The Infinite Eternity?
Discovering the Everlasting Now
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Narrado por:
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Caesar Castillo
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De:
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Boris Kriger
This book proposes a wildly different understanding of time, tossing aside the polite fiction that it marches in a straight line from “back then” to “what’s next.”
Time, it argues, is not a conveyor belt dragging us helplessly toward oblivion but a vast, unmoving structure—something like a cathedral of moments—where nothing ever vanishes. Each moment is not a tick on a clock or a dot on a graph, but its own chamber where past, present, and future sit around the same table, quarreling, laughing, and refusing to leave.
Seen this way, the usual terrors—loss, decay, death—start to look rather small and unimpressive, because what matters has already slipped into permanence. The present becomes the only genuine stage where life, love, freedom, and art can take their bow.
The author’s attention is fixed on lived experience: how turning one’s gaze to the now alters perception and makes even the most ordinary instant throb with meaning.
Memory, in this view, isn’t a dusty filing cabinet but a kind of architecture of the soul, where every engraving on its walls continues to exist outside the jurisdiction of time.
Art, contemplation, forgiveness—these become tools for brushing up against eternity.
Wisdom, then, is not a matter of accumulating facts but of learning to linger gracefully in the moment, resisting the urge to rush off to the next distraction.
The book insists, with serene stubbornness, that nothing truly lived ever disappears. It joins the eternal, becoming part of an indivisible infinity that neither crumbles nor fades.
©2025 Boris Kriger (P)2025 Boris Kriger