
Let me hit you with this—time isn’t speeding up; you’re just running out of it. Think about it: when you’re a kid, that first year of life? That’s everything. It’s your entire existence, your whole world, your whole sense of being. Every second is a new revelation, a universe opening up. To a one-year-old, a year is a lifetime, because it literally is.
But fast-forward a bit. You’re 10 years old, and a year is now just a tenth of your life—a slice of the pie, not the whole thing. By the time you hit 50, that same year? It’s a mere 2% of your entire experience. A single ripple in a sea of memory. And when you’re 70? A year’s gone before you can even catch your breath, a blink in the rearview mirror of a life already half a century long.
That’s the math of it. Time doesn’t change, but your perception does, because every new year becomes a smaller fraction of the whole. The longer you’ve lived, the more compressed time feels. It’s like a movie reel speeding up, each frame shorter than the last. And it’s relentless—like you’re running downhill, faster and faster, with gravity pulling you toward the inevitable.
But here’s the twist: that shrinking sense of time? It’s a reminder. It’s telling you to hold on to the moments, because they’re fleeting. It’s why the small stuff matters—watching the sun set, hearing a familiar laugh, or feeling the weight of someone’s hand in yours. Those moments are the real currency, the only way to fight back against the speeding clock.
So yeah, time’s a thief, but it’s also a teacher. And the lesson? Don’t blink too long, because the best parts are happening now. Every second is still yours to spend—or waste. Choose wisely.
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