After 2020 it seems many of us experienced time differently than expected. What is this phenomenon called?

  • @givesomefucks
    link
    English
    2
    edit-2
    3 months ago

    New experiences would make time move slower, but the vast majority of what we do is routine

    You might eat a new thing for lunch, but you’re still eating lunch like you always have.

    You might walk to a new place, but you’re still walking.

    Having a kid is different than not, but have you ever talked to a parent about how repetitive things get? Things change as the kid ages but it changes incrementally, no big overnight changes. It may seem like that, but that’s because the parents went on autopilot and didn’t notice the small incremental changes till something happens where they notice the change. And then quickly get used to it, putting them back on autopilot.

    Like, you’ve never heard a single parent say “it feels like yesterday I was changing your diaper!” to a kid in their 20s?

    While you can cram a bunch of novel things in to try and help, it doesn’t change the past before you did so. So those years dont have as many milestones and doesn’t feel like much happened, meaning looking back time went fast.

    You can try to always be doing new things constantly you’re entire life, but that takes a shit ton of money. And good luck earning that in a way that doesn’t become monotonous and allows you all that time off work to do the novel stuff.

    I get what you’re trying to say, but it’s not correct.

    • @I_Fart_Glitter
      link
      23 months ago

      Journaling and mindfulness meditation help with this and are free (except the cost of a journal if you get a physical one).

      • bizarroland
        link
        fedilink
        33 months ago

        And if that’s too much effort you can always try microdosing.

        If your brain is experiencing the same world in a new way it will seem to go slower.