Thursday, September 19, 2013

Two Weeks

I've been unable to communicate with SNS Guy for two weeks.  Two weeks. In the online world, that's like a year, isn't it?

Time is different in this world. Not hearing from someone for two days is a big deal, and responses are expected for emails within 24 hours, at the most.  Sooner is better, of course.

And time becomes more intensive for long distance relationships.  If all I have of you is email or text messages, the longer the time between them feels like time without you. And that hurts.

Anyway, I've been thinking about the relativity of time today. The two weeks without contact with SNS Guy were long and drawn out. Time crawled and I was a victim to it with nothing to do but wait. I've missed him terribly.

Sometimes, though, time flies by.  My oldest son leaves in two weeks to move to the other side of the earth with a one way ticket and no return date. I can already see the days moving faster than I can count them until he leaves, and I'm powerless to slow them down, just as I couldn't make them go by faster so I could talk to SNS Guy sooner.

Of course, I know that the amount of time within a two week period is constant. Every two week period has the same number of days, hours, and minutes.  I'm the one who's changing. I'm the one aching for it go faster or desperate to slow it down. I'm the one with the emotional investment. Time has absolutely no sense that I'm dying to speak with someone I love or that I'm afraid that I won't see my son again.

To the relentless march of time, it's just two weeks.

4 comments:

Whores & Hookers said...

We used to complain about infrequently long and slow snail mail, and mailmen caught stealing lovelorn letters and govt paychecks (happened to me). Now long distance romance requires dozens of short and fast texting and sexting to keep a fire alive, with cellphone contracts from hell constantly cutting off service in the middle of arranging hot sex dates (me today). Or Droids randomly sending sext images to parents and employers (me last week). So maybe SNS Guy has been brownbagged by NSA to mine his mind for the top secrets to lovin Kat? Have u called gitmo?

Lust for Love said...

Can understand your sense of loneliness and longing. Waiting is very torturing!

Kat said...

Whores & Hookers - That's funny. I have a feeling that they have more important things to deal with than me. LOL

Lust for Love - Thank you. It is definitely challenging.

Anonymous said...

I disagree with the premise. Why is time in the "online world" different? Why is two days without email a "big deal"? The big advantage of email is, that is does not require immediate reaction and one can wait some time - On the other had, waiting for a regular letter can be equally hard if one longs to hear from each other. Someone remember these feelings?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LPthjsBCk0o