08-10-2014, 07:22 AM
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Videochat Solutions
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Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Canada
Posts: 49,416
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Quote:
Originally Posted by CurrentlySober
When I was a child, and had the ENTIRE summer holidays away from school, those 6 weeks seemed to last forever...
Then, in my late 20s / early 30s time seemed to 'work properly'...
Now, I'm constantly thinking to myself stuff like 'OH WOW! Its Friday again - Gonna order a Chinese' - But it was only like yesterday that it was Friday last week...
I'm thinking to myself today, Its Sunday - Meaning tomorrow is Monday, and the Gardeners gonna come.... Then I have to remember to put the bin out the next morning.... But it only seems like yesterday that he was on my doorstep, and I paid him.... Then got the bin ready to go out....
Time seems to have REALLY speeded up as I've got older
What about you?
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Hi CS,
You're not alone, and the effect is felt by alot of people.
From http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/...-we-get-older/
Quote:
. We gauge time by memorable events.
As William James hypothesized, we may be measuring past intervals of time by the number of events that can be recalled in that period. Imagine a 40-something mom experiencing the repetitive, stressful daily grind work and family life. The abundant memories of her high school years (homecoming football games, prom, first car, first kiss, graduation) may, compared to now, seem like much longer than the mere four years that they were.
2. The amount of time passed relative to one?s age varies.
For a 5-year-old, one year is 20% of their entire life. For a 50-year-old, however, one year is only 2% of their life. This ?ratio theory,? proposed by Janet in 1877, suggests that we are constantly comparing time intervals with the total amount of time we?ve already lived.
3. Our biological clock slows as we age.
With aging may come the slowing of some sort of internal pacemaker. Relative to the unstoppable clocks and calendars, external time suddenly appears to pass more quickly.
4. As we age, we pay less attention to time.
When you?re a kid on December 1, you?re faithfully counting down the days until Santa brings your favorite Hot Wheels down the chimney. When you?re an adult on December 1, you?re a little more focused on work, bills, family life, scheduling, deadlines, travel plans, Christmas shopping, and all of that other boring adult stuff. The more attention one focuses on tasks such as these, the less one will notice the passage of time.
5. Stress, stress, and more stress.
As concluded by Wittmann and Lehnhoff (and replicated by Friedman and Janssen), the feeling that there is not enough time to get things done may be reinterpreted as the feeling that time is passing too quickly. Even older individuals (who are, more often than not, retired from work) may continue to feel similarly due to physical handicaps or diminished cognitive ability.
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To gain perspective on the issue though, read the entire article at http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/...-we-get-older/
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