All the Time in the World

What kind of bedazzling food-merchant or ad man you figure coined the line, “Man can’t live by bread alone,” when the Revolutionist knows that a real Man can live by ANYTHING alone,  (as long as it's the right thing, and you know the trick).

                              

 

Heard a guy who freely admitted he held little love for physical activity still point out that he did get a dose of daily exercise when he took his feet out for their nightly walk.

 

                              

And in that inimitable style native to the City, they pointed out that, “What he lacked in speed and strength, he made up for in clumsiness and stupidity.”

 

                              

And then there was the time I heard this little voice bemoan from the rear of the would-be cerebral crowd, “Just about the time I begin to truly understand something, it becomes passé and  irrelevant.”  Sometime after that, from that same general area, I also heard the following, “Bout the time I'm getting able to overcome a habit, I lose interest in it.”  And finally, this, “You know, just about the time I begin to have some interest in a matter, I suddenly don't give a clinical-damn.”

 

                            

People say that they “Have no time,” and what is meant is that they have no perceivable way OUT OF their “time-problems.”  The Revolutionist might say that he has “all the time in the  world, for it all has me.”

 

J.