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I HATE going back to "standard" time. (Original Post) TomSlick Nov 2019 OP
I feel the same way. Rhiannon12866 Nov 2019 #1
Depressing is right. dchill Nov 2019 #2
You and me both! greatauntoftriplets Nov 2019 #3
I'm retired ,too Delmette2.0 Nov 2019 #37
Why in hell can't we stay on daylight savings time or move the clock doc03 Nov 2019 #4
Daylight Saving Time. SergeStorms Nov 2019 #20
So do I. smirkymonkey Nov 2019 #5
For me standard time is much better ... jimlup Nov 2019 #6
Year round DST came during Jimmy Carter's days. It wasn't a Republican plot. nt pnwmom Nov 2019 #10
No I was referencing the extension of it which jimlup Nov 2019 #38
This was the Republican excuse for not having a real energy policy in 2005 under Bush II jimlup Nov 2019 #44
I'm with you. joshdawg Nov 2019 #16
I'll add my name to that petition. SergeStorms Nov 2019 #21
So if it's dark when you go to the office, and dark when you leave, it would still be PoindexterOglethorpe Nov 2019 #7
Not true. I lived through it here, and year round was better. Getting dark by 5:30 is better pnwmom Nov 2019 #8
How about the morning? PoindexterOglethorpe Nov 2019 #22
School times can be changed more easily than work schedules. pnwmom Nov 2019 #24
Wow. 9 am. Where do you live? PoindexterOglethorpe Nov 2019 #27
Seattle area. I agree that high school students need sleep, and they've been trying pnwmom Nov 2019 #30
I do agree with that. PoindexterOglethorpe Nov 2019 #31
I guess you missed this part of the post. The starting times for middle and high schools pnwmom Nov 2019 #32
I really would like it if WA state can switch to DST full time Salviati Nov 2019 #25
It was nice while it lasted! I agree. The late night summers are wonderful, pnwmom Nov 2019 #26
The problem isn't so much the early daylight in the summer, but the late daylight in the winter. PoindexterOglethorpe Nov 2019 #29
WA has never had late daylight in the winter -- even on DST -- but why would that be a problem? pnwmom Nov 2019 #33
Long evenings in the summer are great, I agree. PoindexterOglethorpe Nov 2019 #35
I haven't forgotten. Year round DST was good in Seattle. pnwmom Nov 2019 #42
Geography matters a lot DFW Nov 2019 #34
I was in Thule, Greenland in June many years ago Major Nikon Nov 2019 #48
Once you get above the Arctic Circle in late June DFW Nov 2019 #50
Thule is about halfway between the arctic circle and the North Pole Major Nikon Nov 2019 #54
That far up, four weeks sounds about right. DFW Nov 2019 #55
I Totally agree with you TomSlick Tikki Nov 2019 #9
I work 10p-6a shifted for 10yrs... Historic NY Nov 2019 #11
The essential problem with shift work. PoindexterOglethorpe Nov 2019 #23
exactly MFM008 Nov 2019 #12
A full spectrum light has really helped me with that. Canoe52 Nov 2019 #14
Thanks MFM008 Nov 2019 #39
I lived I Indiana post the time change east coast. That was about central Illinois it changed rusty quoin Nov 2019 #13
I try to think of it as "go to ground" time EveHammond13 Nov 2019 #15
I wish we could stay at standard time Skittles Nov 2019 #17
Today was horrible -- pitch black at 530p, then the evening was so slow-w-w-w, was progree Nov 2019 #18
4:40 sunset here. And that will get worse over the next 7 weeks. nt pnwmom Nov 2019 #28
Know what you mean yuiyoshida Nov 2019 #19
This is my favorite time of the year. I realize how deeply dewsgirl Nov 2019 #36
Potential safety issue with kids waiting for the school bus in the dark Shrek Nov 2019 #40
Why not just move the School times? Tribalceltic Nov 2019 #56
Hard on the cats Marthe48 Nov 2019 #41
Don't they make devices that will deliver PoindexterOglethorpe Nov 2019 #43
Mine are all seniors Marthe48 Nov 2019 #45
Ahhh. I understand. PoindexterOglethorpe Nov 2019 #46
I put their food dishes in different spots Marthe48 Nov 2019 #47
I'm impressed that they know their own places. PoindexterOglethorpe Nov 2019 #49
Cats are smart Marthe48 Nov 2019 #57
Just imagine if he had opposable thumbs. PoindexterOglethorpe Nov 2019 #58
I'm thinking of buying one of those sunlight lamps. madaboutharry Nov 2019 #51
Good to have some early am daylight for going to work and school and household chores wishstar Nov 2019 #52
I never have to worry about it. Arizona is the same time all year. vsrazdem Nov 2019 #53
I love standard time OriginalGeek Nov 2019 #59
I love it PasadenaTrudy Nov 2019 #60

