It’s as simple as looking at a ratio.
When you’re 5, a year is 20% of your life.
At 10, a year is 10% of your life.
When you’re 25, that same year is 4% of your life.
At 50, a year is 2% of your life, and if you live to be 100 years old, a year is a very fast 1% of your life.
Add in that at 5 and 10, it’s likely that you’re playing all summer, or vacationing, for a quarter of the year. At 25 and 50, you may have 3-4 weeks of vacation to spread through the year.
There was a study like 20 years ago. Basically it said this.
If you were 2 and never saw a circle and someone drew 85% of one it might take a while for your brain to figure it out.maybe it wouldn’t.
But then you see a circle and again and again and at 80%, you “see a circle”
When you are young your brian is really focusing and taking in information. When you get older it fills in information with information you’ve already seen a thousand times. It doesn’t form new blocks it just refuses old ones.
I guess it’s because you are enjoying life – when its going hard , it seems as if the clock’s hands are not moving an inch.
Quoting Einstein’s Statement on Relatively –
” When you sit with a beautiful girl for three Hours it feels like a minute, but if you sit on a hot stove for a minute it feels like three hours and that’s Relativity.”
There are a good few experiments that demonstrate that we perceive time and see more slowly when we are being more fuelled by adrenaline. (One good experiment demonstrated this by using a red digital clock that flickered too quickly for the eye to see the correct time. The human test subjects were dropped along with the clock from a crane to a crash mat. The quick boost of adrenaline and increased heart rates allowed each subject to see the clock correctly on the way down and for a short time after landing.)
I could be hypothesised that children are far more likely to experience elevated heart rates and have more adrenaline boosts from their active play thus making time appear to pass more slowly for them.
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