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October 2, 2025 11 mins

In this Think Thursday episode, Molly explores why the brain doesn’t experience minutes the way the clock does. Our perception of time is not fixed—it stretches and compresses depending on novelty, memory, attention, and emotion. That’s why childhood summers feel endless while adulthood years can seem to vanish.

Molly unpacks the psychology and neuroscience of time perception, including how prospective and retrospective time work, why novelty sharpens attention and stretches moments, and how emotions like fear, boredom, and joy distort our sense of time. She also shares fascinating phenomena like the “stopped clock illusion” and highlights how mindfulness can expand our sense of presence and create richer memories, making life feel fuller and more meaningful.

What You’ll Learn in This Episode:

  • The difference between prospective time and retrospective time
  • Why childhood feels longer than adulthood
  • How novelty, memory, and dopamine influence time perception
  • How emotions like stress, boredom, and joy distort our experience of time
  • Why mindfulness slows down prospective time and lengthens retrospective memory
  • Simple practices to stretch brain time and savor everyday moments

Key Quote:

“Clock time is rigid—sixty minutes is always sixty minutes. But brain time is elastic. Two people can live the same number of years yet experience them very differently depending on how much novelty, presence, and emotion they build into their days.”

References and Resources:

  • Eagleman, D. (2009). Brain Time: The Temporal Dimension of Experience
  • Wittmann, M. (2016). Felt Time: The Psychology of How We Perceive Time
  • Consciousness and Cognition (2019): Mindfulness meditation and time perception
  • Previous Think Thursday episodes: The Power of Reminiscing, The Science of Awe
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