Time Travel discussion
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If you could send a note to your younger self...
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Garrett
(last edited Mar 30, 2014 02:34PM)
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Mar 30, 2014 02:32PM

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Off thread, I know, but have you seen your dedication?
Just wondering, #3 as I recall:
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...


Get back to work & all hopes for a happy completion.
Let us know & is it Time Travel?
If so, my note might say, "More Brenda."

I actually wrote a short story with this premise where a hundred year old man talks to his younger self on the phone. Spoiler alter, it is not kind to liberals.
[url=http://fiddlingant.blogspot.com/2013/...] I Phoned My 100 Year Old Future Self [/url]

Therefore, I will reduce the Bible into two words:
'Adam had'em.'

01000010011101010111100100100000010010010100111101001101010001110010000000110000001101100010111100110001001110010011100100110100001000000111010001101111001000000011000000110110001011110011000100111001001110010011011000101100001000000010010000110001001000000111010001101111001000000010010000110001001101010011000000001010
http://www.convertbinary.com/

Get back to work & all hopes for a happy completion.
Let us know & is it Time Travel?
If so, my note might say, "More Brenda.""
I wrote a time-travel trilogy last year, and thank God! They are done. This book may be the first non-SF I have ever written. It is Victorian melodrama.

And, to be caught in a Loop, did you see your dedication?
#10, as I recall:
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...

Brenda, wonderful, I'd enjoy your take.
For mine, see #4 as it meets my definition.
Maybe exceeds.
Wear a seat belt, as I said.


@hg47

For a possible game changer, how about "kill bin-Ladin" or "no WMDs"


Trust yourself!

'Read more books' is 3 words, not 2.
If you don't believe me just ask your daughter, she'd know.
She's redheaded.

There was a Hulu original series where a young woman gets romantic advice from herself ten years in the future via text messages:
http://www.hulu.com/dating-rules-from...

Howard, I've given up on keeping this a two-word thread. I guess readers are just wordy people. And folks that love Time Travel seems to have a problem following rules. Go figure.
Randy, I just hope that if I had received a message when I was young that read 'Marry Michael' I would have waited and married the Michael I am actually married to, and didn't rush to marry the first Michael I fancied. My Michael is the best husband and friend I could ever hope to have.
So, folks, tell us in as many words as you'd like.....
If you could go back in time and give yourself advice, what would you say?

I loved the ST:TNG episode where Picard got to go back in time and undo an incident he had participated in during his academy days, which caused him to need an artificial heart.
As a result, he ended up being a completely different person. One that he did not like.

https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...
As Amy gave us the first such endeavor (which inspired my newest book) & Amy has a daughter & that daughter is a redhead & much discussion of this fact has been made on various other threads, I came up with the following idea:
I'll send a signed copy of my new collection of Time Traveling short stories to the 1st person (among those who have already posted to this thread) to correctly identify how many times 'redheaded women' are referenced on the Time Traveling Bus video found at this link:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCgGE...
And my new two words are:
More redheads.

I know the younger me would take no notice anyway...


If it's just a 2-word message, how could you possibly know it's from yourself?
Suppose you reach into your pocket and find a scrap of paper you know wasn't there a minute ago. You open it and it says:
"Run! Now!"
What do you do? :)
Randy wrote: "Suppose you reach into your pocket and find a scrap of paper you know wasn't there a minute ago. You open it and it says:
"Run! Now!"
What do you do?..."
My husband always jokes that I'd fail that type of test. My answer to "duck" is always "why?". If it were from me, I'd have to have included a reason like: "Run. Bees."
Wouldn't that be a funny prank? Putting "Duck now" or "Run now" or "There's somebody behind you" slips of papers in library books or pants on store hangers or something. It wouldn't be instant gratification, but it would be kind of funny anyhow. After all, you'd probably get in trouble if you tried putting them in random people's pockets if the pockets were actual in use on a person's body.
"Run! Now!"
What do you do?..."
My husband always jokes that I'd fail that type of test. My answer to "duck" is always "why?". If it were from me, I'd have to have included a reason like: "Run. Bees."
Wouldn't that be a funny prank? Putting "Duck now" or "Run now" or "There's somebody behind you" slips of papers in library books or pants on store hangers or something. It wouldn't be instant gratification, but it would be kind of funny anyhow. After all, you'd probably get in trouble if you tried putting them in random people's pockets if the pockets were actual in use on a person's body.

I think you just came up with an idea for a great screen play. A library checkout-desk worker slips short messages into books, then imagines what will happen.
One day she opens the paper and reads that one of library patrons took the advice in the note and................
Now what would be funny and unexpected right there?

I'd rather it be that the messages actually meant something.
Ever see the Twilight Zone episode, What you Need, where a street peddler sells things to people that turn out to be "just what they need" a short time later?
Loved that one.
P.S. Available on Hulu: http://www.hulu.com/watch/440784
Garrett wrote: "Amy,
I think you just came up with an idea for a great screen play. A library checkout-desk worker slips short messages into books, then imagines what will happen.
One day she opens the paper an..."
P.S. They're still accepting screen plays for Heller Shorts through the end of the month with the theme "Take the Fifth". That would make an interesting twist as you'd have to plead the fifth on causing the accident. http://www.greenroomok.com/event/766
I think you just came up with an idea for a great screen play. A library checkout-desk worker slips short messages into books, then imagines what will happen.
One day she opens the paper an..."
P.S. They're still accepting screen plays for Heller Shorts through the end of the month with the theme "Take the Fifth". That would make an interesting twist as you'd have to plead the fifth on causing the accident. http://www.greenroomok.com/event/766


We loved the idea of the Heller Shorts script contest. It's a fun idea, but tougher on close inspection than it first appears. The challenge is to get a complete story across in 15 minutes of less with only two tables and four chairs as props.
Garrett wrote: "Amy,
We loved the idea of the Heller Shorts script contest. It's a fun idea, but tougher on close inspection than it first appears. The challenge is to get a complete story across in 15 minutes o..."
Yeah. And the formatting alone would take some time. One of my co-workers enters every year and has been featured twice. I thought I might enter this year, but I haven't found an idea for the theme. Maybe next year. :)
We loved the idea of the Heller Shorts script contest. It's a fun idea, but tougher on close inspection than it first appears. The challenge is to get a complete story across in 15 minutes o..."
Yeah. And the formatting alone would take some time. One of my co-workers enters every year and has been featured twice. I thought I might enter this year, but I haven't found an idea for the theme. Maybe next year. :)