Today I’ve done exactly nothing. (Well, I’ve done the laundry and organized my school stuff… still, nothing.)
This due to the small winter break, given to me, and the other students, between the two semesters; fall and spring.
The break is a whopping four days, and since the last exam of the fall semester, was on Friday, and the first lecture of the spring semester, is on Wednesday. I have had nothing to read or think about, and as earlier; nothing to do.
Ok. Remember what I just wrote.
On another note (no pun intended) Lars-Martin e-mailed me today and asked if we could change the time and/or the date for the keyboard recording coming this week. (I said we could, so it’s now on for Wednesday.)
Ok. Remember that aswell.
Now. Naturally I had to let all my avid fans; that’s you, know/learn all this, in an instant. No time to waste! So I Twittered it.
This got my mind going.
So:
1. Not having anything to think about.
2. Lars-Martin giving me something to think about.
3. Having to communicate this.
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4. Why is something called pushed forward when it’s dragged back?
Not understanding a bit of this?
Let me clarify:
Let’s say A, today is January 18.
Let’s also say B, an event is to take place, on January 22.
And further, let’s say that C, the event is rescheduled to January 21 (a date closer to January 18, than it is to January 22).
Now. When C happens, it’s common to say the event has been pushed forward (and, in coherence: if the event were to be rescheduled to January 23, it would be common to say that the event has been pushed back).
I am also going to assume that:
4. Time moves forward.
5. The future is ahead of us (the further in the future the farther ahead).
Now to the question:
How can an event rescheduled from January 22 to January 21, a point in time closer to us, be said to be an event pushed forward? In that; how can an event rescheduled from January 22 to January 23, an event further away from us, be said to be an event pushed back?
Pushed forward back in time?
Pushed back towards the future?
Something is off. (If it’s my understanding of the English language, I apologise for taking up your time.)