Time doesn't steal anything from you, it changes you. It lets you watch your grandmother, a strong woman, sturdy, a force to be reckoned with: shrivel, become small. Her size reminding you of when you'd lay beside her as a child. Her back to you, watching her massive shoulders move like calm waves on a shore with each breath. The presence of that giant chased the nightmares away. And you realize that it was the only time that feeling small felt so good, and being big now felt so terrible.
Time doesn't steal anything from you. It conspires with your brain to help you perfectly remember the time the boy you loved gazed down from above you, the moment before a kiss. The moment that will always feel longer than any other in your life. But time obliterates any words that were said from memory. Obliterates any useful information, any conversations. Does not allow you to remember each and every day.
The momentum of time allows you infinite moments to live in your past today. Like living in the moment that you woke up on your 5th birthday to your mom who spent all morning blowing up hundreds of balloons. Time let's you remember that feeling of opening your eyes to magic. Remember feeling more loved than you will ever feel. Time gives you this moment, but takes away the day.
Time is indifferent as you plummet into the future. Dragging behind you the images and words of an optimistic kid that you hope to keep alive. Time is indifferent as it demands you wake up, and start over again and again.