Time Machine

EroticSounds

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The reluctant cuckold gets upset that his wife is cheating. Deep down he knows he can't get the job done and needs a real man to do the "heavy lifting". He's able to go back in time, put his ego in check and help his wife fulfill her tremendous sexual potential while being feminized and sissified.
 
A loving husband learns that in the years before she died his wife had a string of affairs. Unable to forgive her memory, he invents a time machine so that he can go back and confront her, and perhaps even dissuade her from her infidelity.

Except, it turns out that only his spirit goes back in time, and he finds himself in the body of a stranger - indeed, someone different each time. Not always even a man. And only for twenty-four hours.

And he manages to convince his wife that he's her husband from the future, and she finds it exciting to sleep with so many different people both without her husband's knowledge and also without technically being unfaithful...
 
A loving husband learns that in the years before she died his wife had a string of affairs. Unable to forgive her memory, he invents a time machine so that he can go back and confront her, and perhaps even dissuade her from her infidelity.

Except, it turns out that only his spirit goes back in time, and he finds himself in the body of a stranger - indeed, someone different each time. Not always even a man. And only for twenty-four hours.

And he manages to convince his wife that he's her husband from the future, and she finds it exciting to sleep with so many different people both without her husband's knowledge and also without technically being unfaithful...

I love it!

And each time, he has her take compromising photos of them together, and tells her to leave them with her will so that he will only find them after she dies, thus ensuring that he will be motivated enough to invent the time machine.
 
...thus ensuring that he will be motivated enough to invent the time machine.

Yup, if mutable timeline is at all assumed, whatever you do, you can't remove the reason to travel into the past while in the past.
 
Nice plot twist.

My idea is based on the butterfly effect. One small change in the past can change the future in a big way. I was that reluctant prideful person who ended the marriage because wifey was cheating. There was this huge conflict in my head about it. It turned me on that she was cheating and that creeped me out nost of all.

This could be a cautionary tale to jealous and possessive husbands. If I had it to do all over again and knowing what I know now, I would have encouraged her. That said, I like the other suggestions a lot.
 
A loving husband learns that in the years before she died his wife had a string of affairs. Unable to forgive her memory, he invents a time machine so that he can go back and confront her, and perhaps even dissuade her from her infidelity.

Except, it turns out that only his spirit goes back in time, and he finds himself in the body of a stranger - indeed, someone different each time. Not always even a man. And only for twenty-four hours.

And he manages to convince his wife that he's her husband from the future, and she finds it exciting to sleep with so many different people both without her husband's knowledge and also without technically being unfaithful...

This is an intriguing idea! Another version is that the husband learns his wife was having affairs, but never knew who with. He invents a time machine and goes back in time. He follows his wife one evening 5 years earlier when he suspected the affair began, but she is literally just out running errands. In following her, she spies him and confronts him why he is following her. He hums and haws and says he was particularly horny so they go to a nearby hotel and have an amazing afternoon of sex. Of course, when she gets home, her husband doesn't mention it or even seem to remember their afternoon together.

On and on, the wife has an affair with her husband from the future, who thought she was having an affair with another man...
 
Time travelers... I have several time traveling stories. In fact an entire series.

The series is just pure sci-fi, no sex on screen. It starts off with... Aftermath.

There is one where he's old (well 64) and goes back to live his life over, only he doesn't do things the same, he does them completely different. It's called Yesterday's Dreams.
 
Time travelers... I have several time traveling stories. In fact an entire series.

The series is just pure sci-fi, no sex on screen. It starts off with... Aftermath.

There is one where he's old (well 64) and goes back to live his life over, only he doesn't do things the same, he does them completely different. It's called Yesterday's Dreams.

Interesting concept. In my own case, I would possibly make a whole bunch of new mistakes - in other words, my basic personality would catch up with me. I'm going on the assumption that I would remember everything I had done previously.

Then there is the question of where to start over. As a high school freshman, perhaps? That wouldn't fly on Literotica, but there is another site that would take it.
 
What about a story where a guy sees a picture of an actress from long ago? He gets a room in an old grand hotel on an island, locks himself in there, dresses in period clothes then wishes himself back in time somewhere. He meets her and has his way with her.

Just make sure he doesn't have any present day coins in his pocket.
 
I like that time travel story. This person could travel back in time. Make a note of all the thing in the news, then go another day into the past. He will sound like the smartest guy in the room, making all of these "accurate predictions"
 
My first A Matter of Time story has the Mad Scientist fruitlessly chasing his cheating wife across timelines. Temporal paradoxes intrude, of course.

