Gravity is an apparent attraction between objects in proportion to how much matter they possess and how close they are to each other. It takes a very large body of matter (
such as the Earth) to produce an appreciable gravitational attraction. For a spherical object, of uniform distribution, gravity appears to draw anything on or above its surface towards a point of equivalent mass located at its centre. This is the predominant direction in which objects on the Earth�s surface are pulled.
When your standing on the surface of the Earth your engaging in a complex process of working to maintain your balance and upright position in defiance of the tendency of gravity to pull you toward the centre of the Earth with only the ground beneath your feet acting to impede you from such a journey. This is a skill that for human beings requires many months to acquire but once mastered soon becomes second nature. In a year or two the difficulties of standing upright and balanced in defiance of gravity is now virtually automatic and taken for granted. The same skill must nevertheless always be employed to achieve this feat. If this ability were to abandon you for even a second you would collapse down on and conform to whatever surface you happened to be previously standing provided that it was capable of supporting you in that position.
Once you understand the causal relationships involved it should become clear why wherever we stand on the sphere of the Earth we always stand with our head pointing away from the Earth�s centre . . .
unless your standing on your head . . .
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