How to Talk to People - Introducing: How to Keep Time

Episode Date: November 6, 2023

Why can it feel like there’s never enough time in a day, and why are so many of us conditioned to believe that being more productive makes us better people? On How to Keep Time, co-hosts Becca Rashi...d and contributing writer Ian Bogost talk with social scientists, authors, philosophers, and theoretical physicists to learn more about time and how to reclaim it. How to Keep Time launches December 2023. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 And I've been reading about this concept called the social clock. And it's sort of this invisible timetable that tells us what we should be doing at different stages of our life. So Becca, are you on time? Are you on track on the social clock? I am off the social clock and it's not easy. I'm not sure if I was on or off the social clock when I was your age, but I think there's a point at which maybe the social clock breaks down.
Starting point is 00:00:32 The question I face isn't whether I'm on time, but what should I do with my time? Did I really help me suppress some of that worry, some of that anxiety. You know, given time as finite, it can feel almost impossible to not compulsively try to make every waking minute productive. The only real way to use time to actually find meaning in the present is by some definition of the term to waste it. Is this a uniquely American phenomenon? Are there other cultures where busyness has the same social status as it does in America? Ian, what's the one thing you wish you had more time for? I wish I had more time to figure out how to use the limited time I have. Existential dread about our limited time
Starting point is 00:01:28 is at the core of my curiosity. The season we're gonna get into our complex relationship with time and what makes us feel like we're running against the clock. I'm Becca Rashid, producer and co-host of the How-To series. And I'm Ian Bogost, co-host and contributing writer at The Atlantic. This is How to Keep Time.
Starting point is 00:01:50 Find it here beginning in December.

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