Inertia
1. physics resistance to change: the property of a body by which it remains at rest or continues moving in a straight line unless acted upon by a directional force
2. apathy: inability or unwillingness to move or act
Encarta ® World English Dictionary © & (P) 1998-2005 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
Encarta ® World English Dictionary © & (P) 1998-2005 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
1. I had to turn 50.
>It's technically not correct, but aging is like a time inertia and, in the absence of any directional force (and there's only one), it was always going to happen. Mind you, I was happy to turn 50. I've been 50 for years.
>To mark the occasion we planned a stay in the mountains but, as they were booked out on the day, we shuffled from there to the coast for a couple of nights, back to cloud forests and then back to the coast. I had quite the series of birthday moments......
>Open fires, walks in the hills and local pueblos, surfing in the warm Pacific Ocean, drinks on the beach, seafood dinners, spiffy accommodation all round....... And Mary spent hours making me a card with lots of pictures of our travels. A very nice (and impressive) present, especially since we were in San Jose del Pacifico (nowhere) at the time.
>2. And now, we can't move.
>It's partly the spiffy accommodation (Mary's on our balcony in the photo below) and it's partly paradise. It's not apathy but it's definately an inability or unwillingness to move or act.
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