DandelionFireworks wrote:
Time is visual for me. The precise picture depends on scale. A few months goes on my picture of a year, which curves and stuff. I understand what season and date it is by picturing where I am on this curvy thingy, which also has different colors. Years go on a straight, left-to-right timeline or a bottom-to-top timeline with now on top and the past stretching out below.
For centuries, the scale just gets bigger. Each century is a block of time that sits on top of the previous century and beneath the one after.
For hours, it's quite like a clock, similar to years.
Also, I think of examples from my experience of how long a particular period of time takes. Like, for a decade, I think of myself now and ten years ago.
Holy sh**! ! I do this too but had never heard of anyone else doing it. I don't have a scale for anything larger than a year, but my year is an inclined ring with winter at the high side and summer at the low side. My week looks like a single week from a calendar, and my day is a chevron with the AM ascending to noon at the apex and pm descending on the other side.
I too have a poor sense of time sometimes as 2 hrs can feel like 10 min and vice versa. I scared my mom once with this. My parents had left the house for something one night. When they got back I asked them why they were back so soon as it felt like they'd been gone 10-20 min. Her response was they'd been gone for over 2 hrs. If I'm engrossed i n something, whether I'm really enjoying it or not, I will almost always lose track of time. It happens a lot when I'm writing a paper for school and it's just flowing out. If I struggle to write it then I'm acutely aware of how much time has passed.