Carl Honoré
Time In The Time of Pandemic
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Carl Honoré is a writer and speaker and the voice of the global Slow Movement. His books have been published in 34 languages and landed on bestseller lists in many countries.

His TED Talk in praise of slowness has been viewed 3 million times. His new TED Talk in praise of aging will drop soon. He has written four books:

- In Praise of Slowness: Challenging the Cult of Speed

- Under Pressure: Putting the Child Back in Childhood

- The Slow Fix: Solve Problems, Work Smarter and Live Better in a World Addicted to Speed

- Bolder: Making the Most of Our Longer Lives

Time is a funny old thing.

It flies when you’re having fun. A good party or a promising date always comes to an end too soon.

Yet time slows to a crawl when life is dull. Think how the minutes move like molasses when you’re ticking boxes at work or listening to a boring lecture.

And there’s another twist: experiences that flash by in the moment often expand later in the memory.

Why? Because the tables turn when we look back on our lives.

If moments of tedium drag on at the time, they leave barely a trace in the long run. By contrast, novel, engaging experiences whiz by in the moment but go on to forge lasting memories.  

And the richer your memory bank, the longer your life feels.

That’s why Thomas Mann, in his famous novel, The Magic Mountain, sang the praises of novelty and warned against too much repetition and routine: “When one day is like all the others, then they are all like one; complete uniformity would make the longest life seem short.”

Thanks to the pandemic, many of us are enduring much more repetition and routine than normal. Which may explain why the minutes and the hours seem to pass painfully slowly even as we wonder where the last few weeks and months have gone.

Welcome to the worst of both worlds, where time drags and leaves little mark.

Is there a way out of this temporal double whammy?

One solution is travel. Done right, it can serve up a memorable feast of novelty.

Research suggests that when looking back on two weeks of our ordinary routine we can recall on average six to nine events. When you travel, you can rack up that many Kodak moments in a day – eating unfamiliar food; encountering foreign sounds, smells, architecture; driving on the other side of the road; meeting new people; grappling with another language.

But hitting the road can only help up to a point: Mann warned that the novelty of travel loses its punch after six to eight days.

And anyway, hopping on a plane has lost its charm in these pandemic times.

Here’s another solution: recreate the enriching thrill of travel by injecting some novelty into your normal routine at home:

Chat to a neighbour you’ve hitherto ignored. Cook unfamiliar recipes. Walk or cycle through a distant part of town. Eat lunch in a new place. Commute to work using a different form of transport. Vary your route to the supermarket. Take an online class or attend a virtual food tasting.

You might find that time passes a little more quickly. And that your life feels fuller – and longer.

Just the ticket in a global pandemic.

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Veronica O'Keane
How We Make Memories and How Memories Make Us
Our memories shape who we are, how we perceive the world and are the only means by which we can gauge a sense of time. We spoke to psychiatrist Veronica O’Keane to discuss how our memories store a sense of place and time and how our emotions inform what we remember.
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