How to improve your time sense?
Sep. 13th, 2005 04:21 pmSo, I've never had a really great time-sense. Was I doing something an hour ago? Was it 3 hours ago. Has 15 minutes just passed, or has it been 90?
That short-range stuff has gotten better, but the long-term time sense is deteriorating. Was that party 2 weeks or 2 months ago? Was I talking about that subject 3 months or 2 years ago?
Does anyone have any ideas on how to improve that sort of thing, with an emphasis on internal monitoring? I can write things down, but then going back and figuring out when I wrote something down is almost as annoying as remembering the original thing, especially if I don't know what timeframe I'm looking for the notes in.
That short-range stuff has gotten better, but the long-term time sense is deteriorating. Was that party 2 weeks or 2 months ago? Was I talking about that subject 3 months or 2 years ago?
Does anyone have any ideas on how to improve that sort of thing, with an emphasis on internal monitoring? I can write things down, but then going back and figuring out when I wrote something down is almost as annoying as remembering the original thing, especially if I don't know what timeframe I'm looking for the notes in.
no subject
Date: 2005-09-13 09:30 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-09-13 09:39 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-09-13 10:23 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-09-13 11:08 pm (UTC)Recently I was participating in an ex-neighbor's background check and could not remember whether they'd moved out a year ago or two years ago, when exactly I bought the house, etc. etc. etc.
The only advice I have is that I find it works better to modify the write routine than the seek routine. That is, it's easier for me to say "Hey, I want to remember when this happened, let me think about when it is" and have that work, than to try and improve my lookup success after the fact.
Of course this is useless advice if you want to remember things that have already happened, or that you didn't think to tag when they happen.
no subject
Date: 2005-09-13 11:22 pm (UTC)but I have a suspicion that human time perception
is somewhat logarithmic as we age.
I remember as an 8 or 9 year old twenty minutes
being a long time, whereas now a week is often
not long to wait. A year is a good long while for
a teenager, but much less so for most (but not all) 30 year olds.
I suspect this is part of why childhood traumas and
broken long-term relationships can take so long to
get over. The first twelve years of your life may well
be in some perceptual fashion twice the length of the
next twelve.
Within this, different people have different time horizons.
For short-horizon folks, even in their mid-thirties a year
is long enough that they'll be a markedly different person,
while long-horizon folks are surprised that that ten year warrenty
is over already.
One approach I've seen mentioned is to think of time as geography.
Last year is a near by place, the 1970s much further,
and colonial times quite a ways off. There's a block of address
space occupied in time by your life, this is your city.
The usefulness of the approaches of course depends on just what you
are trying to use a sense of time for. Remembering to have lunch
or pacing the work of a day is a somewhat different, although certainly
related, problem than making sure something happens within a month.
Sunlight is a very good clock. If you work in the same place every day,
and there is a window, you can watch the light crawl across things, and
also see the seasonal change.
no subject
Date: 2005-09-14 01:20 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-09-14 01:20 am (UTC)As for short term, it sometimes works the same way: what was I doing just now? why was I doing that? what was I doing before? etc as ways to check if I'm on track (either studying or in some complex fetch and carry task at work). There was a stupid computer analogy associated with this, but I can't phrase it so it makes sense anymore. The rest of the time I'm just scatterbrained.
no subject
Date: 2005-09-14 01:26 am (UTC)I agree with a suggestion someone else made about "tagging' the important items in your mind when they happen.
Incidentally, I hate when I get calls from security clearance investigators, asking when someone started and stopped working for me, and expecting me to know the answers without consulting my notes. That is definitely not happening.
no subject
Date: 2005-09-14 01:37 am (UTC)First, I (accidentally) drove over my watch one year, and then didn't replace it. In the year or so after, I developed/calibrated my timesense by sporadically guessing the time, and then checking the actual time to see how close my guess had been. At this point, I have a fairly good timesense, *except* when distracted by computers (or good dates. ;-)
And to combat the computer issue, I've set up the clock on my workstation to beep every 30 minutes. It actually helps me tremendously in noticing the passage of time while at the computer. (I just realized that I never set this up on my mac. Now looking into it. :-)
no subject
Date: 2005-09-14 02:01 am (UTC)hour not fine enough? there's probably products you can buy that zzzt, buzz, cheep at increments you prefer - certainly a palm pilot can do that.
as for longer term stuff... perhaps to find a book on memory and associations and such tricks. tying events to weather and seasons and times of day and people and so on.
#
no subject
Date: 2005-09-14 04:02 am (UTC)For longer-term... well, for me it's been meditation. What happened was one day I saw a bunch of people in Davis Sq. holding up political placards. I was really confused. Why would they be doing that at that particular moment? Was there some kind of special election going on? A primary or a mid-term replacement? Then, suddenly, I realized that it was Novemeber and that the general election was in a couple days. I was terrified. What had happened? What had I missed? It was like coming out of a coma, and I was really shocked. That's when I started meditation practice. I realized I had been so wrapped up in my head, and in internal dialogues, that I had not even noticed the change of seasons. So I found a place to teach me to be more aware amd conscious of the act of being alive.
I still don't have a good grasp on things from more than, say, five years ago or so, but going forward from here, I hope to pay better attention as all the time.
YMMV
no subject
Date: 2005-09-14 04:06 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-09-14 04:28 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-09-14 01:57 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-09-14 11:58 pm (UTC)For longer stuff... my job situation, living situation, and lovelife have changed often enough that I can usually use these to navigate. "Okay, if I was living there, and dating that person, but still working there, that means..." If I ever settle down, I'm going to have to come up with a new strategy :)