Respuesta :

Answer:

Explanation:

Growing up, one of my favorite books in the world was The Time Machine by H.G. Wells. I always wanted to travel in time. But I didn’t want to go backwards. I wanted to go forwards. I was less interested in changing things and far more intrigued by what the world would look like in the future. I’m not so much of a historian as I am a futurist.

However, you might not feel the same way. You might be regretting some of the mistakes that you’ve made and wanting to turn back the hands of time to do things over again. But you shouldn’t. You shouldn’t want to change the way that things have unfolded because there’s a reason for everything. You might not understand it now. And as much as it hurts, there is a grand design.

When I experienced life’s failures and really bad things happened in my life like the untimely loss of those close to me, I vehemently would disagree with a statement like that. Pain shrouds our understanding of life. When we feel hurt, it masks any intelligible reasoning or logical comprehension about anything worthwhile. We’re just hurt. That’s all.

Still, wanting to go back in time and change things won’t help us. We can’t live in the past. We have to be present and live in the here and now. We have to appreciate what we have, no matter how meek or little it might seem. Our problems, if given to someone else halfway across the world, would pale in comparison. In fact, many people would love to have your problems.

If you focus on your problems, you’ll get more problems. Alternatively, if you focus on the positive aspects of your life, you’ll reap positivity. You’ll see the good things and you’ll be grateful for what you have, even if it’s not very much. In turn, you won’t think about trying to go back in time and do things differently.

Problems are a sign of life. Everyone has them. You can’t simply do everything in your power to avoid problems. Embrace your problems. Learn from them. Allow them to help you improve your life, mature, grow, get stronger, wiser, smarter and better at solving them. Over time, you’ll become a problem-solving expert and nothing can stand in your way.

 

5 Reasons Why I Would Never Change Things Today

The conversation I had with my friend, really brought back a lot of old memories. It’s funny how you forget things that transpired, even when they had such a big impact on you, because they happened so long ago. They simply fuse into part of your being, molding you a bit, shaping you in all the right areas of your life.

There are loads of reasons why I would never go back in time to change things, but there are 5 that stand out. These 5 reasons helped create the core of who I am today. Even after all those painful failures that I suffered and all the pain that I had to go through, I would still never change things. I would never alter a single thing that occurred for some very powerful reasons.

 

I think I would've changed how much I distance myself from my ”friends”. The transfer from middle school to high school sucked. Only because I didn't know that it wasn't okay for people to make fun of you or put you down on the daily. I would’ve changed letting them push me around and I woild’ve found better friends so I wasn't alone for my first week of freshman year. I'm a 10th grader now whom is close friends with seniors and that's basically it. I would’ve gotten made fun of a lot less if it wasn’t for me not seeing what was wrong. So that's what I would change..

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