How the pandemic upended our perception of time

Our grasp of time is malleable.

Distorted clock, warped time
(Image credit: Shutterstock)

Think back to life before stay-at-home orders. Does it feel like just yesterday? Or does it seem like ages ago — like some distant era?

Of course, time is precise. It takes 23.9 hours for the Earth to make one rotation on its axis. But that's not how we experience time. Instead, internally, it's often something we feel or sense, rather than objectively measure.

Philip Gable
Associate Professor of Psychology, University of Delaware

Philip Gable is an associate professor of Psychology at The University of Delaware. He completed his PhD in social psychology at Texas A&M University in 2010. He has published widely on affective and motivational science with more than 50 peer-reviewed articles and book chapters. He received a fellowship with the Society for Experimental Social Psychology and the inaugural Early Career Award winner from the Society for the Science of Motivation.