Why My Grandmother Is Better at Time Zones Than Your App
My grandmother has never used a smartphone. She doesn't know what UTC stands for. She's never heard of the IANA time zone database. And yet she's never once been confused about what time it is in another country.
How? She uses a system she built over 60 years of having family scattered across the world.
Her Method
She keeps a small notebook next to her phone. In it, she has:
- My aunt in Toronto: "when it's morning here, it's afternoon there, but in winter it's different"
- My uncle in Moscow: "always 2 hours ahead of Germany" (this was accurate until 2014 when Russia changed its zones)
- My cousin in Mumbai: "half the day plus 4 hours" (her way of saying UTC+5:30 vs her own CET)
That's it. No app. No world clock widget. Just a notebook with rough rules she's refined over decades.
Why It Works
She doesn't need precision. She needs to know: "Is this a reasonable time to call?" And for that, a rough rule is enough. She doesn't care if it's 3:47 PM in Mumbai. She cares whether her son is likely to be awake.
Apps give you exact time. Grandmother gives you context. And context is what you actually need.
The Time She Beat My Phone
Last year I was trying to call my brother in Australia. I opened my world clock app, scrolled through cities, got confused by DST transitions (Australia's states don't all change on the same date), and couldn't figure out the current time.
My grandmother said: "It's morning there now. Call him." She was right. I checked — it was 9:17 AM in Melbourne. She was off by 17 minutes.
She didn't calculate it. She just knew. Because she's been tracking this mentally for 40 years. The pattern is in her head.
What I Learned From Her
Technology is great for precision. But precision isn't always what you need. Sometimes you need a rough answer right now, and your brain (or your grandmother's notebook) is faster than your phone.
I still use apps for scheduling. But for the quick "is now a good time?" question, I've started keeping my own mental shortcuts. It's less accurate than an app. It's also faster and works when my phone is in another room.
Grandmother's notebook will never need a software update.