sol began to turn down the heat.

However, we seem to have far more immediate concerns, such as whether we can last another billionth of a second in the event of a surprise nuclear war.

Of course, there is also the daily tendency of the human race to end the sun's longevity concerns for tens of thousands of other stargazers with conventional wars and various murderous sectarian upheavals.

But since we've all become too familiar with too many inconvenient threats to name that can significantly threaten our longevity, the last, more immediate concern to mention is global warming, which could push the world's beach resorts somewhere close within a hundred years. peak of Mt. Everest.

Now that we've covered the challenges ahead for the continuation of ourselves and our descendants, let's move on to what seems to us a much more logical challenge presented by the hot new science has revealed to us about the sun's burning capacity. As the hackneyed advice goes, we should only live so long.

So let's ask ourselves a question that, as far as we know, has not been considered before. How could we a bunch of explosive brats last another five billion years before we self-destruct any time soon?

Or, given that we know other possible shortcuts to our continuation that might worry us, such as the chilling fact that we've just been enjoying another relatively mild interglacial period. that may only last another 10,000 years and may be hit by an asteroid or a meteor.

Earth at some as yet unforeseeable moment, how could we continue to frolic on Earth at least as long as it can provide us with a hospitable abode?

First, of course, we should consider how to deal with the biggest tomahawks that are in the air, especially the three B's, by which we do not mean the names of the three eternal classical composers, but pollution, population and pop, that is the A-Bomb.

In the meantime, what enticingly positive items could we occupy ourselves with over the next five billion years or so? Our unrealistic and yet, we suspect, attainable goal is more than hanging on to what is essentially an eternal ride; he enjoys an amazing flight through space and time.

We propose, then, that besides obsessing over the appalling threats which have accumulated in our minds.

And tax our otherwise eager capacity for joyful employment and indolence, we absolutely insist on setting aside sufficient time for the contemplation of invitations to pleasure, whether great or small, that our daily lives can provide razor-thin marks on the timeline that represents our individual sojourns on a still acceptably full Earth.

For example, if you have something at work today that you know would be a remarkable or at least modestly commendable achievement, we encourage you to think about it.

If you love someone, we suggest that you consider how lucky you are, especially if you are relatively certain that the recipient of your mutual affection appeals loves you too.

And so we go from our grandest considerations to the most insignificant massages of our pleasure principle, say a lady for example. If you have some time to play the game, we recommend that you focus on other dexterous moves.

You'll have a good time, and as you know, you as an individual player don't even have five billion years to make your triumphant leaps.

In closing, we say that rather than worrying exclusively about what to do when the sun is up, we might be wiser to consider looking through the other end of the telescope, the lesser pleasures and damnations that make up our daily lives.

In fact, when you consider how remote or beyond our influence most monstrosities should be of proper concern, you realize with great relief that the little things that fizz in our daily lives are actually like bubbles to smell. champagne, the greatest things.

In fact, it is very plausible to say that the more we discover how astronomically large things are, such as the incomprehensibly long lifespan of the Sun, the more important the little things become. So imagine the true cosmic meaning of a ready smile or even more deliciously a tender kiss. After all, not even a robustly effusive sun could do these things, even if it tried for five billion years.

In conclusion, we advise you to remember what your grandmother often advised, as the barrage of negative news that is the daily lot of us all insults your crafty eyebrows: count your blessings.

As a final service to those who have been kind enough to accompany us on our wanderings of eternity and immediacy, we hereby present a list of blessings to count as we strive to make our stay on earth equal to the eons of Oh, Solo Mio will probably shine them in a mild way.

They are taken from Charles Blaise's boldly innovative piece of popular philosophizing called Life Itself As A Modern Religion. If you like this short sample, you might like to know that you can read the entire book for free at www.toreasonpublishing.com.

We find it a surprisingly informed and reasonably serious approach to our condition, as we hope to be a triumphantly informed and reasonably funny rendition of it.

TEN BLESSINGS*

1. Bless life. It is the highest gift of Creation and the highest natural form of matter and energy.

2. Bless the creature. It gave us life, in all its forms and with all its possibilities.

3. Bless our bodies, the creations of handiwork. They are the temples of our lives and the basic source of all our joy.

4. Bless our brains. They enable consciousness and all our thoughts, talents and feelings. They enable us to experience self-awareness and feelings, make good decisions, contribute to achievements, and enjoy life, while coordinating our physical movements and carrying out the multiple involuntary processes that sustain our lives.

5. Bless our spirits. They form our communicative feelings and thoughts and help us to have good relationships with ourselves, others, other animals, plants, our inanimate environment and all of Creation.

6. Bless our love makers, by which I mean our genitalia. They allow us to enjoy our sex life, restore our connection in creations in the most physical way, help us relax, and most importantly, allow us to create new life.

7. Bless other animals and plants. They are our animated dads

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