Science!
I thought it was simply because a year is a larger percentage of your life when you’re younger, didn’t think there was anything more to it than that
When your 10 a year is a full 10% of your life (really more that than since you probably don’t have many memories before 5 or so) versus a year at 50 is a blip
1986 and 1987 were completely different years to me but the last 20 years are all a mixed up blur
“Did that happen in 2005 or 2015?” And I legit don’t know
===========================
…..“Physical time is not mind time,” as mechanical engineering professor and author of
Time and Beauty: Why Time Flies And Beauty Never Dies,
Adrian Bejan, puts it. “The time that you perceive is not the same as the time perceived by another.”
One side of the equation in explaining this phenomenon is physiological. Remember as a kid when the summer holidays felt elastic, a never-ending wad of chewing gum that kept on extending as hours melted away on lazy afternoons?
There’s an actual science behind that.
“The brain receives fewer images than it was trained to receive when young,” argues Bejan.
He theorises that the rate at which we process visual information slows down as we age; as the size and complexity of the networks of neurons in our brains increase, the electrical signals must travel greater distances, leading to slower signal processing.
The result?
We perceive fewer “frames-per-second” as we get older, and therefore time feels like it’s passing quicker. It’s like a flipbook – the fewer the number of pictures, the quicker you flick to the end.
“People are often amazed at how much they remember from days that seemed to last forever in their youth,” he said. “It’s not that their experiences were much deeper or more meaningful, it’s just that they were being processed in rapid fire.”
Plus, the less time we’ve experienced, the greater a proportion of our lives a set period of time actually is.
For a four-year-old, a year is a much bigger percentage of their overall lifespan thus far than it is for a 40-year-old – so no wonder it feels longer and more significant.
While there’s not much we can do about these physiological elements, there are other important factors at play that we
do have some control over.
Another reason that time feels longer when we’re younger is that the brain is programmed to hang on to new experiences, says Bejan – and when we’re young, we’re having new experiences all the time.
There’s so much for a child encountering the world afresh to absorb and digest each day.
After all, in the beginning, everything we do is the first time we’ve ever done it.
The older we get, the more likely it is that we’re clocking up fewer and fewer new experiences with each year that passes.
This is partly because, naturally, the more stuff we experience, the less new stuff there
is to experience.
But part of it is due to human nature; with age, we can become increasingly stuck in old habits, overly comfortable with the familiar and unwilling to pursue novelty or challenge ourselves to step into the unknown.
Even trying a new food can feel like a bridge too far.
If we’re doing the same things week-in, week-out though, we’re not presenting our brains with anything juicy or remarkable to hang on to.
With few fresh memories made, weeks blend into months, blend into years, with little to differentiate them. Time has, to all intents and purposes, sped up………
https://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/time-speed-faster-years-quicker-old-age-b2671569.html