Heinlein wrote of Lazarus Long regressing in time to fuck his mother but I don't recall if that made him his own father. I've been roughly thinking of a tale of a fellow repeatedly flung back in time, fucking hot young female ancestors so he's his own dad, grampa, great-gramps, et al.
 
My first A Matter of Time story has the Mad Scientist fruitlessly chasing his cheating wife across timelines. Temporal paradoxes intrude, of course.

Heinlein wrote of Lazarus Long regressing in time to fuck his mother but I don't recall if that made him his own father. I've been roughly thinking of a tale of a fellow repeatedly flung back in time, fucking hot young female ancestors so he's his own dad, grampa, great-gramps, et al.

Nope. Lazarus Long was having sex with his mother in her car while his younger self was asleep in the back seat.

Heinlein's most convoluted time travel self-siring tale was "All You Zombies," which I believe is in the public domain and findable on the web.

Edit: yep, here it is: http://www.uky.edu/~mwa229/AllYouZombies.pdf
 
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Heinlein's most convoluted time travel self-siring tale was "All You Zombies,"...
Ah yes, where the narrator is his own mother, father, rapist, kidnapper, and recruiter, and his theme song is I'm My Own Grampa, an inspiration for us all.
 
Ah yes, where the narrator is his own mother, father, rapist, kidnapper, and recruiter, and his theme song is I'm My Own Grampa, an inspiration for us all.

Hey! How 'bout a Spoiler Alert, dude? :D:D:D
 
Interesting concept. In my own case, I would possibly make a whole bunch of new mistakes - in other words, my basic personality would catch up with me. I'm going on the assumption that I would remember everything I had done previously.

Then there is the question of where to start over. As a high school freshman, perhaps? That wouldn't fly on Literotica, but there is another site that would take it.

That was the premise of Yesterday's Dreams. He read an add in the paper - "If you could go back in time with everything that you know today, would you?"

In the John Abernathy series he doesn't remember his past lives in time. Well, not until he runs into the Temporal Corps of Shonda and it brought to their headquarters. Then he remembers all of his past lives but none of what is to come.
 
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What about a story where a guy sees a picture of an actress from long ago? He gets a room in an old grand hotel on an island, locks himself in there, dresses in period clothes then wishes himself back in time somewhere. He meets her and has his way with her.

Just make sure he doesn't have any present-day coins in his pocket.

That's a little detail that I've rarely heard in time travel stories. If you are going to be in the past for more than a couple of hours, where are you going to get the old-style money to spend? It's not just the coins; it's the bills too. You can't use a credit card. Yet one has to buy lunch, or dinner at some point - plus a lot of other things. How do you pay for public transit if needed?

Oddly enough, the same issue occurs if you travel too far into the future - assuming they still have cash in use.

By the way, some physicists speculate that it might be possible to travel to the future but not the past. But it's a one-way trip, so you better like what you find there because you can't come back.
 
That's a little detail that I've rarely heard in time travel stories. If you are going to be in the past for more than a couple of hours, where are you going to get the old-style money to spend? It's not just the coins; it's the bills too. You can't use a credit card. Yet one has to buy lunch, or dinner at some point - plus a lot of other things. How do you pay for public transit if needed?.....

Bring something that you can pawn or sell. A gold nugget, for instance.

.....By the way, some physicists speculate that it might be possible to travel to the future but not the past. But it's a one-way trip, so you better like what you find there because you can't come back.

I've heard that too, but I believe it's a philosophical argument rather than a scientific one. If you can travel to the past (even a past that you originally came from) it is possible to "alter the time line." But if you travel to the future, there is no danger of that. So future travel doesn't come with the same philosophical contradictions that past travel does.
 
By the way, some physicists speculate that it might be possible to travel to the future but not the past. But it's a one-way trip, so you better like what you find there because you can't come back.

That's very simple actually. We are traveling into future constantly, by default, so there's no much art in it.

There's "easy" if a bit confusing way we know for certain is working, just requiring stupid amounts of energy. All you need is to go real fast for a while. Like, significant percentage of lightspeed fast, resulting in time dilation: your ship's onboard clock will tick slower than one left on Earth, and that wouldn't be an error. If you want to come back a couple of thousand years later while only aged ten yourself, there's an actual formula that will tell you how fast you must go. That speed may not be practically achievable with today's technology (or borderline, by any, as approaching lightspeed both your ship's mass and energy required to accelerate further limit on infinity), but are completely legal physics. It doesn't break causality, nor logic. Heck, we can't avoid the very fact in mundane modernity, like, everyday. Even if relativistic effects are extremely minor at speeds involved, GPS system couldn't provide accuracy it does without taking them into account, for example.


The only thing you need to go further in future than others is to make your subjective clock to run slower, so that less time will pass for you than them. In some sense, don't we do that every night?

