You’re scrolling deep into your crush's Instagram feed. You go past the cool travel photos from last summer, past the awkward university graduation pics, and you finally hit gold: 2015. The era of bad filters, weird angles, and questionable fashion.
That person in the photo is them, but... not really. It feels like a different person from a different universe.
That feeling of complete separation is the secret to the English past tense. Textbooks will tell you it’s about adding -ed, but that's a lie. The real rule is about creating emotional and temporal distance. It’s about putting a memory in a "closed box" and sealing the lid.
The Screenshot of Time
The simple past tense takes a clean screenshot of a finished event. The action is over. Done. It has zero connection to the present moment.
Think of it like this: I walk to work[TRANS] is a live stream. It’s happening now. But I walked to work[TRANS] is a photo of a past event, stored in your phone's gallery. You are looking at it, but you are not in it anymore.
This is why we use it for storytelling. We are opening a photo album and pointing to specific, finished moments.
She sent the risky text at 2 AM.
They ordered pineapple on their pizza.
The Unsentimental Cut
Here’s where most learners get it wrong. They see the past tense as just "before now." But in English, it’s more brutal than that. It’s a deliberate cut.
When a native speaker chooses the simple past, they are often subconsciously creating a wall between then and now.
This is especially true with feelings and relationships. If someone says I loved my ex[TRANS], the use of loved in the simple past implies that the feeling is now in a closed box. It's a memory, not an active emotion. It’s emotionally clean.
[OPTIONAL-COMMENT]
Contrast this with I was in a relationship with him for two years[TRANS]. The speaker is just stating a historical fact, like a date in a textbook. There’s no ambiguity. The relationship is over.
He worked at that company for a year.
I really wanted those sneakers last month.
The Emotional Blueprint of '-ed'
The English past tense isn't just a way to organize time. It’s a way to organize reality. It reflects a mindset that treats past events, identities, and feelings as artifacts in a museum. You can look at them, you can describe them, but you can't touch them. They are behind glass.
This is why it feels so final. When you talk about a past self, a past job, or a past relationship using the simple past, you are drawing a clear line. That was then, this is now. You are declaring that the old file is archived. It is no longer open on your desktop.
This isn’t about being cold or unemotional. It’s about clarity. It’s a grammatical tool for closing doors, which allows you to focus on what’s happening in the present. The past isn't a ghost that haunts the present; it's a photograph in a drawer.
The Golden Rule: Use the simple past when you are narrating from the "future." You are standing firmly in the present, looking back at a completed scene from a story that has already ended.
View Comprehensive Vocabulary List
I went to the store yesterday.
I went to the store yesterday.
She had a great idea.
She had a great idea.
We did the homework.
We did the homework.
He said he was tired.
He said he was tired.
They saw that movie last week.
They saw that movie last week.
I made a mistake.
I made a mistake.
She knew the answer.
She knew the answer.
I thought you were coming.
I thought you were coming.
He took the last cookie.
He took the last cookie.
My friend came over.
My friend came over.