There is a particular elasticity to time in Senegal that reveals itself slowly, like the widening breath of the sky at dawn. Mornings are paced by small, reliable things — the warm light lifting off the roofs, the rhythmic calls of vendors arranging their wares, the faint scent of wood smoke and coffee — more than by the strict ticking of a wristwatch. People often orient to moments of encounter: finishing a conversation before stepping away, waiting for the right face to arrive before a meal begins, or letting a joke run its course until it lands. That way of keeping time is not careless; it is relational, a way of saying that presence and attention matter as much as whatever is written on a calendar. In markets and on dusty streets, the calendar of the day is audible: the clatter of wheels, the shout of a seller, the bell of a shared taxi leaving when it is full. Appointments sometimes open up like this: they are negotiated, delayed, reshuffled, and frequently accompanied by a wave of laughter and an apology rather than a glare.
For visitors used to sharp beginnings and endings, the looseness can feel confusing; for others it is simply practical, an adaptation to heat, transport, and the daily need to pause for conversations that tend to solve more than a hurried checklist can. There are also spaces where the clock rules more strictly — offices, certain services — and people move between those registers depending on what the moment requires. Hospitality gives another shape to how time is lived. The ritual of attaya — the three rounds of sweet, minty tea poured into tiny glasses — is a small ceremony that stretches out an hour or a minute depending on who is present. Steam rises from the glasses, hands cradle warmth, and stories spill in the pauses between pours; arriving a little late to an attaya session often meets a smile rather than an indictment. Big family events and neighbourhood gatherings similarly unfold in stages: there is a schedule, but it is elastic, making room for greetings, last-minute arrivals, and the unplanned conversations that truly count.
Being there, fully, is often treated as the most punctual thing one can do. At the edges of city life, new rhythms mingle with older ones. Young people check phones and coordinate exact times, while elders remind them with a gentle shake of the head that an hour can be measured in stories, too. Negotiation becomes the norm: a meeting might begin with a clear time but still leave space for a cup of tea and a word with a neighbour. The result is a practice of time that can be maddening when one expects a dial to be turned, and wonderfully generous when one is open to it — a cultural cadence that values arrival and attention as much as the minute hand.