I've been using this model to wrap my head around the concept of spacetime: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wrwgIjBUYVc
In the video you'll see an animation of an apparently dynamic and warping 3-space that is supposed to be representative of spacetime. But earlier in the video, he stacks layers of 2-space for a flatland model of spacetime. In that view, the spacetime manifold appears static, with time axes extruding into the 3rd spatial dimension (of the abstract manifold).
Is it better to think of spacetime as static or dynamic? In the static model, we think of a bunch of geodesics cast onto a static background of curved spacetime. In the dynamic model, we think of bodies being enmeshed in and co-moving with space-time, with a relative component fighting against the "river" of flowing spacetime. Thus, a satellite orbiting a massive body is conceived of as not following a geodesic in a static manifold, but constantly getting sucked in by a current of deforming spacetime. If a planet is seen as a sink of space, what happens to the space when it reaches the center of a planet? Does it get annihilated?
Which is the more correct interpretation?