
Paul Eggert wrote in <81dee870-e83b-69b5-5402-1bfafbcb7e50@cs.ucla.edu>: |On 8/28/20 6:25 PM, Philip Paeps wrote: |> Will our bodies remember conquering jetlag, or will the first couple \ |> of trips be |> accompanied by sleepless nights and zombie days |Although I used to fly east and west across the Pacific reasonably \ |often, I |never really conquered jetlag. | |But my worst case of jetlag involved flying *north*. It was at the \ |start of |summer and the extra hours of sun zonked me more than moving the clock \ |hands did. | |For a different kind of jetlag, try traveling *up*. See Jim Kelly's \ |interview |<https://www.nasa.gov/multimedia/podcasting/askastronaut_kelly2_trans.ht\ |ml> and |look for "jetlag". Yes. Schools and education should do something useful and talk about and teach hygiene, desire for self-reflection, diet, endogenous hormone production (sports, sex), enable the capability of naming of environmental species, and other things that many non-western cultures cultivated. You maybe do not have to drink your own morning urine for proper (body) self-reflection, but i think "even that" gets more to the point of caring for and protecting the masses then not changing the clock twice a year, in my opinion. A nice weekend i wish, --steffen | |Der Kragenbaer, The moon bear, |der holt sich munter he cheerfully and one by one |einen nach dem anderen runter wa.ks himself off |(By Robert Gernhardt)