"Age affects how people experience time"
About this Quote
Hall’s line reads like a calm lab note, but it quietly detonates one of modern life’s favorite myths: that time is a neutral medium we all move through the same way. For a scientist who spent his career mapping culture and communication, “Age affects how people experience time” isn’t a sentimental nod to getting older. It’s a systems claim. Your sense of urgency, patience, boredom, and “enough time” isn’t just personality; it’s conditioned by where you are in the life cycle, what stakes you feel, and how your body and attention metabolize experience.
The intent is pragmatic. Hall is pointing at a variable that changes everything from planning to conflict. If younger people often live in a future-heavy mode (time as runway), older people may treat time as an economy (time as scarce capital). That gap doesn’t just produce generational jokes; it shapes negotiations, workplace expectations, even how advice lands. “Take your time” can sound like freedom or like theft depending on the listener’s clock.
Subtext: time is partly social technology. Age doesn’t only speed up or slow down perception; it can shift which “time system” you inhabit: deadlines versus seasons, novelty versus repetition, ambition versus maintenance. Hall’s broader context matters here. He argued that much miscommunication comes from invisible frameworks (including “monochronic” clock-time and “polychronic” event-time). Age becomes another hidden framework, a built-in bias that makes two people think they’re discussing the same schedule when they’re actually living in different temporal realities.
The intent is pragmatic. Hall is pointing at a variable that changes everything from planning to conflict. If younger people often live in a future-heavy mode (time as runway), older people may treat time as an economy (time as scarce capital). That gap doesn’t just produce generational jokes; it shapes negotiations, workplace expectations, even how advice lands. “Take your time” can sound like freedom or like theft depending on the listener’s clock.
Subtext: time is partly social technology. Age doesn’t only speed up or slow down perception; it can shift which “time system” you inhabit: deadlines versus seasons, novelty versus repetition, ambition versus maintenance. Hall’s broader context matters here. He argued that much miscommunication comes from invisible frameworks (including “monochronic” clock-time and “polychronic” event-time). Age becomes another hidden framework, a built-in bias that makes two people think they’re discussing the same schedule when they’re actually living in different temporal realities.
Quote Details
| Topic | Aging |
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