It has been brought to my attention by several coworkers that most of them find cannabis–thc specifically–makes time go much faster for them. The day flies by compared to normal. I’m just the opposite. Any amount of thc stretches time to its limits. It makes the day feel so, so long. Even a little bit of H4CBD has me in the time tunnel. I feel like I’m gonna be here forever. I’m curious if I’m in as much a minority in the grand scheme of things as I am in this building.

  • MDZA
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    8 months ago

    Normally I’m in a weird place when time feels slower when I become aware of it, but it speeds up too much when I’m doing something which means I’m not paying attention to the time anymore.

    • LilB0kChoy@lemm.ee
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      8 months ago

      Yep, this is the same for me. If I’m clock watching time drags but if I’m not it goes by much more quickly.

    • LegionEris [she/her]@feddit.nlOPM
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      8 months ago

      I could see how it could just exaggerate the typical “time flies when you’re having fun” experience, but that’s not it for me. I genuinely love my job with everything in me. Yesterday was a great day in the time vortex. Both of my best friends work Fridays, and I enjoyed perceiving extra time with them.

      • MDZA
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        8 months ago

        I think this phenomenon can be explained by understanding our frame of reference with respect to time when we’re high.

        In normal time (NT), time registers fairly linearly from our perspective. Generally, each second feels about as long as the next and we’re able to measure our mood, emotions, experiences and how long they go on for with a reasonable degree of accuracy.

        In high time (HT), time does not flow linearly from our perspective. One second could be as long as the next, or it could be slower. There’s no really way to tell. Even if you deliberately set a timer like I often do, the numbers on the dial don’t really tell the whole story.

        And I think this is because you can perceive so much more while high. Those cymbals you don’t hear in when in NT. The way the clouds move in the painting that you don’t notice in NT. The micro expressions on your friend’s faces as you talk that you don’t notice in NT.

        You start to perceive all these extra things. Things that have always been there but time forgot to highlight to you, because you were in the wrong sort of time.

        So when you’re in the correct time, the HT, I think you start to measure time not in how many seconds flow from one to the next, but by how much you experience from one moment to the next.

        Then when you start to think of the moments passing and the minutes passing too, you realise that you actually packed more moments into those minutes than you would have in NT – and if you had to normalise those HT moments with NT moments to make the moments last the same amount of time, what actually ends up happening is that the seconds and minutes end up being longer when translated into a linear time space.

        I hope this makes sense, if not, I’ll try and draw it.