Why Does Time Seem to Speed Up with Age?
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Where did the time go? middle-aged and older adults often remark.  Many of us feel that time passes more quickly as we age, a perception  that can lead to regrets. According to psychologist and BBC columnist  Claudia Hammond, the sensation that time speeds up as you get older is  one of the biggest mysteries of the experience of time. Fortunately,  our attempts to unravel this mystery have yielded some intriguing  findings.
  In 2005, for instance, psychologists Marc Wittmann and Sandra  Lenhoff, both then at Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, surveyed  499 participants, ranging in age from 14 to 94 years, about the pace at  which they felt time movingfrom very slowly to very fast. For  shorter durationsa week, a month, even a yearthe subjects' perception  of time did not appear to increase with age. Most participants felt that  the clock ticked by quickly. But for longer durations, such as a  decade, a pattern emerged: older people tended to perceive time as  moving faster. When asked to reflect on their lives, the participants  older than 40 felt that time elapsed slowly in their childhood but then  accelerated steadily through their teenage years into early adulthood.
  There are good reasons why older people may feel that way. When it  comes to how we perceive time, humans can estimate the length of an  event from two very different perspectives: a prospective vantage, while  an event is still occurring, or a retrospective one, after it has  ended. In addition, our experience of time varies with whatever we are  doing and how we feel about it. In fact, time does fly when we are  having fun. Engaging in a novel exploit makes time appear to pass more  quickly in the moment. But if we remember that activity later on, it  will seem to have lasted longer than more mundane experiences.
  The reason? Our brain encodes new experiences, but not familiar ones,  into memory, and our retrospective judgment of time is based on how  many new memories we create over a certain period. In other words, the  more new memories we build on a weekend getaway, the longer that trip  will seem in hindsight.
  This phenomenon, which Hammond has dubbed the holiday paradox, seems  to present one of the best clues as to why, in retrospect, time seems to  pass more quickly the older we get. From childhood to early adulthood,  we have many fresh experiences and learn countless new skills. As  adults, though, our lives become more routine, and we experience fewer  unfamiliar moments. As a result, our early years tend to be relatively  overrepresented in our autobiographical memory and, on reflection, seem  to have lasted longer. Of course, this means we can also slow time down  later in life. We can alter our perceptions by keeping our brain active,  continually learning skills and ideas, and exploring new places.