You're trying to tell your friend a story about last week's disastrous date.
You say, He told me he loves dogs.[TRANS]
Wait. Or should it be, He told me he loved dogs[TRANS]?
One feels right, but the other feels... more correct? And now you’re stuck, the story is losing momentum, and you’re mentally rebooting your English grammar settings.
School taught you a simple rule: when the main story is in the past, everything else gets dragged back with it. This is technically true, but it's also the worst way to understand it. It makes the rule feel like a chore.
The truth is, this isn't a rule. It's a time machine.
The "Time-Sync" Command
Think of your main reporting verb (said, told, thought, knew) as a button that activates "Story Mode."
When you press it, you're no longer in the present. You've transported your listener back to the moment something was said or thought. Everything inside that story bubble automatically syncs to that past moment.
It’s like applying a "Vintage" filter to a photo. The filter changes the color of everything in the frame.
She says she is tired.
She said she was tired.
Breaking the Timeline on Purpose
So, why do we sometimes hear people break this rule? Why does He told me he loves dogs[TRANS] still sound okay?
Because you can intentionally poke a hole in the story bubble to connect a past event to a present reality.
Breaking the "Time-Sync" is not a mistake. It's an advanced technique. You do it when you are reporting something that was true then, is still true now, and will likely be true tomorrow. It's a statement of permanent fact.
He told me he was from Canada.
He told me he is from Canada.
The Narrator's Glitch
This isn't about memorizing a sequence of tenses. It's about deciding who is in control of reality.
When you use standard "Time-Sync" (said he was...), you are being a neutral journalist. You are simply reporting the facts from a past event. You are inside the character's timeline.
But when you break the sync (said he is...), you become the all-knowing narrator. You are pausing the flashback to give the audience information from the present. You are pulling their past statement into your current timeline.
This is the hidden engine behind it all. Are you staying inside their past, or are you connecting it to your present?
The Golden Rule: Your main reporting verb creates a bubble in the past. Everything inside that bubble gets pulled back in time, unless you intentionally break the glass to prove a point about the present.
Master this, and you're not just reporting speech. You're controlling the flow of time itself.
View Comprehensive Vocabulary List
He `said` he was running late.
He `said` he was running late.
She `told` me she had already eaten.
She `told` me she had already eaten.
I `thought` you knew the answer.
I `thought` you knew the answer.
He `knew` the store was closed on Sundays.
He `knew` the store was closed on Sundays.
They `believed` the project would be successful.
They `believed` the project would be successful.
She `explained` that the train had been delayed.
She `explained` that the train had been delayed.
He `claimed` he didn't see the message.
He `claimed` he didn't see the message.
You `promised` you would call me.
You `promised` you would call me.
I `realized` I had left my wallet at home.
I `realized` I had left my wallet at home.
He `mentioned` he was moving to a new apartment.
He `mentioned` he was moving to a new apartment.