
I noticed this week an interesting phenomenon happening with clients. In session, they lose sense of time. For them, time flies by. By session end, they’re shocked time went so fast.
It’s a common human experience. One most humans only seldom acknowledge. Nevertheless, the experience proves how time shapes to our focus. We could even say time shows how subjective physical reality is.
Time morphs according to the point of consciousness experiencing it. It shapes and twists and turns one moment to the next. It can crawl by. Or it can pass in a flash. What is responsible for all that twisting turning?
Our focus, of course. When focused in one way, time speeds up. Focused another way, it slows down. The “way” in which we focus depends on beliefs active in us at any given moment. With positive belief, time flies. “Engaged” and “interest” or “fascination” are all emotions clients usually experience in-sesssion. These positive emotions stem from positive beliefs such as “I’m getting something valuable here” or “I am hopeful I’m going to resolve this”.
Negative belief slows time. Boredom, pessimism and insecurity are all emotions people tend to wallow in. In those emotions work days drag by. It takes forever to move through traffic. In these cases, versions of these beliefs are active: “I don’t want to be here” or, “I’m can’t wait until the weekend” or “This traffic sucks”.
There’s a direct connection, therefore, between our thoughts, beliefs, and our experience of time and reality. That direct connection is worth exploring.

Matching reality with nonphysical
I find in my own life that, as I am focused more and more positively, days fly by. Since I “work” only 2 1/2 days a week, you’d think I have lots of time available in the week. And yet, I find days often end before I complete all I’d like to. And most things I’d like to do are about fun. Indeed, I often wonder how I got all the tasks done that I did, back in the old days when I dedicated 40+ hours to work every week. I’m really surprised I got anything done other than working and sleeping back then.
I don’t feel a sense of scarcity in this. Rather, I feel a sense of joyful abundance and wonder. I recognize that days flying by is indicative of a very high vibration. After all, in non-physical, where all vibration is high, the sense of time is irrelevant because it flies by so quickly. Instantaneously, actually. In nonphysical everything happens simultaneously. That means, hardly any time is available to experience time passing.
So I could argue accurately, that my personal experience of “time” is beginning to match my subjective non-physicalexperience of time. I like that conclusion. It’s a conclusion that seems accurate, given my experience and client experiences.
An interesting postscript: I’m aware of my eternal nature. Since I am eternal, what would be the point of trying to get it all done in one day or one life? So while I wonder at this thing we call time, beliefs about time that once had me grasping for more of that are soothing. And in the soothing, I’m realizing I have all the time in the world. An eternity of it, actually.