Now, Chew on this, there is now good amount of research to prove that Flies experience time much slower than us (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/science/science-news/10311821/Flies-see-the-world-in-slow-motion-say-scientists.html)
What that means is that, flies experience everything slower than us. Imagine spilling a glass of water and for the fly the water moves in slow motion. For a fly almost everything is in slow motion, even the second hand of the clock takes forever to tick.
As a house fly, your life might be about 15-30 days to a human, but it might seem like a good solid 60-90 years to the fly. Ok I jumped on the math there :P At that rate (30 days to 90 years) 1 human day is about 3 fly years (~1000 days), which comes upto about 1 human second is like 16.66 fly minutes!
Now imagine time as humans experience it. A lot easier than fly time, Water falls from the glass at normal pace and clocks tick a second at a time. Easy, so we shall skip right on from this part.
Next imagine being someone who experiences time much faster than humans… this is a bit like the time dialation in Interstellar but instead of you being light years away from the people experiencing time at normal human speeds, you are in among them. Imagine, 1 second for you is like 16.66 human minutes. Water spills, crashing to the ground, some of it even evaporates before you realize its been spilt. The clock is racing in front of your eyes, human hours are slipping by… Motion of the shadows during the day are visible, the stars move slowly as you look up at the night sky. life is like one of those time lapse videos.
Now imagine being even faster… how bout another 16.66 times faster… Now every second for you is about 278 human minutes(~4.5hrs). For you the earth day takes about 5.3s to complete. The water spills and dries before you can notice it. The clock is spinning hysterically, the second hand zipping by into a blur… Standing outdoors you can see an alternating play of day and night (~2.75 s each). You can watch new buildings being constructed, trees growing and blossoming. The world around you is almost always in motion.
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The more I think about it the more I wonder if our perception of time is actually an handicap to our efforts to understand the universe. Maybe we should have to look at the universe from the point of view of a house fly or a giant Redwood tree. There will be entire species of animals that probably existed and disappeared in a years you have been alive.
Then there might be species that have existed for so long and will last so much longer than us that they might never know we even lived…