From efbce4ec407749bb82554db821237786e60dcc00 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Cat Flynn Date: Sat, 27 Apr 2024 00:57:16 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] fix ending flow --- blogs/2024/4/27/interactive-astrodynamics.md | 8 ++++---- 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) diff --git a/blogs/2024/4/27/interactive-astrodynamics.md b/blogs/2024/4/27/interactive-astrodynamics.md index 4cf8f86..e0b5a9d 100644 --- a/blogs/2024/4/27/interactive-astrodynamics.md +++ b/blogs/2024/4/27/interactive-astrodynamics.md @@ -177,10 +177,10 @@ In a thousand years, the smallest step we can represent is still less than a mic After a million years, the minimum increment finally creeps up to half a millisecond, which sounds about right. With a grin, you add a healthy number of zeroes, aim, and throw. -You watch the ball disappear over the horizon - it does so much more quickly than last time, and sit down. -You turn around, sit down, and looking at your watch, start to crank up the passage of time itself. -You watch as the ball comes back around... and around, and around, and around again, until it becomes a steady blur over your head. -It stays that way, and you start to think about double doubles. +You watch the ball disappear over the horizon - it does so much more quickly than last time - and turn around to await its return. +Sitting down, you look at your watch, start to crank up the passage of time itself. +You watch as the ball comes back around... and around, and around, and around again, until it becomes a steady blur over your head, and your mind starts to wander. +You start to think about double doubles. You've come a long way, but what's a million years, when you're a planet? ---