Wrist watch…reset. Alarm clock…check. Oven and microwave…done and done. This Saturday, just prior to going to bed, you will find me buzzing around my home and bumping up each clock by one hour to spring forward into Daylight Saving Time. YUCK! I really hate this time of year when I lose one hour of sleep. It seems so harmless--one little hour, just 60 minutes. Then why the heck does it take about 2 weeks for my body to eventually adjust? I am one of those people with a very strong, internal alarm clock. Messing with the timing of my machine really hampers my performance for days. I find myself to be more irritable and cranky, drowsy, moody, unproductive and my creativity comes to a screeching halt. Call me crazy…but I also find that I am hungrier for days following this sudden switch in time. While my body clock may be messed up, data from the National Sleep Foundation suggests that my problems are minimal. In fact, during the 3-days following the time change in March, there is an increase in the number of heart attacks, traffic accidents, workplace accidents, and suicides. Not only does the time change increase sleep deprivation (in a society already sleep deprived), but it can also disrupt chronobiologic rhythms as well as influence the duration and quality of sleep which can last for many days after the initial shift in time. DANG! Be careful out there, folks! And what about hunger, you ask? Well, partial sleep deprivation can impact the daytime hormone profiles of leptin and ghrelin, thus affecting hunger and food cravings. Research has shown that with sleep deprivation, leptin levels decrease up to 18%, while ghrelin levels increase by up to 28%. The result is a 23% increase in one’s hunger level! Additionally, one’s desire for high carbohydrate foods (think cookies, cakes, and pastries) increases by more than 30%. WOW! No wonder I crave those chocolate chip cookies when the clock moves forward. So, if you are like me, you may benefit from this Daylight Saving Time Disaster Plan. Here goes:
How does your body respond to Daylight Saving Time? What techniques do you use to help with the adjustment phase? |
More From SparkPeople
|