Time feels faster as we age because our brains have fewer new experiences to remember. When you're a kid, everything is new, like learning how to ride a bike or making your first friend. That means more memories to fill up the brain’s memory box. But when you’re older, most things feel familiar, and life has fewer surprises. So the same amount of time feels shorter because there are fewer interesting events to mark it by.
Examples
- A child learning to ride a bike feels like it took forever, while an adult doing it again thinks it only took minutes.
- Going to school for the first time seems like years; going to college as an older student seems quicker.
- Making your first friend is memorable and anchors time in your mind, but repeating that experience later feels faster.
Ask a question
See also
- Why Does Time Feel Faster as We Age?
- Why Does Time Feel Like It Speeds Up as We Age?
- Why Does Time Feel Like It's Speeding Up?
- Why Does Time Seem to Speed Up as We Get Older?
- Why Does Time Seem to Fly When We're Happy?