Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

This Tweet About Our Inaccurate Perceptions Of Time Is Weirdly On Point

This Tweet About Our Inaccurate Perceptions Of Time Is Weirdly On Point
Thomas Barwick/Getty Images; @ThukralAnkur/Twitter

Somehow, it's insane to me that we're in July.

We're halfway through 2019, but didn't it just start yesterday?

And don't get me started on what day of the week it is.


Outside of culture shock, time shock is probably the most relatable experience. Luckily, I'm not alone. A tweet by Twitter user @quartzen has gone viral, sharing their own feelings about time. And you gotta admit, there's something to their logic.

I'd be willing to bet some part of the tweet feels familiar.

It feels pretty accurate.

For me, 2010 to 2013 feels like it was both decades ago, and also like it was last week. 1990 feels like a foreign time period, but is also the time during my formative years.

Giphy

Sadly, this kind of perspective on time isn't due to some kind of sci-fi time dilation, but the more mundane anchoring of specific times to events. Growing up around this time has anchored many of our minds to the year 2000, which explains the first three decades on the list.

But why do so many find the other parts so relatable?




I would suspect it has to do with 2001. Since that time, there hasn't been a defining moment in 18 years that crystallizes in your mind quite the same as the horrible tragedies of that year.

This makes the last two decades a mishmash of everything that happened, leading to it feeling like so long ago, and also like it happened yesterday. This despite the fact we can clearly point to a difference between pop culture and trends.

But it's also why so many agree with the first half of the list and maybe want to change some things with the second half.


This doesn't even touch on our experience for how quickly time is moving. That doesn't even have a set of certain explanations, though it's something being researched extensively.

It's been shown that as you get older, it can feel like time moves faster. But only in retrospect. In an article from Scientific American Mind, researchers posited that this is because of our lack of new experiences as adults compared to when we're children and still learning about the world.

That still leaves the question of how we are expected to relate to time when it seems all over the place.




I'd be willing to bet there's a pretty solid timeframe from your younger years, with everything in the past two to three decades a strange soup of happening last week and also so long ago you can barely remember it.

Giphy

Whatever your perspective on time, your best option is to make new memories with your loved ones. Even if the research is wrong about new experiences, it's hard to argue that it's still enjoyable to do that.

For the ultimate time warp, Dr. Who 50th Anniversary special: The Day of the Doctor, is available here.

Amazon

More from Trending/weird-news

unidentified female Trump supporter at MAGA rally
Eva Marie Uzcategui/Getty Images

MAGA Mom Goes Viral After Revealing Her Son Refuses To Talk To Her Because She Voted For Trump

While people grapple with how to handle family members and friends who voted against their basic human rights, the people in question are dealing with the fallout from their choices.

MAGA Republican President Donald Trump and the Republican Party's embrace of the Heritage Foundation's Project 2025 made clear the rights of women; ethnic, racial and religious minorities; the disabled; immigrants; and the LGBTQ+ community were at risk.

Keep ReadingShow less
Mike Lee
Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images

GOP Senator Faces MAGA Backlash Over Plan To Sell Millions Of Acres Of Public Land

Utah Republican Senator Mike Lee is facing harsh criticism—including from Team MAGA—over his proposal to sell off millions of acres of public land in the American West owned by the Bureau of Land Management and the U.S. Forest Service to supposedly create more affordable housing.

Lee claimed in his proposal that there is an "extensive process for interested parties like States and local governments to nominate land for disposal to meet housing and community needs," noting that it specifically exempts national parks, monuments, and federally designated wilderness areas from potential land sales.

Keep ReadingShow less
Donald Trump
Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images

Trump Ripped For Complaining That Americans Get 'Too Many' Federal Holidays Off Work

While it was ultimately former President Joe Biden who established Juneteenth as a federal holiday, President Donald Trump—who once campaigned on that promise—took to Truth Social on Juneteenth to whine about the number of "non-working holidays" Americans get, claiming that it costs businesses "billions of dollars."

Juneteenth is derived from June 19, 1865, when Union troops led by General Gordon Granger arrived in Galveston, Texas, and declared that all enslaved African Americans in the state were free.

Keep ReadingShow less
Donald Trump
Carlos Barria - Pool/Getty Images

Donald Trump Called Out After Awkwardly Misspelling His Own Name In Post About Iran Attack

President Donald Trump was ripped by critics after he awkwardly misspelled his own name while praising the B-2 pilots who flew the strikes on Iran—only to later delete the post and repost it as if nothing happened.

On Saturday, Trump authorized a series of intense U.S. air and submarine strikes targeting three Iranian nuclear facilities, amid ongoing uncertainty about the status of Tehran’s nuclear program.

Keep ReadingShow less
A woman sitting up in bed as a man sleeps next to her.
Florida State University Researchers Find Predictors for Infidelity in New Study
(Wodicka/ullstein bild via Getty Images)

The Biggest 'They're Definitely Cheating On Me!' Signs People Ignored

When our partner commits suspicious behavior, it's easy for us to jump to conclusions.

Most of the time, the conclusions we jump to are 100% wrong and are just our imaginations playing tricks with us.

Keep ReadingShow less