
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Why do some people live perpetually late, painfully early, or chronically out of sync with the world around them? In this Mailbag installment of The Observable Unknown, Dr. Juan Carlos Rey responds to a listener whose lifelong struggle with time has shaped relationships, careers, and mental health.
Drawing from neuroscience, psychology, and lived human experience, this episode explores how time is not merely measured but constructed by the brain. Anxiety, depression, chronic stress, and unresolved trauma can distort temporal perception, disrupting the nervous system’s ability to sequence, predict, and settle into the present moment. What appears on the surface as poor punctuality or lack of discipline often reveals itself as a deeper neurological and emotional dissonance.
This conversation reframes time not as a moral failing, but as a relational phenomenon shaped by safety, prediction, and internal rhythm. Dr. Rey examines how misaligned temporal processing affects intimacy, trust, professional stability, and identity, and why traditional productivity advice so often fails those who suffer most from time-related distress.
The episode also introduces a quieter question beneath the struggle: who is authoring the timeline of your life? When time becomes adversarial, it may be inviting a deeper recalibration rather than stricter control.
As with all Mailbag installments, this reflection blends scientific grounding with contemplative insight, offering listeners both intellectual clarity and emotional resonance. The episode closes with a gentle invitation to explore interdisciplinary approaches to forecasting, coherence, and personal recalibration for those seeking a more truthful relationship with time.
The Observable Unknown is a podcast exploring consciousness at the intersection of neuroscience, culture, and lived experience. It is written and hosted by Dr. Juan Carlos Rey of drjuancarlosrey.com and crowscupboard.com, an interdisciplinary scholar whose work bridges neuroscience, philosophy, and the interior dimensions of human experience.
By Dr. Juan Carlos Rey5
99 ratings
Why do some people live perpetually late, painfully early, or chronically out of sync with the world around them? In this Mailbag installment of The Observable Unknown, Dr. Juan Carlos Rey responds to a listener whose lifelong struggle with time has shaped relationships, careers, and mental health.
Drawing from neuroscience, psychology, and lived human experience, this episode explores how time is not merely measured but constructed by the brain. Anxiety, depression, chronic stress, and unresolved trauma can distort temporal perception, disrupting the nervous system’s ability to sequence, predict, and settle into the present moment. What appears on the surface as poor punctuality or lack of discipline often reveals itself as a deeper neurological and emotional dissonance.
This conversation reframes time not as a moral failing, but as a relational phenomenon shaped by safety, prediction, and internal rhythm. Dr. Rey examines how misaligned temporal processing affects intimacy, trust, professional stability, and identity, and why traditional productivity advice so often fails those who suffer most from time-related distress.
The episode also introduces a quieter question beneath the struggle: who is authoring the timeline of your life? When time becomes adversarial, it may be inviting a deeper recalibration rather than stricter control.
As with all Mailbag installments, this reflection blends scientific grounding with contemplative insight, offering listeners both intellectual clarity and emotional resonance. The episode closes with a gentle invitation to explore interdisciplinary approaches to forecasting, coherence, and personal recalibration for those seeking a more truthful relationship with time.
The Observable Unknown is a podcast exploring consciousness at the intersection of neuroscience, culture, and lived experience. It is written and hosted by Dr. Juan Carlos Rey of drjuancarlosrey.com and crowscupboard.com, an interdisciplinary scholar whose work bridges neuroscience, philosophy, and the interior dimensions of human experience.

90,829 Listeners

78,879 Listeners

44,043 Listeners

43,595 Listeners

27,195 Listeners

14,353 Listeners

8,783 Listeners

113,460 Listeners

7,385 Listeners

3,370 Listeners

29,436 Listeners

710 Listeners

569 Listeners

1,428 Listeners

8,807 Listeners