# The time of your life: mapping the mechanisms behind life tempo judgments

**Authors:** Mark J. Landau, Young-Ju Ryu

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2025.1747171 · Frontiers in Psychology · 2026-01-26

## TL;DR

This paper reviews psychological mechanisms behind why meaningful periods of life often feel like they pass quickly in memory.

## Contribution

The paper integrates diverse theories to explain life tempo judgments, highlighting their joint influence on perceived time.

## Key findings

- Meaningful and engaging life periods are often remembered as having passed quickly.
- Life tempo judgments depend on memory structure, motivational standards, and cultural narratives.
- The review identifies convergences and explanatory gaps across different theoretical perspectives.

## Abstract

Across history and cultures, people have persistently lamented that life seems to move “too fast.” Psychology has approached this impression from multiple angles, yet lacks an integrative account of why autobiographically meaningful periods so often feel fleeting in retrospect. In this review, we examine the psychological mechanisms that shape life-tempo judgments (LTJs)—retrospective assessments of how quickly or slowly personally significant periods are remembered to have passed. LTJs are not literal perceptions of temporal speed nor comparisons to clock time, but flexible judgments made relative to subjective standards and expectations. We synthesize major theoretical accounts of LTJs, ranging from classic “cold” cognitive explanations centered on routine, memory compression, and attention, to “hot” motivational and affective accounts emphasizing personal growth, longing, social performance, and identity-relevant evaluation. Rather than treating these perspectives as competitors, we evaluate their explanatory scope, empirical support, and points of convergence. Recent empirical work reviewed here highlights a consistent pattern: periods remembered as especially meaningful, engaging, or growth-promoting are often the same periods described as having passed most quickly. We suggest that this pattern is unlikely to be explained by any single mechanism, but instead reflects the joint influence of memory structure, motivational comparison standards, affective meaning, and cultural narratives in the construction of lived time. By organizing a fragmented literature on LTJs, this review provides a conceptual scaffold for future theoretical refinement, empirical research, and translational work. Rather than prescribing how to slow life down, we argue that understanding why life feels fast may help clarify what a fast life signifies—and when it reflects loss, fulfillment, or some combination of the two.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

79 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12883632/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12883632