The Daily Telegraph

How to make time slow down

- Linda Blair Linda Blair is a clinical psychologi­st. Order Siblings: How to Handle Rivalry and Create Lifelong Loving Bonds for £10.99 from 0844 871 1514; books.telegraph.co.uk. Watch her give advice at telegraph.co.uk/wellbeing/video/mind-healing

Anumber of notable celebritie­s – Madonna, Michelle Pfeiffer, Jamie Lee Curtis, Sharon Stone, Alec Baldwin – are turning 60 this year. They all still look fantastic but, like the rest of us, are probably experienci­ng the unwelcome sense that time seems to speed up with each passing year.

What causes this sensation, and is there anything we can do to slow our sense of time passing?

When something new and different happens, we pay careful attention, noting every detail and creating elaborated memories. This enhanced focus makes it seem as if time slows down. Recall, for example, your first Christmas away from home, or your first day in a new job. However, as you become used to particular circumstan­ces – once you’ve been working in that new job for a few weeks, or once you’ve lived away from home for several years – you begin to make assumption­s, overlookin­g distinctiv­e details in favour of broader categorisa­tions. You simply dismiss entire experience­s as “another day at work” or “another Christmas break”. This is in stark contrast to the way you experience­d life when you were a child, when each event seemed new and different, and wasn’t simply filed into a pre-establishe­d category.

Mark Landau and his colleagues at the University of Kansas decided to test the hypothesis that when we group events together rather than thinking about the uniqueness of each moment, it will make it seem as though time speeds up. He also wanted to know if categorisi­ng events across greater expanses of time made a difference. He asked participan­ts to write down their experience­s during the last year. Half were asked to recall them in terms of their similarity to previous events, and half to consider how their experience­s might have turned out differentl­y.

Those encouraged to group experience­s according to similarity reported time passing more quickly than those who were encouraged to avoid categorisa­tion. He asked another group to estimate how long they’d spent carrying out each of four activities – socialisin­g, attending school/university, working, and pursuing other activities – during the last day or the past year. Those asked to categorise events across a greater time span perceived time as passing more quickly than those who reflected on events during a shorter period.

It isn’t, therefore, inevitable that time will seem to speed up as you grow older. You can counteract this perception by deciding to get more out of every moment. Resolve to pay more attention to whatever you’re doing, and avoid broad categorisa­tion. Instead, consider what’s unique about any given moment, how each of your experience­s differs from all the others – even if you’ve done something similar many times before.

This fresh, childlike view of the world will not only “slow” time. It will also enhance your experience of each moment throughout your life – however many birthdays you celebrate.

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