>>13294570No. That's a brainlet tier understanding of relativity.
What "time" dilation is telling you is that what you are measuring as "time" is not physical. Proper time is the only time which is actually meaningful, and this does not "dilate" or anything. The concept of time dilation is supposed to tell you that when you're imagining some global measurement of time as you do in the Newtonian sense, the entire concept is not well defined, and that's precisely why it appears to change depending on a reference frame. Anything that actually changes based on a reference frame is not physically real. That's what you're supposed to learn when you learn relativity properly.