Lifestyle
Why we feel like Christmas comes around more quickly each year
It's beginning to feel a lot like Christmas... again. While technically the gap between each Christmas is exactly the same as it always was, for many explainable reasons your brain doesn't see it that way.
By Ruth Ogden
Think back to your childhood. December was the longest of months. It might have been filled with rehearsing school nativity performances, writing up your wishlist and savouring the morning’s advent calendar chocolate. But at times it felt like Santa would never arrive.
As an adult it’s a different experience. One minute it’s summer holidays, barbecues and sunburn and then, in the blink of an eye, it’s mince pies, tinsel and turkey. Is it just me, or is Christmas coming around faster?
If you cannot believe the festive season is upon us already, you’re not alone. My colleagues and I recently conducted a survey of 918 adults in the UK and found 77% of respondents agreed Christmas seems to arrive more rapidly each year.
One reason may be the way we experience the passage of time changes as we age, often resulting in the feeling that time speeds up as we get older. For a 7-year- old, the 12 months between Christmases are a huge proportion of their life. For a 55-year-old, those same 12 months are a small portion of their experience. This difference in ratio compresses the relative time between Christmases each year.
Our experience of time also changes because we rely on memory to estimate duration. When we judge how long something lasted for, we base our estimate on how many memories we made during the period of interest. Whether we are trying to remember the length of a film, car journey or relationship, the number of memories we encoded during it will serve as an indicator of its length.
Periods of time in which fewer new memories are made, either because there was a lack of stimulating tasks, novel activities or heightened emotions, are interpreted by our brains as short.
Where has the year gone?
As we age, memory becomes more fallible and we recall less from our day-to-day lives. We’re also less likely to try new things than when we were younger. Together these factors may contribute to the sensation that less time has passed since last Christmas than we were expecting.
Because what we do has such a strong influence on how we experience time, changes to our routine distort the passage of time. A predictable day helps time to flow steadily.
This was illustrated on a global scale during the pandemic. One minute we were all going about our daily lives. Then all of a sudden, our routines were scrambled. People from Buenos Aries to Bagdad reported an overwhelming sense that time did not pass as normal during the pandemic.
While Christmas does not cause the same level of disruption as a global pandemic, it does disrupt our habits.
Can’t wait ‘til it’s Christmas!
Another factor which may make us feel like Christmas is here too fast is the amount of energy we put into anticipating it. For many children, Christmas is arguably the most eagerly awaited event of the year. Advent calendars count down the days until Santa arrives. All this excitement means children pay a lot of attention to the passage of time in the run up to Christmas. Unfortunately for them, focusing on the passage of time typically makes it drag.
For most adults, Christmas is less thrilling. So we probably think less about the countdown and paying less attention to time makes it pass more quickly.
Technological change also affects our perception of time. Advances in technology enable us to accomplish more tasks, more quickly, than ever before. This acceleration in the pace of life over the past 20 years may also contribute to the sensation that Christmas now comes around too soon.
Running out of time
Despite paying less attention to time, adults experience significantly more demands on their schedules than children in the run up to Christmas. For children, Christmas happens by magic. For adults however the festive mystique is replaced by large amounts of planning, shopping, wrapping and cooking. The added time pressure created by Christmas may contribute to time passing more quickly.
The lack of control children have over Christmas likely increases their level of temporal uncertainty. Not knowing when, or indeed if, something will happen can also slow the passage of time.
However, maybe we feel like Christmas comes around faster each year because it really does. In years gone by Christmas advertising wasn’t seen until the start of Advent. Nowadays it is normal to see chocolate Santas on the supermarket shelves in early October. This literal shifting of the Christmas timeline undoubtedly adds to the psychological sense of Christmas coming earlier.
Feature image: iStock/PRUDENCIOALVAREZ
Ruth Ogden, Reader in Experimental Psychology, Liverpool John Moores University. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.