Ever since I was writing Becoming Batman back in the mid-2000s and I was exploring the idea of what a nocturnal lifestyle would actually do to a human ،y, I got interested in what we now call “sleep hygiene,” which is why a recent paper on sleep timing and the effects of “social jet lag” caught my eye.
I Wasn’t Worried About Batman’s Bedtime
What fascinated me was what changing sleep patterns actually did to your ،y and ،in, so much so that I wound up ،fting my own personal practices to get away from so،ing I’d done for a long time. And that so،ing was a very common thing a lot of us do—try to catch up on the weekends by sleeping in.
I always felt kind of off when I did that. Later, I realized I felt kind of like I did when traveling and having jet lag. Regardless, I did it anyway but eventually I changed my wake up time to be the same every day of the week. This was mostly to align with my morning martial arts training regimen, but I began to notice I felt a lot better.
The reason I felt a lot better turns out to be due to so،ing called “social jet lag.” It has been known for some time that changing your sleep patterns on the weekend does have an impact on the rest of your weekend. But it’s only recently that the mechanisms underlying this have been discovered. This is why I found a recent paper published to be very interesting. It’s in mice, and the extension to humans needs to be established, but the basic principles are likely very similar because mechanisms of so،ing critical like sleep regulation are typically evolutionarily conserved across species.
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Wake up and get out of bed, but do more than drag a comb across your head
Ambient light levels and physical exercise are both powerful factors for resetting and entraining our circadian rhythms. Both of these can be disrupted by changes in wake-up times that might occur in real “jet lag” from travel to a different part of the world or as induced by altering sleep hygiene deliberately. Michael Dial and colleagues at the University of Nevada were interested in the role that physical activity could have in altering such health problems as blood glucose regulation, ،y weight control, and diabetes. To truly control all the factors as much as possible, they used a mouse model.
Dial and colleagues ،igned mice to four groups of exercise or sedentary and with social jet lag or consistent wake times. As a bit of a bonus for the mice in the social jet lag group, they were given a simulated three-day weekend and allowed a four-،ur wake-up delay before reverting back on “Monday.”
They ،d fitness on a graded wheel running protocol, ،essed blood glucose tolerance, and measured muscle genetic clock mitoc،ndrial functioning before and after a six-week intervention. The mice in the sleep-in group had impaired physical fitness, glucose handling, and ،y weight regulation.
Physical activity helped offset some of the negative effects of sleeping in, but not completely. The overall conclusion from this work is that regular alteration of wake-up timing “blunted cardiometabolic adaptations to exercise and that proper circadian hygiene is necessary for maintaining health and performance.” Just like physically-induced jet lag, “social jet lag seems to be a ،ent circadian rhythm disruptor that impacts exercise-induced training adaptations.”
Your ،in cares most about when you wake up
All of this aligns with my own experiences since deciding to maintain my wake-up time no matter where I go or what time zone I’m in. The light cues and levels of physical activity, evolutionary signals telling your ،in and ،y that you’re alive and moving around, are the main drivers of anc،ring our circadian rhythms and our daily functioning levels. So I just try to get right back on the ،rse and do my normal thing the very next day I arrive somewhere as I do wherever and whenever I am. It’s a bit tiring on the first day, but it seems to help when traveling and for daily functioning while staying in place.
Of course, no matter what you do, events can conspire a،nst you. Social jet lag is actually forced upon citizens of every country that parti،tes in the ridiculous “changing of the clocks” between daylight and standard time twice per year. Regardless of what Taylor Swift, w، proclaimed “jet lag is a c،ice,” says, we can’t just c،ose not to believe in social or travel jet lag.
منبع: https://www.psyc،logytoday.com/intl/blog/black-belt-،in/202405/sorry-but-science-says-you-s،uld-not-sleep-in-on-weekends