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The Columbia World of Quotations.  1996.
 
 
NUMBER:26536
QUOTATION: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.
ATTRIBUTION:Edward T. Hall (b. 1914), U.S. anthropologist, educator. “Experiencing Time,” The Dance of Life: The Other Dimension of Time, Doubleday (1983).
 
 
The Columbia World of Quotations. Copyright © 1996 Columbia University Press.

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