No, because our relative velocity (according to someone at "rest", relative to our frame) will diminish, yet we will feel no change.
Well if our velocity diminishes, that means we are no longer accelerating, and the force exerted on us will diminish as well. Eventually we will be moving at a constant speed, and no longer accelerating. That means A: We would not be able to go upwards because we, along with the Earth are at the point where acceleration is no longer possible. That means if you stand up, your body is now accelerating past the speed of light. and B: since we are no longer accelerating or we are now accelerating at a lower rate, that means the force that keeps us planted here on the earth, are no longer existant, or greatly diminished.
The theory of relativity basically said that if I were to be standing at one point, and you were to be moving at the speed of light away from that point, then time to me would seem to pass by much more quickly than it does for you. One second to you would seem like years to me.
Why is that? Well, atoms vibrate because they have heat, and things that have heat, vibrate. Now let's assume that one particular atom we're looking at is vibrating exactly perpendicular to the direction we're traveling. (just for the sake of making this nice and simple)
Start
Stop
It takes that Atom very little time to do that action. Now if that atom is put into motion at such a velocity that it starts out in a different place than it stops, then it takes little more time for it to catch up with the starting point.
Start_________________________________________________Stop
Try this with a ball, bounce it directly up and down, and then take that same ball, and then bounce it from on spot to another at the same speed down and up as it did when you did it directly up and down. Even though the ball is traveling up and down the same amount (one foot let's say) at the same speed (let's say one inch per second) because it's also now making a forward motion, it is taking longer to cover the same up and down motion.
I'm seriously disappointed. You proved your own theory wrong. With a little help from me of course.
