Quantum duck wrote:
I am terrible about the passage of time. I consistently forget that class will end and make my students late if they don’t remind me (ie: Me: “ok, everybody get two dowels, a rolling pin, and a pound of clay.” Student: “class ends in 5 minutes.” Me: “nevermind, everybody clean up.”
Quantum duck wrote:
I can’t remember how old people are - including myself, my Dh, and my kids. I can remember what year they are born, so I remind myself what year it is now and do the math.
I can never seem to remember my age.
Quantum duck wrote:
Always have to check the date. Even if I checked the date five minutes ago.
Same!
Quantum duck wrote:
I will ask students “did you know so and so?” No? “They graduated/taught here a couple of years ago.” On further thought, actually in 2010.
Quantum duck wrote:
Also, my daughter says I believe “time is flat” as in the sequence of events does not matter.
Example - when I was a teenager I was horsing around with a casual friend and physically injured him. I felt very bad about that. Every time I remembered it, I felt bad about it. 35 years later he acquired a position of authority in which he did some things I find morally reprehensible. I no longer feel at all bad about the injury. Serves him right.
I'm having trouble wrapping my head around the “time is flat” concept, but how long ago memories feel to me are all over the place, and they can change suddenly. Something that was 10 years ago but for the last ten years felt like last year, can suddenly feel like 10 years ago. As if my brain said "ok I guess the difference is big enough for this to be considered "the past."