Psychological time is a complex concept. We examined how male inmates (N = 32) experience selected aspects of time. The study focused on the experience of the present and how it is related to the past and the future. To explore how time is experienced, we referred to spatial metaphors that conceptualize time in simpler categories based on spatial relations. Inmates tend to experience the present as brief moments, and when defining it – and other dimensions of time – they use a limited vocabulary. They tend to have an egocentric perception of time, in their estimations focusing more on the life time than the history time. Inmates seem to be primarily present-oriented, and they think about the present and the future frequently. At the same ti...