Ian2day
14-03-2009, 03:58 AM
The transition of time when travelling a distance is perceptional and linked to your emotional state. Our emotions somehow influence the way that we perceive reality and how reality is created. The more anxsious you are the faster time expires relative to the distance travelled. So you want to get somewhere on time. You see a clock and become anxious as you have not got much time to reach your destination. The transition of time speeds up for the distance you have covered under a state of high anxsioty. Remaining calm and not rushing slows down the transition of time and your perception adjusts accordingly.
branjo
21-03-2009, 11:23 AM
I totally agree,
A few weeks ago I was due to pick my kid up from school just down the street a few blocks, I leave the house at an exact time every day going to get him but I lost track of time and had 5 mins to get there, he is in kindergarten so in a blind panic I ran out of the house without a coat hoping that if he doesn't see me he will just wait with his teacher, but all sort of stupid thing were going through my mind, running like a crazy person then walking then running again until I got there I was about 2 mins late and there he was with his teacher waiting.
Just the other day I did the exact same thing and left at the exact same time, but since I knew that he knew not to leave his teachers side until I got there I wasn't panicked, so I briskly walked there and I got to the door as the school bell rang, weird as hell I thought.