The fictitiousness of time by Sandra Horn
For the first time ever, this year, we forgot to
change the clocks. Now, most of them self-adjust anyway, but our watches and
the big old striker on the wall don’t. I think we forgot because, in these days
of lockdown, it didn’t matter. Time drifts. I rather like it.
I have occasional rants about watches and clocks,
especially now that they are electronic and can measure this ‘time’ in
umpteenths of a second. A runner breaking a record by nought-point something
of a second makes me shout expletives at the television – anyway, where do they
measure it? It strikes me that a big bust, nose or foot could make all the
difference in reality. Where was I? Oh yes, while admiring the brilliant range
of mental and physical skills and the extraordinary imagination that led to the
conception and implementation of gadgets to measure time – and the traditional
ones are often miracles of delicate and beautiful engineering - they are also
responsible for shaping our lives powerfully, irresistibly and fictitiously.
They have made us believe that time progresses only in one direction, and by
regularly-spaced ticks and tocks. Pure rubbish, but believed in with the
fervour and dedication some people give to karma or some other bizarre creed. Pause
here, while I’m at it, for an interjection of a poem I like very much, which
touches, lightly, on the theme of beliefs:
The Avatar by Kerrie Hardy
Listen, this is the trinity, he said, tramping the
wet road
in the thin well-being of a winter morning:
God the curlew, God the eider,
God the cheese-on-toast.
To his right, a huddle of small blue mountains
squatted together, discussing the recent storm.
To his left, the sea washed.
I thought it was whimsical, what he said,
I condemned it as fey.
Then I saw that he meant it: that, unlike me,
he had no quarrel
with himself, could see his own glory
was young enough for faith still in flesh and in
being.
He was not attracted by awe
or a high cold cleanness
but imagined a god as intimate
as the trickles of blood and juice that course
about inside him,
a god he could eat or warm his hands on,
a low god for winter:
belly-weighted, with the unmistakeable call
of the bog curlew or the sea-going eider.
That was really a digression, but to get back to
the theme: we think we cannot function without recourse to clock time. It is
handy, of course, to agree when, say 5 o’clock is if we are meeting someone in
person or by phone or online, and if there’s something on the television,
radio, cinema etc. that we don’t want to miss. Otherwise it’s largely
irrelevant, as we are discovering now nearly all our commitments have been
cancelled. Now we can see that time slows down, speeds up, doubles back on
itself, slides sideways for a while, dances around, and it doesn’t matter. Our
distant ancestors, when asking how long it would take to get somewhere, would
likely be told ‘three days and two nights’, or ‘walk with the sun at your left
shoulder until you come to the bluff shaped like a heel, and you will be there
by sunset,’ and that was near enough.
I’d love to do that! ‘I’ll meet you at the crossroads when the sun is
directly over the tower on the town hall,’ ‘Come when the quarter moon is
sitting on the tops of the trees on the Common.’ And yes, I know that cloudy
weather would kybosh it, but then you could all just stay home and it probably
wouldn’t matter.
Here's another poem I like very much, with some
relevance here:
The Banished Gods by Derek Mahon
Paros, far-shining star of the dark-blue earth,
Reverts to the sea its mother.
The tiny particles
Rose quartz and amethyst,
Panic into the warm brine together.
Near the headwaters of the longest river
There is a forest clearing,
A dank, misty place
Where light stands in columns
And birds sing with a noise like paper tearing.
Far from land, far from the trade routes,
In an unbroken dream-time
Of penguin and whale
The seas sigh to themselves
Reliving the days before the days of sail.
Down a dark lane at the back of beyond
A farm dog lies by a dead fire
Dreaming of nothing
While a window goes slowly grey
Brightening a laid table and hung clothing.
Where the wires end the moor seethes in silence,
Scattered with scree, primroses,
Feathers and faeces;
It shelters the hawk and hears
In dreams the forlorn cries of lost species.
It is here that the banished gods are hiding,
Here they sit out the centuries
In stone, water
And the hearts of trees,
Lost in a reverie of their own natures –
Of zero-growth economics and seasonal change
In a world without cars, computers
Or nuclear skies,
Where thought is a fondling of stones
And wisdom a five-minute silence at moonrise.
Although ‘five-minute’ seems incongruous!
Just in case you’re wondering if I’m going
stir-crazy, no. At least, I don’t think so. I think I’m just adjusting to the
happy fact that clock time is, for now, largely redundant. We get up in the
morning at roughly the same that time we always have, from habit. Ditto eating,
but bedtime drifts later. Who cares? I do glance at my watch from time to time
(habit again) and I’m always surprised at what it says, and find myself
wondering, momentarily, what it means. Of course, when ‘this’ (Corvid19) is
over, I’ll revert. We’ll all be back to being harassed again by this modern
avatar of time.
Comments
We writers are lucky in a way, Enid - introverts by and large, so less likely to be climbing the walls if we are not constantly stimulated.
Also, I love those clocks with a different approach to time, like the ones with "one-ish" "two-ish" etc. on the clock face. And there's a clock with an old fashioned clock face that goes backwards in a cafe near me... catches me out every time!