Do you lack an internal sense of time?

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Do you lack an internal sense of time?
I have no sense of time 73%  73%  [ 33 ]
I have good sense of time 27%  27%  [ 12 ]
Total votes : 45

AnnePande
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14 Sep 2009, 10:57 am

My sense of time is not very good. I tend to feel like I have lots of time although I cognitively know I don't have. So I tend to get late. Or to get stuck in the moment instead of making plans that are necessary.
Executive dysfunction / inertia, I guess.



PlatedDrake
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14 Sep 2009, 11:29 am

Same, and its to the point that i feel naked if I dont have a watch one. If i didnt have a watch, i know id be late for interviews, family meetings, etc. However, as long as i have a watch on and know the calculated amount of time needed, i can plan things very well (I usually time myself to see what all i need to do before heading somewhere).



GreatCeleryStalk
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14 Sep 2009, 4:28 pm

Um... does my Blackberry count?

Without a clock, I have no idea what time it is or how much time has passed. I can remember that I have to be somewhere at 1PM, but if I don't have a clock, I can sit down at 12:30 and not have any idea when 1PM is.

I have trouble with indefinite concepts of time, like later. I hate it when people say "we can do that later." I don't know when later is or when it might be.



Ligea_Seroua
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14 Sep 2009, 4:45 pm

I am usually that unnerving bit TOO early for appointments, because i overcompensate for my total inability to estimate how long anything takes or how much time is passing. I have at least one clock in every room, it does not help.

I can't guess the time well, and to make it worse I can sleep anything from just a couple of hours to 16 or so if I didn't have alarm clocks and child/cat to wake me. If I don't have an externally imposed timetable i don't remember to eat (or have two meals combined). Drawing up a schedule is a fail, if it's just for me I'd spend ages designing it and then get stressed that I didn't follow it, then abandon it :roll:


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mysterious_misfit
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15 Sep 2009, 9:34 pm

Ligea_Seroua wrote:
If I don't have an externally imposed timetable i don't remember to eat (or have two meals combined).


Me too. I forget to eat sometimes.



ooOoOoOAnaOoOoOoo
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15 Sep 2009, 11:23 pm

I couldn't answer this one because it would be both yes and no. When I'm doing something that requires a lot of movement I keep track of time rather well. When I'm doing something that requires a lot of thought, time goes by quickly and it takes me longer.
I can wake up at the exact same time several nights in a row.



pschristmas
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16 Sep 2009, 1:13 am

I lose track of time quite often -- either that, or it seems to crawl by, and not just when there's something else I'd rather be doing. I have a great deal of trouble judging time. Every now and then, my boss will ask me how long I spend on a particular task during the day and he seems to think I should be able to make a good approximation of it, but I never can. I just start tossing out numbers until he's satisfied, then go back to work.



SplinterStar
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16 Sep 2009, 3:32 pm

I never know the time. So I leave insanely early and hope everything works out. It's not uncommon for me to not know if it's AM, PM, or 2009 for that matter. I don't understand how people can run on time. I measure my days by how I felt that day, or what I did. Today, and yesterday and the rest of last week all feel the same to me Because I did the same things all those days.

"How did work go on wednesday?"
"Oh, you mean monday?"
"... what the hell are you talking about?"



melissa17b
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16 Sep 2009, 4:04 pm

I have no internal clock; only an internal metronome. Unless there is a clock in sight, such as on the computer, once I become absorbed in something (which happens easily) I lose any connection to time, and I absolutely cannot distinguish 20 minutes from three hours. I may be working late at night, last having checked around 9:00, thinking it must be around 11 or so, only to find that it's after 3:00.

During the day, I lose track of time, but when the sun reaches critical positions in the sky it sets of an alarm of sorts in my head, resulting in my pausing to consider what time it is. As I know (a special interest, of sorts) what time these "alarms" happen even as the sun's position in the sky changes throughout the year (or as I travel), these "time landmarks" prevent me from totally losing any sense of time.

Also, when absorbed and unaware of time, I am completely oblivious to such things as needing to eat, etc.



CowboyFromHell
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16 Sep 2009, 4:38 pm

I'm usually on time to work and other things. But my problem with time is perception of how much time has passed or how fast or slow it is. Like I can sit down during my break time at work and while I feel like I've just sat down, it's been 20 minutes already. Or when I'm working, it may feel like it's been a half hour, yet it's been 2 or 3 minutes. WTF?!

And from an earlier post on the first page of this thread, you won't look weird if you suggest a schedule. It would help greatly. But you are gonna look weird if you ask someone else what their constant schedule is, you're gonna look creepy, not weird. You don't want this girl to think you're stalking them.


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18 Sep 2009, 2:57 pm

I've got a pretty great sense of short-time, (like, I almost don't need a food-timer) and a pretty good internal alarm clock, but bad sense of what day it is and horrible sense of stuff like what year something happened.


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