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Why Do Mondays Feel Longer Than Other Days

Scientists have tried to explain it. Psychologists have studied it. Employees have suffered through it.

And yet one mystery remains unsolved:

Why does Monday feel like it has 72 hours packed into a single morning?

No one has proof. But everyone has experienced it.

Step 1: The Sunday Illusion

Sunday night is peaceful.

Too peaceful.

You tell yourself:

“Tomorrow will be fine.”

This is the first lie of the week.

Because somewhere between falling asleep and waking up, time undergoes a suspicious transformation.

Step 2: Monday Arrives With Extra Weight

You wake up.

You check the clock.

It says Monday.

Instantly, gravity increases by 30%.

Even your thoughts feel like they need permission to move.

Getting out of bed feels like negotiating a contract with reality.

Step 3: The Slow Motion Morning

Everything on Monday operates differently:

  • Alarm: louder than usual
  • Shower: longer than necessary but still late
  • Clothes: mysteriously harder to choose
  • Keys: temporarily invisible

Time is clearly moving, but not in a way that benefits you.

Step 4: The Clock Betrayal

You check the time.

It’s 9:12.

You feel like you’ve already lived three separate lives.

You check again 5 minutes later.

It’s still 9:12.

Monday has entered time distortion mode.

Step 5: The Email Avalanche

You open your inbox.

And suddenly:

  • 47 unread emails
  • 12 “urgent” messages
  • 3 people asking things that could have waited
  • 1 mysterious “just following up” from Friday that grew stronger over the weekend

It’s like the internet was resting… and Monday decided to wake it up aggressively.

Step 6: The Productivity Expectation Problem

Monday has expectations.

Too many expectations.

People believe you should:

  • be focused
  • be energetic
  • be organized
  • have a plan for your life

Meanwhile, you are just trying to remember how keyboards work.

Step 7: The Meeting Time Warp

Monday meetings are especially powerful.

A “quick 30-minute meeting” becomes:

  • 1 hour discussion
  • 1 philosophical debate
  • 1 existential reflection on why meetings exist

You leave the meeting and somehow it is still the same hour of Monday.

Step 8: The False Hope of Afternoon

At some point, you think:

“Okay, the day is almost over.”

Wrong.

Monday hears this and responds:

“Not even close.”

Afternoon becomes a slower version of morning, but with more tiredness.

Conclusion

Monday does not feel longer because it is longer.

It feels longer because:

  • time slows down emotionally
  • tasks multiply spiritually
  • and your energy leaves the chat immediately

By Tuesday, reality returns.

But Monday always leaves a warning behind:

“See you again in 6 days. I’ll feel even longer next time.”

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