Anonymous
ID: waPCx0mj
7/14/2025, 10:29:54 AM No.510342033
It's not because of age, smartphones, busy life or whatever shit they sell.
It took me two months to prove it. I dedicated each week to a certain type of lifestyle and yes, it's faster no matter what you do. It's anecdotal but see if it clicks with you.
1. Binge watching movies and shows. Days go by in no time.
2. Gaming: still same. Still same. Very fast.
3. Browsing: Fast as usual.
Here's where it gets special. The digital theory fails now
4. Diy woodworking projects : i completely cut off from digital world. Only receiving calls and messages. First two days were slow as fuck but after Wednesday it still felt very fast.
5. Camping : just lying in grass, eating and sleeping. First fay felt slow but later half of the week felt fast
6. Reading books : First two days are slow. Third normal and rest of them are fast.
7. Teaching: First day was slow. Rest were fast.
8. Eating and bringing on food. Like that mukbang stuff. First two days were slow . Then fast
Time is indeed faster. When you change your daily schedule time may feel slow for a day or two but that's it. That's just your body getting used to new schedule. Once you get with the flow it start feeling normal (faster).
My take, our days are not 24 hours anymore. They are somewhere between 18-20 hours. I personally feel that we've lost a quarter of day .
It's not aging as well. I'm in my early 30's. I confirmed that with a simple experiment. While I was younger, manual works such as sanding, painting, soldering etc took time because I was unskilled. But now after 10 years I can do all that with eyes closed but still my speed hasn't increased the way it should have. Things that took half hour still take 20 minutes while they should be 5-10 minutes only. My body is not slow as I do workout and calisthenics.
Governments know this. Elites know this.
Flaggots stay away.
Don't try to derail this thread.
This is the most important topic.
It took me two months to prove it. I dedicated each week to a certain type of lifestyle and yes, it's faster no matter what you do. It's anecdotal but see if it clicks with you.
1. Binge watching movies and shows. Days go by in no time.
2. Gaming: still same. Still same. Very fast.
3. Browsing: Fast as usual.
Here's where it gets special. The digital theory fails now
4. Diy woodworking projects : i completely cut off from digital world. Only receiving calls and messages. First two days were slow as fuck but after Wednesday it still felt very fast.
5. Camping : just lying in grass, eating and sleeping. First fay felt slow but later half of the week felt fast
6. Reading books : First two days are slow. Third normal and rest of them are fast.
7. Teaching: First day was slow. Rest were fast.
8. Eating and bringing on food. Like that mukbang stuff. First two days were slow . Then fast
Time is indeed faster. When you change your daily schedule time may feel slow for a day or two but that's it. That's just your body getting used to new schedule. Once you get with the flow it start feeling normal (faster).
My take, our days are not 24 hours anymore. They are somewhere between 18-20 hours. I personally feel that we've lost a quarter of day .
It's not aging as well. I'm in my early 30's. I confirmed that with a simple experiment. While I was younger, manual works such as sanding, painting, soldering etc took time because I was unskilled. But now after 10 years I can do all that with eyes closed but still my speed hasn't increased the way it should have. Things that took half hour still take 20 minutes while they should be 5-10 minutes only. My body is not slow as I do workout and calisthenics.
Governments know this. Elites know this.
Flaggots stay away.
Don't try to derail this thread.
This is the most important topic.
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