Pop icon Mariah Carey has never been one to follow convention—and that includes the ticking of the clock. In a recent radio interview, the global superstar revealed she doesn’t subscribe to the concept of time at all, from clocks to birthdays. For Carey, life isn’t measured in minutes or years, but in moments and anniversaries.
A diva untethered from time
During a light-hearted conversation on the UK’s Capital FM, Mariah Carey made a statement that left her interviewers—Jordan North, Chris Stark, and Sian Welby—both amused and intrigued. When asked about her relationship with time, Carey casually confessed, “I just don’t believe in it.” The revelation prompted some clarification from the hosts. Did she mean time zones? “No, just time,” she replied with characteristic coolness. It wasn’t a joke or a metaphor; for Carey, the entire construct of time simply doesn’t hold much value. “No clocks,” she confirmed. “Just let it go.”
In an industry where everything runs on precise schedules—tour dates, studio sessions, press appearances—Carey’s detachment from time is both unexpected and oddly fitting. She has long embodied the aura of a timeless diva, and now it appears she’s taking that notion literally.
Birthdays are out, anniversaries are in
Carey’s disdain for time extends beyond the clock to the calendar. When asked about how she marks the passing of years, the singer revealed she doesn’t celebrate her birthday in the traditional sense. “I don’t have a birthday, no,” she said. “Anniversaries, yes.” It’s a subtle but symbolic distinction. Anniversaries, often associated with milestones and celebrations of life or career, offer a more elegant and less finite way to mark time. Birthdays, by contrast, carry the weight of aging—a topic Carey has long dodged with a wink and a smile.
Though she avoids stating her age outright, fans know that Carey has celebrated 56 such “anniversaries” on this planet. But in her world, that number holds little meaning. It’s not about how long she’s been here—it’s about what she’s created along the way.
Diva logic: no clocks, no problems
With such a loose relationship to time, one might wonder how Carey navigates the real-world demands of schedules and commitments. The answer is delightfully on brand. “I would have someone call you and figure it out,” she said, when asked how she arranges meetings or appointments.
It’s a luxury few can afford, but it perfectly aligns with her persona. Carey isn’t just a pop star; she’s a lifestyle. Freeing herself from time adds another layer to the fantasy she curates—a world of gowns, candles, and high notes where alarm clocks simply don’t exist. In an era where we are increasingly bound to calendars, reminders, and countdowns, Carey’s approach reads almost like self-care through denial. Why stress about time running out when you can pretend it isn’t even ticking?
Mariah time: A personal mythology
Mariah Carey has long been a master of myth-making. From her butterfly motifs to her famously high standards backstage, she’s crafted a persona that is as much legend as it is real. Her stance on time fits neatly into that narrative—yet it also suggests a deeper philosophy.
There’s a freedom in refusing to let clocks and calendars define you. Carey’s attitude subtly challenges the way society obsesses over age, productivity, and time management. She doesn’t merely reject time—she replaces it with celebration, creativity, and carefully curated moments. As she once sang, “It’s like that, and that’s the way it is.” And perhaps that’s all there is to it. Time may be a constant for most of us, but for Mariah Carey, it’s optional.
Living timelessly in a time-obsessed world
In a culture that constantly reminds us of the clock—whether through social media countdowns, aging anxieties, or relentless productivity pressures—Mariah Carey’s time-denial offers a provocative escape. Of course, most of us don’t have personal assistants to “figure it out,” but the spirit of her philosophy resonates.
Carey’s approach to life, divorced from time’s grip, reflects a broader lesson: we can choose how we relate to time. We can celebrate anniversaries over birthdays, mark success through experience instead of age, and sometimes, just maybe, we can “let go” of the pressure to always be on schedule. After all, if time can’t contain Mariah Carey, maybe it doesn’t have to contain the rest of us either.