The Clock That Forgot Time
Sometimes losing time is the only way to find yourself

In a quiet town where nothing ever seemed to change, there lived a young man named Ayaan. His life was as predictable as the ticking of the old clock hanging in his room. Every morning, he woke up at exactly 7:00 a.m., drank his tea at 7:15, and left for work at 8:00 sharp. His days passed like pages in a book no one cared to read.
The clock in his room had been there for as long as he could remember. It was old, slightly rusted, and made a faint ticking sound that echoed in the silence. But one morning, something strange happened.
The clock stopped.
Ayaan noticed it immediately. The hands were frozen at 6:42. He frowned, tapped it lightly, and even changed the battery, but nothing worked. The clock refused to move.
“Strange,” he muttered.
For the first time in years, Ayaan didn’t know what time it was.
At first, it made him anxious. He checked his phone repeatedly, worried about being late. But as the day went on, something unexpected happened—he started to feel… free.
Without the constant ticking, there was no pressure. No schedule controlling his every move. He walked to work without rushing, noticing things he had never seen before—the way sunlight filtered through the trees, the laughter of children playing, the quiet beauty of ordinary life.
Days passed, and Ayaan stopped relying on time completely. He woke up when his body felt ready. He ate when he was hungry. He worked, but without the usual stress. His colleagues noticed the change.
“You seem different,” one of them said.
“Better,” another added.
Ayaan smiled but said nothing.
One evening, as he returned home, he paused at his door. For the first time, he didn’t feel tired. Instead, he felt curious. He picked up a sketchbook that had been lying untouched for years and began to draw. Hours passed, but he didn’t notice.
That night, something inside him awakened.
Weeks turned into months, and Ayaan’s life transformed. He discovered passions he had buried under routine—art, writing, even music. The world no longer felt like a race against time. It felt like a journey.
But one morning, something unexpected happened.
The clock started ticking again.
Ayaan stared at it in silence. The hands moved slowly, as if nothing had ever happened. 6:43… 6:44… 6:45…
For a moment, fear returned. Would everything go back to the way it was?
He stepped closer, listening to the ticking sound that once controlled his life. Then, gently, he removed the battery.
The ticking stopped.
Ayaan smiled.
He didn’t throw the clock away. Instead, he placed it back on the wall—not as a ruler of his life, but as a reminder.
A reminder that time is not something to chase.
It is something to live.
From that day on, Ayaan chose his own rhythm. He still worked, still had responsibilities, but he no longer let time control his happiness. He had learned something most people never do—that life is not measured in hours or minutes, but in moments.
And sometimes, to truly live…
You have to let time stand still.
About the Creator
Waleed khan
Mysterious & Artistic




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