Siddarth RG

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The endless ebb and flow of Time

Are you passing time or is time passing you?
May 25, 2025

This essay was part of a collaborative, constrained-writing challenge undertaken by some members of the Bangalore Substack Writers Group. Each of us examined the concept of ‘TIME’ through our unique perspective, distilled into roughly 400 words. You can find links to the other essays by fellow writers at the bottom of the original post.

Image by Utsav Mamoria


I looked up at the mountains in awe - their scale was immense and alien. How many thousands of years did it take for their intricate fingers to burst out of the ground, reaching desperately for the blue skies above?

We had walked for two days and still the same peaks stayed stubbornly in view. We crested hill after hill after hill - each one revealing the next long stretch of green for us to walk. I was struck by a sense of being removed from my own time and it was a most pleasant feeling.


To me, time is mechanical or non-mechanical.

Mechanical time is all our human constructs that we use to measure time passing. The hours on a clock, the events on your calendar, the days we designate as the weekend - they are abstract concepts we hold as solemn truth. Mechanical time is the shared fiction upon which we all coexist in society.

Non-mechanical time is the cycles we see passing in nature. The sun rising and setting every day, the moon changing phases over the months, the rainy season coming around every year with its abundance of sights and sounds and smells. Non-mechanical time is the physical reality that we can experience with our senses that reminds us of the world outside our elaborate mental fictions.

It's so easy for us to step into the flow of mechanical time and let go - the steady, consistent demarcation of our time into seconds, minutes, hours, days, years, soothes our certainty-craving brains. Yet in that certainty, we lose the natural ebb and flow of existence. Nature's cycles are long-term, slow, and uneven with rough edges.

Straight edges are of human design.

When we pay attention to the non-mechanical time in the natural world around us, we tune in to its rhythms. It gives us perspective and reminds us that we are single nodes in the complex, diverse, tangled web of life all around us.


The mountains stood for thousands of years before I saw them - and they will stand for thousands more after I am gone.

photo by srg


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