People usually percieve the concept of eternity in a literal sense. It traps them to the pursuit of assurance that someone would make them feel loyalty and contentment, which, in the real sense, does not exist in human nature. Sooner or later, there would be something or someone else that would attract a person to a higher extent. "Nothing is permanent but change;" the statement invokes the popular fallacy. However, forever might not always refer to something that isn't bound to end. For instance, forever might be a period composed of "now's" that could envelop sentiments that are ideal to be felt forever. In another way, it might be a period composed of "now's" wherein emotions overflow as if it would flow boundlessly. Even though at some point of time it does not make us feel happy any longer, at the back our minds is the memory of what used to be now, what used to make us happy. Although unfavorable events occur later and tend to cover up the good ones, at the back of our minds is the fact that we had been extremely happy for a certain period. That memory is to be recalled every now and then; that memory lasts forever. Everything is bound to perish; some might stay for longer, but others eventually drift away. The fact that us humans have the ability to retain a blur of the past in our minds is a privilege; it enable emotions to travel through time. Forever does not necessarily imply a never-ending bliss, but rather it might refer to a certain period subject to end but does not seem to decay.







