When I was pregnant with my third child, doctors discovered that she had no bones in her legs or lower spine and would never walk. They gave her a few weeks to live, and the most humane thing would bbee to put her to sleep, but I couldn’t bear to do it; she was my baby girl. After doing some research online, I stumbled across an article about Professor McTavish’s time machine that he’d been working on in secret at MIT, and the science behind it really intrigued me.


#1: The Power of Perspective

You probably feel like nothing can save your baby now that it's gone. You may even blame yourself or others for letting this happen, and feel the sense of responsibility to do something or change things. But you need to shift perspective in order to save your baby from despair. Think about what you want from life and how badly you want your child's death never to have happened. Consider how you would use a time machine in order to save your baby if given the chance.


#2: Regret Fills Us With Shame

And in that instant, she wishes she could do it all over again. But the time machine was destroyed when her baby fell out of the basket onto the ground and cracked her head open. The silence is only broken by her sobs as she sits there for a moment, knowing that it's already too late to change anything. If only she had put on a helmet first, this never would have happened to her sweet little angel!


#3: The Law of Reciprocity

Even if you are not using a time machine to save your baby, many would argue that reciprocity is a law that we all abide by. The idea of reciprocity says that what goes around comes around- in other words, when someone does something nice for you, you should feel compelled to do something kind for them.


#4: When Things Are Bad Enough They Don’t Get Worse

I have a baby, who may die. I want to save her. But she is only 6 months old and they don't do transplants on babies that young, so there's not really any hope. The thing is, though, it feels like there has to be something else that we can do- a machine or something- because we can't just let her die without doing anything about it. You see what's happening here?


#5: If You Knew Then What You Know Now

It's one thing to dream about the future. It's another to get into a time machine and find out how things could have been different. Who doesn't want to know what would have happened if they did something different in the past? What if there was an opportunity to make a change that would alter their future completely, even saving their baby from an early death or accident? We can't see the future but we can experience it by reading or watching our favorite movies or television shows.


#6: Not Knowing Is Half the Battle (Maybe)

This is hard to hear, but there are some things that simply cannot be changed. The past cannot be altered and every possible future has yet to exist. For example, you can't go back in time and save your baby, even if it's something you want more than anything else in the world. They might say that not knowing if a loved one is dead or alive is half the battle, but when it comes to life and death we don't think that sentence is true at all.


#7: Just Asking a Question Will Often Get You an Answer

A friend of mine recently experienced the worst tragedy imaginable. His wife and baby were killed in a car accident. The doctor was able to save the baby, but he wants to know if it's possible to use the time machine I invented for a good cause and bring his wife back from before she died. It's tempting, but there are some reasons why I think it might not be a good idea. For one thing, both my friends would remember different versions of their lives.

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