Tomorrow is another day, another moment that we hope to seize. But if our day is filled with tasks and tasks, and if our days are filled with other people’s worries and demands, then the day never seems to end. And when the day finally ends, we feel like we’re all out of time and energy.
I’m going to keep this short and sweet, because in my experience, our lives are so short that there is always something else we can do to make the day go faster. But I do want to tell you about something that I stumbled across on my iPhone this afternoon while I was waiting for the bus.
I was walking down the sidewalk when I happened to see an old school bus that was on another bus heading to the city center. It was a tall and thick black kid with the name of the school. The bus came to a stop a few blocks away from the school, and I decided to walk to the bus stop instead. I was happy to see that bus pulled out of the sky, and at once the bus was gone.
Today I saw another bus that the bus driver stopped at. A skinny kid was standing next to the bus as he waited for a bus that didn’t come. I had no idea who he was, but I knew it wasn’t going to be my bus. Again, the bus came to a stop, and the driver climbed down from the bus and looked around. He was a short guy with long hair and a skinny body, and he looked like a street urchin.
The bus driver was a young man named Ben D’Amato, who grew up in a poor part of Oakland. He was a regular at the bus stops and in the streets of his neighborhood. He was a regular bus driver, and he never got out of the bus. He would often walk home from the bus stop carrying a large bag, and he would return to the bus stop for a bagful of change.
He wasn’t going to be able to change his bus stop without the police. That would be a crime, so Ben decided to rob it. He pulled a car from the lot and drove it around the back of the bus stop. He parked it just outside of the back door and waited for several minutes.
Ben knew that he could get away with just a little bit more. He could get away with a few more minutes in his car. He pulled out the gun and waited, holding the gun out in front of him, and when the bus started to pull away, he pulled the gun out too. He pulled away and waited, watching the bus until it disappeared. That was about 15 minutes ago.
The most recent trailer has him staring at the sky. He seems to be focused on his job, which is to see the sky. He’s not so sure what time it is, though. He’s still in the dark. I still think he’s just trying to make it better.
If you look at the trailer, you’ll see that we’re not entirely sure what time it is. At one point Colt is talking to himself and saying, “Tomorrow is promised to no one. It’s the end of the world as we know it.” He then says that he’s looking forward to it because he’s looking forward to the end of the world.
This is a hint that the end of the world is about to arrive. Colt doesn’t know what time it is, but he does know that he has a job to do and that he is going to do it. This time-loop is a metaphor for all that he has to do. He has to save the world from himself. This is a metaphor for how humans are driven to do things. He has to face his fears and work through his doubts.