I start work at 4 a.m. and am in bed by 8 pm most nights.Don't most people go to work in the AM? But more like 7-9AM not 5AM I just don't know anyone that goes to bed at 9PM.
I start work at 4 a.m. and am in bed by 8 pm most nights.Don't most people go to work in the AM? But more like 7-9AM not 5AM I just don't know anyone that goes to bed at 9PM.
I am up at 3 in bed by 9I start work at 4 a.m. and am in bed by 8 pm most nights.
I'll split the difference...You are still the ONLY person I know of that likes changing the clocks. You're same old arguments are exactly that, old.
They need to pick a time and leave it. There is NO reason to mess with the clocks twice a year.
We were on CDT year round for decades. That corresponds with our correct time zone. EDT, which we are about to start does NOT correspond with our correct time zone.We should be on Daylight Saving the entire year.
Having more daylight later in the day benefits the most people.
There is no "correct" time zone for us, it is all a construct. We have two choices for time zone, we can be the leading edge of central or trailing edge of eastern.We were on CDT year round for decades. That corresponds with our correct time zone. EDT, which we are about to start does NOT correspond with our correct time zone.
I go to bed at 9am get up at 3p drive and hour and work 5p-5a, daylight savings doesn't affect me Don't most people go to work in the AM? But more like 7-9AM not 5AM I just don't know anyone that goes to bed at 9PM.
Me.Don't most people go to work in the AM? But more like 7-9AM not 5AM I just don't know anyone that goes to bed at 9PM.
There are options:There is no "correct" time zone for us, it is all a construct. We have two choices for time zone, we can be the leading edge of central or trailing edge of eastern.
We cannot go back to not being on DST unless the country changes, it sucks having a changing time differential with other states...
Option C). Move to Arizona where they don't fiddle with changing clocksThere are options:
1) Move to the eastern edge, instead of staying on the western edge, of a given time zone. Or move to the middle of the time zone.
2. Change latitude. Move closer to the equator to mitigate the daylight-cycle inter-seasonal swings.
The worst of all options is to fiddle with the clocks continually.
Option C). Move to Arizona where they don't fiddle with changing clocks
As if the physical act of changing clocks is the actual issue.The whining here about changing clocks is just hilarious, like it is some big deal. It takes about 5 minutes to change mine. 5 five freaking minutes! LOL
As if the physical act of changing clocks is the actual issue.
As you said, the physical act of changing clocks takes maybe 5 minutes. The problem is the impact to Circadian rhythm, sleep cycle, and hour-shift in the sunlight cycle.If you reread the thread the angst over changing clocks is a big issue with many...
I get that, but feel the end result is why it to me and mine, obviously others don't. It works out great for most all I know. I know very few that are affected negatively by the changes.As you said, the physical act of changing clocks takes maybe 5 minutes. The problem is the impact to Circadian rhythm, sleep cycle, and hour-shift in the sunlight cycle.