Time change. Again.
Comments
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I cant wait! We'll have extra sunlight after work, happy hour is best at sunset!Pick up my debut novel here on amazon: Jonny Bails Floatin (in paperback) (also available on Kindle for $2.99)0
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81 Needing a ride to Forest Hills and a ounce of weed. Please inquire within. Thanks. Or not. Posts: 58,276pandora wrote:I was just loving early sunshine upon rising but it will be back in a month or so.
Sunday evening later sunset on the deck...
it's going to be a beautiful weekend here very springlike...
to enjoy spring forward!
welcome back81 is now off the air0 -
:wave:0
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Spring Forward. Good morning! I forgot and was a little late starting work. :fp:"In the age of darkness
want to be enlightened"0 -
JaneNY wrote:jlaustin wrote:
Hate losing that hour of sleep!
right there with both of you. It takes me around 3 weeks to feel adjusted to it. I dread it every year. The extra light is nice, but not the sleep disturbance.
3weeks? For 1 hour?
Do you never stay up past your bedtime?
Do you never have to wake up early for something?
Are all your trips 4 weeks, so you can adjust? :?Sorry. The world doesn't work the way you tell it to.0 -
yeah...just sleep an hour later today than you would normally do. or go to sleep an hour earlier last night. problem solved.www.myspace.com0
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EdsonNascimento wrote:JaneNY wrote:jlaustin wrote:
Hate losing that hour of sleep!
right there with both of you. It takes me around 3 weeks to feel adjusted to it. I dread it every year. The extra light is nice, but not the sleep disturbance.
3weeks? For 1 hour?
Do you never stay up past your bedtime?
Do you never have to wake up early for something?
Are all your trips 4 weeks, so you can adjust? :?
Staying up late isn't the problem - having to get up at what now feels like the middle of the night is. (8am Complex Analysis class tomorrow I'm looking at you) Sorry we can't all adjust as easily as you. :?R.i.p. Rigoberto Alpizar.
R.i.p. My Dad - May 28, 2007
R.i.p. Black Tail (cat) - Sept. 20, 20080 -
Love it! Who the hell actually sleeps anyway :?
I think I would love 24 hours of sunlight
"I need your strength for me to be strong...I need your love to feel loved"0 -
JaneNY wrote:EdsonNascimento wrote:JaneNY wrote:
right there with both of you. It takes me around 3 weeks to feel adjusted to it. I dread it every year. The extra light is nice, but not the sleep disturbance.
3weeks? For 1 hour?
Do you never stay up past your bedtime?
Do you never have to wake up early for something?
Are all your trips 4 weeks, so you can adjust? :?
Staying up late isn't the problem - having to get up at what now feels like the middle of the night is. (8am Complex Analysis class tomorrow I'm looking at you) Sorry we can't all adjust as easily as you. :?
Oh! You're in school. I don't recall time existing when I was in college. I also found most classes to be optional. Eh. Kids these days.
I will ask again, though - so if you stay up an hour later than normal, you have no trouble getting up, but bc the clock changed that lost hour now makes a difference?
EDIT: and who the hell picks an 8am class in college?Sorry. The world doesn't work the way you tell it to.0 -
Not again.... :fp:*********************************************************************************************0
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Fuck daylight savings! It's already past 1?! :fp: :xWith all its sham, drudgery, and broken dreams, it is still a beautiful world. Be careful. Strive to be happy. ~ Desiderata0
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That was some bullshit0
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EdsonNascimento wrote:JaneNY wrote:EdsonNascimento wrote:3weeks? For 1 hour?
Do you never stay up past your bedtime?
Do you never have to wake up early for something?
Are all your trips 4 weeks, so you can adjust? :?
Staying up late isn't the problem - having to get up at what now feels like the middle of the night is. (8am Complex Analysis class tomorrow I'm looking at you) Sorry we can't all adjust as easily as you. :?
Oh! You're in school. I don't recall time existing when I was in college. I also found most classes to be optional. Eh. Kids these days.
I will ask again, though - so if you stay up an hour later than normal, you have no trouble getting up, but bc the clock changed that lost hour now makes a difference?
EDIT: and who the hell picks an 8am class in college?
i think the issue with her is now having to wake up while it's dark again? if that's the case, i can understand.www.myspace.com0 -
81 Needing a ride to Forest Hills and a ounce of weed. Please inquire within. Thanks. Or not. Posts: 58,276i hate this bullshit...can't we just stay on this time cycle.81 is now off the air0
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My morning jog is now in complete darkness. F!Pick up my debut novel here on amazon: Jonny Bails Floatin (in paperback) (also available on Kindle for $2.99)0
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81 Needing a ride to Forest Hills and a ounce of weed. Please inquire within. Thanks. Or not. Posts: 58,276Once again, the oft-dreaded daylight saving time change is upon us. The day that the clocks “spring” forward also inevitably takes a spring out of our step.
