“Time is free, but it’s priceless. You can’t own it, but you can use it. You can’t keep it, but you can spend it. Once you’ve lost it, you can never get it back.”
– Harvey Mackay
Maybe it’s the season. Maybe it’s an aging parent. Or, a sense of my own mortality. Milestone birthdays tend to bring up a lot of feels for me. Time seems to slip by faster and faster. Is it the passing of a decade, or the beginning of a decade? The most common theory on why we perceive the speeding up of time is that our perception of time is directly proportional to our neural processing speed, which slows as we age. Another theory by Cindy Lustig, a psychology professor at the University of Michigan: “When we are older, we tend to have lives that are more structured around routines, and fewer of the big landmark events that we use to demarcate different epochs of the ‘time of our lives,’” And, finally, another viewpoint by Steve Taylor, PhD, senior lecturer in psychology at Leeds Beckett University, UK, is that our experience of time is highly flexible and subjective. The more information our minds process, the slower time passes. Time speeds up with increasing age because we have fewer new experiences and our perception is less vivid.
What all this really drives home for me is that we should never stop exploring, learning, and experiencing new things. We can’t stop time, but we can slow down our perception of it by living mindfully, and bringing in new experiences.
Get out and take those trips you’ve been dreaming about. Climb a local mountain, enjoy live music (and dance like no one is watching), ride in a hot air balloon if you’ve never done it–you won’t regret it! My point is simple, don’t wait. Do those things you’ve been putting off until “the time is right.” Right now is the perfect time.
In health & wellness,
Claudia
P.S. The fourth installment in my 5 Essential Exercises video series is up (The Plank), and a new yoga video have been added to my Vimeo platform: Glow Flow – Moon Salute.