Someone who wakes up from a prolonged coma, have they travelled into the future? We rather would accept that as such if they were in some kind of suspended animation while asleep, so their expected lifetime after waking up is significantly extended in comparison it would be if their just straight lived up to that future time, else it's just missing out of stuff not a future trip, but that's disputable. Suspended animation might be potentially feasible in humans, there animal models exist in nature we could probably adapt; certainly there's absolutely nothing logic or causation breaking.

Taking the idea of suspended animation further, why waste resources trying to preserve the body at all? A snapshot, a perfect record of every quantum state of your body at some moment in time would, in theory, allow to assemble a perfect copy at a later date. Would it be you is debatable, but it would be indistinguishable from you by anybody else, or even the copy itself (yes, "beam me up Scotty" teleportation will kill you, and nobody would care).

Craziest part? You don't need superintelligence or godlike aliens. If one truly accept infinity of universe, and/or infinitely many universes in a multiverse, not only there will be exact copy of you having exactly the same thoughts reading exactly this same text at same point in future, assembled out of pure randomness (by law of really big numbers), but there's even infinite numbers of those do exist right now, and others will eventually every single plank moment forever.

Well, that's not exactly time travel, perhaps. Then, neither of the above is either, at least in a strict sense.
 
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That's a little detail that I've rarely heard in time travel stories. If you are going to be in the past for more than a couple of hours, where are you going to get the old-style money to spend? It's not just the coins; it's the bills too. You can't use a credit card. Yet one has to buy lunch, or dinner at some point - plus a lot of other things. How do you pay for public transit if needed?

Well, I do recall a book where they found what accounted for a magic time travel artifact on a medieval dig site, and decided to use it for some immersive exploration. Being trained archeologists with purely scientific interests they went to great lengths to avoid anachronisms, but the mission went sideways and some contamination was introduced, up and including some of the travelers left behind, facts and letters of their later life in the past found (and covered up) in the continuation of the dig at present time, but the story wrapped up before any other, profound changes of the underlying present were discovered. I'm reasonably certain the author had done extensive research of the site and events (ab-)used in that story, so maybe the paradox with purely explanatory powers was inbuilt and present didn't need to change.

(No, I don't recall neither title nor author.)
 
Hi LupusDei:

I have to chew over some of the things you said. To start with, yes we are always moving forward to the future. The question is: is it possible to build a device that could move one a significant distance into the future? How much energy would be required to move fast enough to go a week, a month ahead? I'm not qualified to say. Usually when we think of "time travel" we imagine it to be several decades at least.

If you remember old TV shows like Time Tunnel, they would move through space as well as time, which seems even harder to do with a single device. If one moves through time only, one could wind up buried in a mountain or two-hundred feet in the air depended on how the landscape changed during that period. Not a pleasant prospect. I haven't even mentioned the aftermath of nuclear wars, plagues, and so forth that could make the future unpleasant. What if the Earth has been wrecked by an asteroid collision?

I'll get to some of your other comments later.
 
The only reasonably close to workable theory I've ever seen is kind of hard to post in a few words. It involves membrane or string theory. You don't move through time as such, you move to a different place in time, or a different universe if you will.

Think of pages in a a book and the ability to move from page to page, through the pages physically at the same point on each page. Then think of each page being from a different book. YOU are at the same place on each page, but everything around you is different.
 
And if you recall, in the Time Machine, that's closer to what happened. The chair never moved. It was always in then same place, it was the world that changed around it. Or at least that's how In remember the story.
 
Bring something that you can pawn or sell. A gold nugget, for instance.

I've heard that too, but I believe it's a philosophical argument rather than a scientific one. If you can travel to the past (even a past that you originally came from) it is possible to "alter the time line." But if you travel to the future, there is no danger of that. So future travel doesn't come with the same philosophical contradictions that past travel does.

The gold nugget sounds like a good idea. Plenty of cash in that.

Who really knows, but I heard it was a scientific issue, not a philosophical one. If travel to the past was possible, then the ones from the future are already here I suppose. Robert Silverberg had a lot of fun with that in Up The Line, where time travel becomes a tourist attraction for sale. I think the narrator even bangs his future grandmother at one point.
 
The only reasonably close to workable theory I've ever seen is kind of hard to post in a few words. It involves membrane or string theory. You don't move through time as such, you move to a different place in time, or a different universe if you will.

Think of pages in a a book and the ability to move from page to page, through the pages physically at the same point on each page. Then think of each page being from a different book. YOU are at the same place on each page, but everything around you is different.

I sort of get that, although it's kind of mind-bending. In some ways, for the person involved, it doesn't really matter. Everything is still different.
 
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