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Vortexes Indenting our World

Janet Kuypers
3/15/19

Yesterday I enjoyed reveling in knowledge
about Albert Einstein, since yesterday
was his birthday. March Fourteenth passed

and I reflected on his past, and even on
his scruffy misdemeanor; why worry
about grooming when you’re redefining

the laws of nature. And redefine he did —
I mean, I can understand equating
the bending of spacetime like a vortex

indenting any surface, buy my mind won’t
bend to comprehend the slowing
or speeding of time. Then again, the only

way I’d see that for certain is if I got too
close to a black hole, staying in one
piece to understand the change in time. But

anyway, as I say, yesterday was a great day
for reveling in science, thanks to
a man who had to leave Nazi Germany,

fearing the formulas that he created could be
used to help annihilate all of mankind.
I know this pacifist’s choice to write the U.S.

President, asking him to make this bomb
before Germany did, weighed heavy
on his mind. I just hope it wasn’t so heavy,

making him unable to make additional leaps
of a physicist’s faith, because
one physicist did, Stephen Hawking, battling

not only the scientific world but also ALS,
living much, much longer than my
friend, who even used the same voice box.

I thought for a while yesterday, on March
Fourteenth, what amazing things
these two scientific minds could create, until I

realized that I reflected on the wonder of
Albert Einstein on the day of his birth,
as well as the wonder of Stephen Hawking

on the day he passed away. What gravity
a single day can take to the scientific
world, as well as the world’s goals as a whole.

One day, a day most correspond now to
with the beginning of the number Pi,
but three fourteen is a day that is more

than just about equations. It is also about the
greatest recent scientific minds, opening
the world to more than just equations. Trust me.



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