Showing posts with label time. Show all posts
Showing posts with label time. Show all posts

Monday, December 29, 2008

Time is hella relative

In middle school, my math teacher explained that time seems to move faster as you get older, because each year that passes is a smaller portion of your life. For example, a four year old who turns five just lived a quarter of her life over again. A ten year old who turns eleven just lived a tenth of her life over again. And a twenty year old who turns twenty-one lived just 5% of her life over again. And it’s so true: years move faster and faster. An hour seemed a wildly long time to wait when I was nine, but now I practically jump for joy when there’s only an hour left of work.

That math teacher changed the way I thought about time, but there was something else that really altered the way I experienced it. For two years, I dated a fellow named John. He was from Berkeley, like me, but he went to school in New York, and I went to school in Santa Cruz. He would come home during summer and winter breaks. I went to visit him during spring breaks (expensive!) In between those times, I would wait.

Each day I would wait until John would call me. I would wait until he had bought his plane tickets and I could draw hearts all over one date in my calendar. I would wait through three months of school. I would wait through finals week. I would wait for his plane to land. I would wait until he would rip me open again.

All time was divided into measurable amounts leading up to when I would see him again, graduation, and then into more nebulous regions of commitment. If a class was miserable, I just had to remind myself that after 45 minutes of class, I had just one more class to go, then I’d be home and could pass the evening how I pleased, and then I just had to do that two more times and it would be the weekend, and then I just had to do 4 more of those and he would be home. When I was far from seeing him, I would make just a few markers to seeing him, like counting weeks. When I was getting closer, I would keep many markers so that my excitement would be increased each time I passed one. Most of the time, even sitting around waiting was pleasant, because I had the ultimate reward waiting for me.

After a year of this, waiting became a science. I had just 11 weeks in a quarter, which was basically the maximum I would go between seeing him. I looked forward to midterms and finals, because those were just markers on my dash to spooning the shit outta him. Each Saturday night that I spent not doing anything because I was waiting for him to call-- and I didn’t want to do things without him anyway-- was just the end of one more week.

Time went by so fast. I made few friends sophomore and junior years. I didn’t talk to guys at all. I wouldn’t shave my legs between seeing him. I was just waiting. I didn’t do fun things or go out much. I didn’t care about anything but John. John John John. I just passed time.

Once our relationship ended, I was able to experience time as something which I could use, not merely something to finish. Having set myself free, I no longer waited. Instead, I enjoyed myself. I got control of my life and did the things that I felt like doing. Each day was no longer a barrier to some time in the future, but rather a chance to make myself happy in that moment. I stopped counting weeks and began to look at what each day had to offer.

Now I have a choice about how I feel towards time. When I’m at work, I just keep my eyes on the prize: winter break, then January, then I’m quitting. I savor the moments when I’m at a show or with my sister. I hold onto them, squeeze them, and let the feeling tumble around inside of me as long as I can. Time is hella relative, and is completely subjected to the way you view it. Time is a treadmill, but it’s up to you how fast you want to go.