Sure, the birds seem to chirp a little later, the sunlight shines a little less as we drag ourselves through the morning routine. But as study after study has shown, that seems to be about the only highlight in those first days after the change.
According to the Better Sleep Council, a nonprofit organization supported by mattress manufacturers, 61% of U.S. adults say daylight saving time affects their work the Monday after the changeover.
In a survey of 1,038 adults, the immediate effects of losing an hour of shuteye affected everything from people’s moods to eating and driving habits.
About 29% of those surveyed said it takes a week to adjust to the change, with adults between 18 and 34 needing the most time to get with the new program. (But let’s face it: those at the younger end of that range may struggle to get out of bed regardless.)
But don’t just take the mattress industry’s word for it. A number of studies over the last 13 years have highlighted the range of health consequences of people ill-prepared to start their morning routine just 60 minutes earlier.
According to a 2008 Swedish study, there’s a 6% to 10% increase in heart attacks in the first three workdays after the start of daylight saving time. An Australian study the same year concluded that men were more likely to commit suicide in the first few weeks after the switch, and a 2000 study in the journal Accident Analysis & Prevention showed accidents in Sweden increased by 11% the Monday after the change.
Even your bank account can take a hit from the time change. A 2011 study notes that not only are stock markets more volatile the Monday after a time change, it usually leads to negative returns.
But sleep experts say all it takes to minimize the effects is a bit of preparation. People should start going to sleep earlier for several days before the change (it’s Friday so better late than never), and set their clocks ahead the night before.
Otherwise, you could end up like some of the respondents in that Better Sleep Council survey. Some of the more unusual mishaps from the time change included going to an ATM to order food, getting into the shower with underwear on and putting on clothes inside out.81 is now off the air0 -
81 wrote:Once again, the oft-dreaded daylight saving time change is upon us. The day that the clocks “spring” forward also inevitably takes a spring out of our step.
Sure, the birds seem to chirp a little later, the sunlight shines a little less as we drag ourselves through the morning routine. But as study after study has shown, that seems to be about the only highlight in those first days after the change.
According to the Better Sleep Council, a nonprofit organization supported by mattress manufacturers, 61% of U.S. adults say daylight saving time affects their work the Monday after the changeover.
In a survey of 1,038 adults, the immediate effects of losing an hour of shuteye affected everything from people’s moods to eating and driving habits.
About 29% of those surveyed said it takes a week to adjust to the change, with adults between 18 and 34 needing the most time to get with the new program. (But let’s face it: those at the younger end of that range may struggle to get out of bed regardless.)
But don’t just take the mattress industry’s word for it. A number of studies over the last 13 years have highlighted the range of health consequences of people ill-prepared to start their morning routine just 60 minutes earlier.
According to a 2008 Swedish study, there’s a 6% to 10% increase in heart attacks in the first three workdays after the start of daylight saving time. An Australian study the same year concluded that men were more likely to commit suicide in the first few weeks after the switch, and a 2000 study in the journal Accident Analysis & Prevention showed accidents in Sweden increased by 11% the Monday after the change.
Even your bank account can take a hit from the time change. A 2011 study notes that not only are stock markets more volatile the Monday after a time change, it usually leads to negative returns.
But sleep experts say all it takes to minimize the effects is a bit of preparation. People should start going to sleep earlier for several days before the change (it’s Friday so better late than never), and set their clocks ahead the night before.
Otherwise, you could end up like some of the respondents in that Better Sleep Council survey. Some of the more unusual mishaps from the time change included going to an ATM to order food, getting into the shower with underwear on and putting on clothes inside out.
Dude?0 -
Have today off! Like a boss!0
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81 Needing a ride to Forest Hills and a ounce of weed. Please inquire within. Thanks. Or not. Posts: 58,276
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BinauralJam wrote:Have today off! Like a boss!
Lucky bastard!WI '98, WI '99 (EV), WI '00, Chgo '00, MO '00, Champaign '03, Chgo '03, WI '03, IN '03, MI '04, Chgo '06:N1 & 2, WI '06, Chgo '07, Chgo '08 (EV:N1), Chgo '09:N1 & 2, Chgo '11 (EV:N1), WI '11:N1 & 2, Philly '12, Wrigley '13, Pitt '13, Buff '13, Detroit '14, MKE '14, Wrigley '16: N1 & N2, Seattle '18 N2, Wrigley '18: N1 & N2, Fenway '18 N1, STL '22, St Paul '23 N2, Chgo '23: N1 & N2, Wrigley '24 N1 & 20
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