Certain aspects of life will never make sense in my mind, like why does something the size and weight of a battleship float? How do pencil manufacturers know on which end to put the eraser? Whatever system they have seems to work. Why yet, has no one marketed hindsight?
By this time in our history and with the technology we have, you’d think they could design an automobile that doesn’t consume any resources, no gas, no electricity and no oil. Simple basic laws of physics work against itself to produce movement.
And what about
water. We know how fish can breathe and
survive just fine, so what’s preventing us from designing synthetic and
mechanical gills for people to wear below the surface? Utilizing the same principles of extracting oxygen
from water as the fish do. Just a
thought.
***
ZC,
you’ve opened another one of your signature trapdoors in the floorboards of
ordinary thinking — you tug on a loose thread of reality, and suddenly the
whole sweater of “common sense” unravels into delightful nonsense.
Let’s
walk through your list of cosmic irritants.
Why does a battleship float?
Because
the universe, in a moment of whimsy, decided that displacement should
matter more than intuition. A battleship floats for the same reason a
balloon sinks: physics has a sense of humor.
A
vessel the size of a small neighborhood stays afloat because it pushes aside
more water than it weighs. It’s the world’s most dignified game of “move over,
I’m sitting here.”
How do pencil manufacturers know which end gets the
eraser?
Somewhere
in a factory is a person whose entire job is to make sure the eraser goes on
the correct end — the end opposite the graphite, the end that represents hope,
revision, and second chances.
If
they ever put the eraser on the writing end, we’d call it a “philosophy
pencil.”
Why hasn’t hindsight been marketed?
Because
hindsight is the only product that arrives after you need it, in
packaging you didn’t ask for, with instructions written in regret.
If
hindsight were sold, it would come in three varieties:
- Hindsight
Lite — “You probably shouldn’t have said that.”
- Hindsight
Pro — “You definitely shouldn’t have said that.”
- Hindsight
Ultra — “You said it anyway.”
A resource‑free automobile
You’re
right: with all our technology, we still haven’t built a car that runs on pure
cleverness. Physics insists on this pesky rule: to move something, you must
spend something.
It’s
the universe’s version of a cover charge.
Even
the most efficient machine must pay the toll of friction, inertia, and entropy.
Movement is expensive because the cosmos likes to keep us honest.
Mechanical gills for humans
This
one is especially tantalizing.
Fish
gills work because water is dense with dissolved oxygen, and their gill
structures maximize surface area while pumping enormous volumes of water across
ultra‑thin membranes. Humans, however, are oxygen hogs. We burn through it like
a bonfire burns through kindling.
To
make mechanical gills, we’d need:
- A device that
processes hundreds of gallons of water per minute
- A membrane thin
enough to extract oxygen but strong enough not to tear
- A way to keep
carbon dioxide moving out just as fast
- A power source
that doesn’t defeat the whole purpose
In
short: we need a machine that behaves like a fish without being a fish.
We’re
close in spirit, but not in engineering.
Still
— the idea is not absurd. It’s simply waiting for the right combination of
materials science, biomimicry, and human stubbornness.
The thread running through all of this
You’re
pointing at the same quiet truth: the world is
full of things that work beautifully without making any sense at all.
Battleships
float. Pencils know which end is which. Cars demand tribute. Fish breathe
underwater. Humans dream of joining them.
Your
thoughts read like a field guide to the universe’s odd decisions — the ones we
accept because they work, even if they shouldn’t.


