I am trying understand the interpretation of geodesic equations. For simplicity, let us take a metric $$ds^2 = g_{00}(x)dt^2 + a(x,y,z)(dx^2 + dy^2 + dz^2).$$
I interpret the metric to be a spacetime, where time, $t$, varies with $x$. Now how does $t$ vary with $x$? We know that $dt = \frac{d\tau}{\sqrt{g_{00}}}$, where $\tau$ is proper time. Since $\tau$ is an invariant quantity, is it right to say that time $t$ varies with $x$ as $t = \frac{t_0}{\sqrt{g_{00}}}$, where $t_0$ is some constant? or should one use the geodesic equation to determine the spatial variation of $t$?
The geodesic equation would obviously depend on $a(x,y,z)$, and hence the result should be very different from giving the time variation as $t \approx \frac{t_0}{\sqrt{g_{00}}}$.
If the geodesic equation does not provide the spatial variation of $t$, what would it signify here?