No I don't. Provided conservation of energy is adhered to I don't have a problem with antigravity. A shelf stops a brick falling down, but to lift that brick up to the shelf you need to do work on it, and add gravitational potential energy to it. Then when you push it off the shelf the brick falls down and gravitational potential energy is converted into kinetic energy. Once this is dissipated, you're back where you started. If you can do all this with some kind of field, good luck to you. It isn’t in the same league as the multiverse that can never be proven and is unscientific
Let's try to make it clearer. Imagine it's a parallel-mirror light clock, used to
explain time dilation. It counts the number of times the light reflects between the mirrors. There's no actual
time flowing or passing between the mirrors. It's just light, moving. So it isn't actually time that's being measured in an empirical sense.