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Updated: July 26, 2025 20:38
Ever felt like your weekend vanished in a blink? Neuroscientists now explain that our perception of time is shaped less by the clock and more by how our brains encode experiences. The key to making weekends feel longer lies in novelty, attention, and emotional engagement.
Key highlights from recent studies:
- Passive rest compresses time. Activities like binge-watching or scrolling offer little for the brain to record, making the weekend feel shorter in retrospect.
- Novel experiences stretch time. Engaging in new settings or unfamiliar tasks activates the brain’s memory systems, creating richer recollections and a sense of extended time.
- The “bookend effect” shortens weekends psychologically. Friday evenings are often lost to decompression, while Sunday nights are overshadowed by
Monday anxiety, leaving only Saturday and part of Sunday as the true core.
- Neuroscientists recommend starting weekends with a memorable activity, breaking routines, and practicing mindfulness to slow perceived time.
- Supplements like L-theanine and Rhodiola Rosea are being explored for their ability to enhance focus and reduce stress, potentially supporting more time-rich experiences.
In short, weekends don’t need more hours—they need more meaning. By curating novelty and presence, we can reclaim the rhythm of rest.
Sources: Very Big Brain, Lifehacker, ELLE