Time blindness—the difficulty sensing how much time has passed or managing duration intuitively—can be partially compensated for when an AI actively marks temporal boundaries and announces them at regular intervals. Using AI to provide external temporal anchors ("You've been working for 25 minutes" or "You need to leave in 15 minutes") creates the kind of external structure that bypasses the internal sense of time that doesn't work.
Time blindness is a core feature of ADHD and some other neurodivergent profiles in which a person has significant difficulty perceiving the passage of time, estimating how long tasks will take, and connecting present actions to future consequences, resulting in chronic lateness, missed deadlines, and poor planning despite genuine effort. This is not a motivation problem but a neurological difference in how the brain tracks and anticipates time.
AI can function as a temporal anchoring system by building structured prompt routines that make time visible and concrete, generating realistic time estimates through collaborative task analysis, creating external countdown cues embedded in workflows, and helping users build time-aware planning habits that compensate for what the internal clock does not provide.
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