Monday, May 08, 2006

The Theory of Relativity:Revisited


Nature naturally has the most natural nexus with compromise. This sounded too alliterative to reject, but bear with me and I will henceforth unfold with utmost simplicity.
Jurassic Park triggered off thoughts. Not nightmares about big bad dangerous looking lizards, but far more profound. Millions of years ago, or rather, in the same galaxy many aeons ago, lived mammoth creatures. Quite akin to the DOS days of computers, things were dark, and sinister. So far so good, I am not stating anything extraordinary, so why on earth are you reading this? Herein enters the theory of relativity.
Space was an abundant commodity; hence nature did not compromise on size when indulging in creativity. Just like a painter without politico-economic constraint, she created, saw and got terrified. Just like a woman who gives birth to a bizarre being, and wants to get pregnant again to assure herself of her normalcy, nature too introduced evolution. Gradually nature gave birth to a variety of species, however, to accommodate them all, Mother Nature compromised on size. With every stage of evolution, beings were smaller. The “Saurs” series gave way to far more familiar animals, finally leapfrogging to Homo sapiens. By then space was at premium so Homo sapiens were miniatures compared to nature’s earliest creations. Things should have stopped there, but she forgot something.
Nature had endowed all creatures with the gift of procreation, so space continued to plague her. So, the invisible hand of nature was still at play, working on the fine balance between creativity and accommodating her creations. Hence all creatures continued to grow smaller and smaller in mass. However, men were already created undersized, so there was little scope of further correction, physically.
But nature is at work, even as I write and you read, we are all shrinking, not in tangible dimensions, but within. We are meaner, smaller versions of our earlier self. Our minds have shrunk, to frightening proportions, and even as I write I can feel the imagination gradually draining out of my system. Don’t you?

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