Famous Quotes | Age affects how people...

Age affects how people experience time. The observations on this are well known, so it is only necessary to outline briefly what has been the experience of everyone I have ever talked to or read about: the years go faster as one gets older. At the age of four or six, a year seems interminable; at sixty, the years begin to blend and are frequently hard to separate from each other because they move so fast! There are, of course, a number of common-sense explanations for this sort of thing. If you have only lived five years, a year represents 20 percent of your life; if you have lived fifty years, that same year represents only 2 percent of your life, and since lives are lived as wholes, this logarithmic element would make it difficult to maintain the same perspective on the experience of a year’s passage throughout a lifetime. - Edward T. Hall
Attribution: Edward T. Hall (b. 1914), U.S. anthropologist, educator. “Experiencing Time,” The Dance of Life: The Other Dimension of Time, Doubleday (1983).

Categories: Adulthood/adult Development, Anthropologist, Childhood, Educator

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