Love is a lot like Physics

Mar 11, 2007 15:54

Love is a lot like physics.

You fall in love. And because you fall, like you do when you fall off a building or out of an airplane, there's this terminal velocity that you reach, where you can't fall any faster, meaning no more acceleration. However, since love comes in waves, it can then be stated that love may be represented by some sort of sinusoidal wave form that has phase shifts and amplitude changes (maybe it's hooked onto an op out with some sort of gain that can be modulated by a trim pot or something). In turn, it all acts like an electron circling a nuclei where the electron's motions can't be traced, but you have a 90% probability of guessing where it is at all times. It can never get so close as to touch the nuclei, and it can never escapee, unless it's forced to by external forces.

Love can also be represented by F = ma. Some people fall faster and harder than others, as represented by F=ma, assuming all our hearts are about the same mass. If we vary a, the force that we produce can thus also be varied. Here, the analogy would be like creating a larger force due to a larger a, and then hitting a wall, deaccelerating in a short amount of time, which hurts.

But that varied acceleration is unexplainable, and so is the fall, caused by unknown external force, since something at rest should stay at rest, and not fall off a building without an external force (Newton's first law). And so the search for the answers in our hearts goes on, pretty much unending.

Love is a lot like physics, there are still many mysteries to solve.
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