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Interesting theory but for me its always have been about my mood. If I am relaxing and happy, time is usually fast, but when I am depressed or having a bad time, time is extremely slow
I'm sure you do know the side effects of remaining miserable and depressed for long.From now on I will try to be miserable, depressed and pathetic so that time pass slowly.
I'm sure you do know the side effects of remaining miserable and depressed for long.
When you do routine work time will run like anything because there is no new experience to your brain and memory part is not very active ..If you reside in your iwn home then go to other new city you feel a lenthier day because your mind is active for new things and memorising it for future use ..If you are working outside then when you go to native time again starts to move slowly because of hectic activity of brain ...Onething to consider is if days are running faster then lesser you are using your brainIts how you perceive it!!!
It moves fast at times and at times slow,like the way it is explained in theory of relativity.
By greater do you mean it feels longer or shorter??
Okay!!
you mean the day I'll be dead??
Qayamat right?
"When you sit with a girl for an hour,it seems as if a minute has passed and when you sit with your hands on a heater for a minute it seems as if an hour has passed"...or something to that effect.
No.I think there's a biological clock which keeps ticking inside us all the time.jamahir said:1. i don't think any animal ( including humans ) has a twenty-four-hour biological clock... time-keeping is just a social arrangement... but certainly, animals have a rest period.
I have to ask you this , how old are you mate?@levina
The other day my son was complaining "Why exams are coming so fast?".
But then in another example when you wait for someone in his house for your money then the times seems longer.
For @Skull and Bones time seems longer for he want to finish his PhD quickly and earn lots of money to buy a Ferrari for his Italian GF, but time seems to elude him.............
Have you noticed while going from point A to Point B and returning back to Point A at the same speed, the return trip seems quick.
Thought of impending death puts the thought in older peoples mind that time is moving fast!!............
No.I think there's a biological clock which keeps ticking inside us all the time.
We sense time from the direction of sun on day to day basis and then when it comes to year,the seasons give us a sense of time that has passed...and may be the full moons too.And ergo the idioms like many moons ago, once in a blue moon etc.
"“No one likes the polar nights: when it’s dark you just want to sleep all the time. But then, during the polar days, by the time you want to go to sleep the new day has begun. And, actually, you get used to it. Humans can get used to anything…” says Tatiana, director of School No. 7 in the village of Korzunovo in Murmansk Oblast."
"Doctors estimate that the polar night interferes with the function of the human body, due to the lack of ultra-violet light and vitamins. Many people from the North become depressed and lethargic around this time of year."
"During the polar night, Murmansk schools are open for a shorter time. In some educational establishments lessons start later than usual and are shortened. In kindergartens children are given vitamins and made to do strengthening exercises."
Why each passing year seems to disappear quickly than the last?
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For most people, each passing month of their lives seems to feel shorter than the previous. Many of us can’t believe that stores are already starting to display Christmas products, and if you’re writing a check, you might still catch yourself writing 2013 when 2014 is nearly over.
All clocks follow the same 12 hour / 60 minute symmetry, yet studies suggest that as we get older, we don’t experience time the same way. And there are many theories that explain why it feels like time speeds up as we grow older.
Many psychologists believe that as we age, our perception of time begins to accelerate versus time actually speeding up. Studies indicate that biological changes in the human body that happen as it ages, such as reduced dopamine production in the brain, impact our internal clock. Furthermore, some believe that as we grow up, we have fewer emotional and arousing experiences – the first kiss, the first trip away from home, the first heartbreak. Such experiences are easier to remember and lead to higher time estimations.
The emotional intensity of our daily life is affected by the fact that many of us experience “Habituation Hypothesis”. Consider how often you find yourself on autopilot, moving through your daily tasks such as getting dressed or cooking dinner, or sitting in your daily commute while your mind is elsewhere. If you’ve lived in one place for a long time, or held the same job for many years, less and less feels truly new.
Our instinct is to conserve energy when we can, so when life is predictable, our minds turn to autopilot and we tune out. Our minds become efficient at carrying out tasks that have become habitual, so they are freed up to address more pressing issues. Unfortunately, many of us spend this mental energy on worrying, self-analyzing, weighing decisions, etc., which can become quite stressful. Yet, regardless where our mental focus goes, by exhibiting this type of behavior, we have a tendency to compress time, and as a result our lives seem to speed up.
There’s also what psychologists call “Forward Telescoping”, which considers how we perceive past events that have made a significant impact in our lives. We are inclined to stay connected to important past events – a birth of a child, a friend dying – to where they seem quite recent, even when many years have passed. The realization that ten years have gone by since you got married, when you feel like it’s only been five, can be quite shocking.
The quickening of our perception of time was also explained by Paul Janet’s “Proportional Theory”. It suggests that as we get older, each period of time is a smaller fraction of the whole lifetime, and this affects how we perceive each moment.
“The apparent length of an interval at a given epoch of a man’s life is proportional to the total length of the life itself. A child of 10 feels a year as 1/10 of his whole life – a man of 50 as 1/50, the whole life meanwhile apparently preserving a constant length.” ~ William James
“Studies show that people who feel “time-rich” tend to be happier and more fulfilled than those of us who constantly feel rushed. They experience fewer headaches and upset stomachs, and regularly get better quality sleep.” ~ Ron Friedman, Ph.D. (Source)
Why Each Year Seems to Disappear More Quickly Than the Last | The Mind Unleashed
@thesolar65 @jamahir @Skull and Bones @halupridol
and others
@levina
The other day my son was complaining "Why exams are coming so fast?".
But then in another example when you wait for someone in his house for your money then the times seems longer.
For @Skull and Bones time seems longer for he want to finish his PhD quickly and earn lots of money to buy a Ferrari for his Italian GF, but time seems to elude him.............
Have you noticed while going from point A to Point B and returning back to Point A at the same speed, the return trip seems quick.
Thought of impending death puts the thought in older peoples mind that time is moving fast!!............