Time Flies - Or Does It?

SifuPhil

R.I.P. With Us In Spirit Only
I came across an interesting article on how the perception of time can change according to one's age or even emotional state.

[h=3]Does “Matrix” Time Exist?[/h] To understand when, how, and why your brain edits your perception of time, it’s useful to begin with what happens to your “brain time” when faced with a life-threatening situation. If you’ve ever felt close to death – gotten into a car wreck, engaged in a firefight, fell off a roof – you likely felt that time expanded during those fraught moments, and that everything happened in slow motion, a la The Matrix. In the aftermath, you probably remembered the experience in vivid detail.


Dr. Eagleman wanted to find out if people’s brains were really slowing down their perception of the world during these life-threatening situations, or if something else was going on. So he took a group of participants to one of the scariest “amusement” rides in the world: the SCAD. Riders are dropped, on their backs, into a 100-foot freefall. Those who try it typically find the experience utterly terrifying. Eagleman had his participants wear a wristwatch and asked them to look at it during their freefall. The watch would flash a digital read-out of a number a split-second too fast for the human eye to register under normal conditions. If fear slows down our perception of reality, Eagleman reasoned, the participants would be able to see the number as they dropped. Yet none were able to do so.


After their experience on the SCAD, Eagleman asked the participants to imagine their fall and how long it had taken. Though they had been able to accurately guess the time of others’ falls, when it came to estimating their own drop, they invariably felt it had taken 30% longer than it actually had.


From these results, Eagleman posited that time doesn’t actually slow down when we’re fearing for our lives. Instead, scary situations send our amygdala – a part of the brain connected with memory and emotion – into overdrive, spurring the brain to record much more detail than normal. Because the brain lays down such rich, dense memories of those moments, when you later look back on the experience, there’s a lot more “footage” than normal to run through, making the experience seem like it lasted longer than it actually did.

Source: Be A Time Wizard - The Art of Manliness


What's quite interesting is that I've always experienced - and taught my students - that time seems to dilate or lengthen during a life-threatening scenario, but have never had the proof of it - it was always just "that feeling".
 

Have you ever watched a pot trying to boil water ?

As a matter of fact, yes. And it DID boil, eventually - it could do no less, given the laws of physics.

... which tells you how boring MY life can be ... :(

I've also watched paint dry and tortoises mate -

In ...



Out ...



In ...



Out ...


:rolleyes:
 

Problem with "time flies".

When the 2 kids are out of school for the summer...time just drags on day by day.

When they are in school "what the hell did time go?"
 
Problem with "time flies".

When the 2 kids are out of school for the summer...time just drags on day by day.

When they are in school "what the hell did time go?"

Very true, but as the article mentions, to the kids those 2 or so months are like a year.

It's all in the perception, I guess. :rolleyes:
 
I find it strange that the older I get the quicker the days appear to fly by. I am less busy than I was when younger when I was raising the kids etc, but time goes faster and faster. Everyone of my age, and older, makes the same observation.
 
Time Flies Like an ArrowAn Ode to OettingerNow, thin fruit flies like thunderstormsAnd thin farm boys like farm girls narrow;And tax firm men like fat tax forms -But time flies like an arrow.When tax forms tax all firm men’s souls,While farm girls slim their boyfriends’ flanks;That’s when the murd’rous thunder rolls -And thins the fruit flies ranks.Like tossed bananas in the skies,The thin fruit flies like common yarrow;Then's the time to time the time flies -Like the time flies like an arrow.Edison B. Schroeder 1966:)
 
I find it strange that the older I get the quicker the days appear to fly by. I am less busy than I was when younger when I was raising the kids etc, but time goes faster and faster. Everyone of my age, and older, makes the same observation.

I AM raising kids today,gal 16,boy 8 at 77 years old and believe me times STILL flies. Im lucky, during school days ,if i can find time to go pee.
BREN...tie your shoes,zip up your fly,did you brush your teeth yet? we're leaving in 2 minutes.
TELLA...You're wear THAT to school?GO CHANGE!!!...$12 for lunch you paying for the boyfriend too? Papa!!!where's my gym shorts? why are you asking me,go look???
we're leaving in 10 minutes.
 
Time goes fast now that we are older, why? However it certainly does. I have hardly done anything today but it's already 6 p.m. here.I want it all to slow down a bit.
 


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