Anyone else feel like time's just... speeding up?

Ben Arthur

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Is it just me, or did this year basically vanish in the blink of an eye? We're already halfway through 2026 and I'm still mentally adjusting to the fact that it's not 2023.

Mondays turn into Fridays before I even feel the week happening. Weekends? Gone in like five seconds. And don't even get me started on how 2020 still feels "recent" in my head, when it's actually been six years.

Is this just an age thing, or is everyone feeling this lately? : )
 
Probably because of:

1) We speed everything up in our digital lives. Videos, movies, everything speed 2X to avoid wasting time.
2) Routine. There is nothing different happening. Everyday is basically the same, many stuff we are doing on autopilot
3) Useless activities transforming people into zombies. Those social media apps, you can watch hours of this shit and after that, you can't remember 2 videos that you watched
4) Excessive time screen, again, time goes quicker when you are overstimulated by videos, sound effects, comments to read, replies to answer at the same time
5) Nothing new, as said in 2. Also, if you spend a whole day without a phone in a forest, I'd be surprised if that day goes as quick as an average day

Not saying this exactly applies for OP or any specific person, but in many cases this is happening with millions of people.

There was that movie, Click with Adam Sandler, I guess we have that remote control, we speed everything up and live in autopilot all the time, sick.
 
It's the 2x speed + routine combo. Once you start watching tutorials at 2x and skipping intros, your brain gets impatient with real-time life too. Everything feels like it's dragging except the years.
 
Probably because of:

1) We speed everything up in our digital lives. Videos, movies, everything speed 2X to avoid wasting time.
2) Routine. There is nothing different happening. Everyday is basically the same, many stuff we are doing on autopilot
3) Useless activities transforming people into zombies. Those social media apps, you can watch hours of this shit and after that, you can't remember 2 videos that you watched
4) Excessive time screen, again, time goes quicker when you are overstimulated by videos, sound effects, comments to read, replies to answer at the same time
5) Nothing new, as said in 2. Also, if you spend a whole day without a phone in a forest, I'd be surprised if that day goes as quick as an average day

Not saying this exactly applies for OP or any specific person, but in many cases this is happening with millions of people.

There was that movie, Click with Adam Sandler, I guess we have that remote control, we speed everything up and live in autopilot all the time, sick.
You really nailed it, especially the part about routine and social media. It's wild how easy it is to lose hours scrolling and barely remember any of it afterward. The Click comparison is honestly a great way to sum up modern life.
Ever since I discovered hentai time does seem to move 100x faster.

Last time I checked it was 2023 and bam now we in 2026 but it feels like 5 mins.
Haha: D, that's one way to measure the passage of time. Feels like we blinked and somehow skipped straight from 2023 to 2026.
It's the 2x speed + routine combo. Once you start watching tutorials at 2x and skipping intros, your brain gets impatient with real-time life too. Everything feels like it's dragging except the years.
That's a really good point. We've trained ourselves to expect everything instantly, so day-to-day life feels slow while the years somehow fly by without warning.
Age is a bish when you reach a certain level, times fly faster that before, hmm.
Haha, it really does feel that way. The older you get, the faster the years seem to slip by. It's a little scary when you actually stop to think about it.
Every time I check the calendar, another month has somehow disappeared.
Same here, honestly. I feel like I just get used to one month, and the next time I look up we're already deep into the next one.
 
i think your brain measures time by new memories, not clock hours. a week on holiday feels long looking back because every day made a distinct memory, a month of the same commute collapses into one blur. the years fly because we stopped making markers. its why one random spontaneous day can make a whole month feel fuller.
 
i think your brain measures time by new memories, not clock hours. a week on holiday feels long looking back because every day made a distinct memory, a month of the same commute collapses into one blur. the years fly because we stopped making markers. its why one random spontaneous day can make a whole month feel fuller.
I like that way of looking at it. The more memorable experiences you have, the slower life seems in hindsight. Routine really does make months blend into each other.
 
You're definitely not the only one. One thing that's helped me is slowing down on purpose, even if it's just taking a short break during the day or trying something new each week. Those small moments make time feel a little less like it's flying by.
 
Your definitely not alone, the older I get the faster time seems to pass, I think routines have a lot to do with it, when weeks start looking the same our brains dont create as many distinct memories so months feel like they disappear.


Its funny because 2020 still feels "a couple of years ago" to me too even though its been much longer, makes me appreciate the importance of trying new things every now and than just to make time feel a little fuller.
 
You're definitely not alone! Time has been flying for so many people lately—it really does feel like 2020 was just yesterday.
 
It’s not just you time moves faster when your daily schedule is monotonous.
When everything runs together work, browsing, sleeping, your mind condenses time so that the months seem to slip away
 
yeah and the useful flip is you can game it on purpose, one genuinely new thing a week, a different route, a place youve never been, and that month stops blurring. novelty is basically a time dilation cheat code. beats waiting for a holiday to feel like you actually lived that stretch.
 
Exactly. It's like our brains are buffering faster than reality can deliver. The weird part isExactly. It's like our brains are buffering faster than reality can deliver. The weird part is when you do something genuinely new — travel, learn a skill, meet new people — time slows back down. Novelty is the only counter I've found. when you do some
 
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