From personal experience, I have to disagree with many of the other responses you received. YES, most definitely time appears to take on the speed of light as we age. When younger, the good times going by faster and the bad times going slower may have applied, but when older it ALL goes by fast. And whether one is busy with responsibilities or doing absolutely nothing it whizzes by when older. I was out of town for a month and a half recently and it zipped by as if I was gone for one blink of an eye. I returned and it time continues to vanish-it is morning, then suddenly-literally it feels like a second had passed, it is night and then the day, the week, another month, year gone. I think it may have something to do with the nature of our brain cells, neuro-transmitters, etc. But yes, our PERCEPTION of time definitely shifts with age. Then again, from another perspective, time doesn't even exist outside of the man-made perimeters that people/society have given it. Who knows what other dimensions there are...
2007-12-16 20:22:28
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answer #1
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answered by Eggplant 4
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This is a proven process, scientifically speaking.
The maturing consciousness tends to summarize experience, which tends to make processing quicker, hence, time seems to move by more quickly.
This might also be seen with snails and turtles: a snail and a turtle run into each other at a crossroads; the snail says, "What happened? Everything moved so quickly." So too with those who are more perceptive of various levels of being; spacetime events are generalized and events, time, are perceived to move more quickly.
"Climb the HIghest Mountain," Mark Prophet, "The Reincarnation of Edgar Cayce?", Free, and "Men in White Apparel," Colton, are interesting.
2007-12-16 19:54:19
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answer #2
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answered by j153e 7
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I definitely would agree with you that indeed time moves faster in our mind. Having a matured mind as an adult, we have so much responsibilities that sometimes we are left out of time. Time has been so essential for us to meet our targets and deadlines in work. We are too much preoccupied of so many things that we later find out that even a year passed by so soon.
Thanks for asking. Have a great day!
2007-12-16 11:00:39
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answer #3
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answered by Third P 6
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Time flies when having fun and crawls when not. When you perceive time as an others property, I don't know, do we not share time? We do not want to fail, but why would time be a determinant; we have enough time when we need it or there is not enough time. Do we not discover that the quantity of time is not enough at the end of an attempt to complete something? We only attempt our best because that's all there is.
The Will is positive, the Judgment is negative.
2007-12-16 13:59:54
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answer #4
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answered by Psyengine 7
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i've got self belief we are only extra attentive to time-lines that positioned us decrease than rigidity to get issues completed that makes it sense as though time is passing quicker than in our young ones. evaluate this, a individual at paintings that consistently watches the clock feels as though the paintings day won't in any respect end; although, the guy that's overwhelmed through his paintings load would not have adequate hours interior the day. Then if we are having relaxing, we easily lose music of time and in basic terms take exhilaration in existence.
2016-12-11 06:58:42
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answer #5
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answered by quartermon 4
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Yes, I have noticed this too. I'd like to think it is a combination of the first two ideas but fear it may be the last one because I don't really know the answer.
2007-12-16 11:01:29
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answer #6
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answered by packingal 4
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It's relative. In birth we have the probability of having 99% of our life to live. At 50 we have 50% or so of it left, and so on and so on; so life does excelerate as we age. When we are born we begin to die.
2007-12-16 15:35:10
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answer #7
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answered by hmmmm 7
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Here's a theory based on Einstein's idea that time is relative:
To a five-year-old, for example, a year represents one fifth of his/her entire life--a large percentage.
To a forty-year-old, a year is 1/40th of his life, and to an eighty-year-old, a year is only 1/80th of his entire life.
2007-12-16 11:08:42
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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Time seems to move faster because when your little you learn new things every day which makes it seem to go by quicker.
2007-12-16 11:03:03
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answer #9
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answered by bloo935 2
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I think it depends on whether you are enjoying life or not. i would also say it depends on the person. i consider myself young [18] and i mostly have been feeling like times has been going super slow.
2007-12-16 12:02:12
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answer #10
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answered by Mayonaise 6
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