dchill

(38,447 posts)
2. Depressing is right.
Mon Nov 4, 2019, 12:28 AM
Nov 2019

Regardless of time zone, the days are just plain shorter in the winter. Somebody should do something about it. Stat.

greatauntoftriplets

(175,729 posts)
3. You and me both!
Mon Nov 4, 2019, 12:30 AM
Nov 2019

I had an email this morning from Change.org wanting me to sign a petition to abolish DST. No way was I going to sign that thing. Like you, I hated going to work in the dark, then coming home in the dark. I felt like a mole. It's not nearly as bad now that I'm retired.

Delmette2.0

(4,157 posts)
37. I'm retired ,too
Mon Nov 4, 2019, 06:29 AM
Nov 2019

But the time change still mucks me up. Right now it is 3:30am and I have been up for an hour. I had a long day day yesterday and I tried to stay up to my usual bed tome, but didn't make. Now I I'm f'ed up again by being wide awake in the middle of the night.

doc03

(35,299 posts)
4. Why in hell can't we stay on daylight savings time or move the clock
Mon Nov 4, 2019, 12:31 AM
Nov 2019

back 1/2 hour and leave it there?

 

smirkymonkey

(63,221 posts)
5. So do I.
Mon Nov 4, 2019, 12:53 AM
Nov 2019

I love getting the extra hour. For about a day or two, but the early dark is so depressing. Is there a good reason why we still keep doing this? I can't think of one. Not everyone is up very early, but almost everyone is up in the early evening when we could use the extended daylight.

jimlup

(7,968 posts)
6. For me standard time is much better ...
Mon Nov 4, 2019, 12:54 AM
Nov 2019

I don't have to drive to work in the dark. Yes, I drive home in the dark for a couple of months but that's better than having to get up while it is still dark.

I hate daylight saving time. It saves nothing and moved to November by the Repubicans a couple of decades ago as an excuse for an "energy policy."

We should abolish daylight savings in my opinion.

jimlup

(7,968 posts)
38. No I was referencing the extension of it which
Mon Nov 4, 2019, 07:53 AM
Nov 2019

while not a Republican plot was a Republican excuse for not having an energy policy. I'll look up the reference for you.

jimlup

(7,968 posts)
44. This was the Republican excuse for not having a real energy policy in 2005 under Bush II
Mon Nov 4, 2019, 03:18 PM
Nov 2019

This is what I meant, have a look if you are interested

http://www.webexhibits.org/daylightsaving/e.html


The Energy Policy Act of 2005 extended Daylight Saving Time in the U.S. beginning in 2007, though Congress retained the right to revert to the 1986 law should the change prove unpopular or if energy savings are not significant. Going from 2007 forward, Daylight Saving Time in the U.S.

begins at 2:00 a.m. on the second Sunday of March and
ends at 2:00 a.m. on the first Sunday of November

SergeStorms

(19,187 posts)
21. I'll add my name to that petition.
Mon Nov 4, 2019, 02:27 AM
Nov 2019

It serves no useful purpose whatsoever, except for screwing everyone up. Well, the dogs love getting fed an hour earlier, but they hate me in the spring. They adapt though.

PoindexterOglethorpe

(25,816 posts)
7. So if it's dark when you go to the office, and dark when you leave, it would still be
Mon Nov 4, 2019, 01:09 AM
Nov 2019

the same even on year round DST. The problem is where you live, not the time, be it Standard or Daylight Saving.

Alternatively, see if you can get a job where you go to work midday, say anywhere from noon to 3pm. That way you will always go to work in daylight. You will also always come home in the dark, but that's not so bad.

The real problem is working a "normal" job. 40 hours a week is ludicrous. I figured that out a very long time ago, and even though all of my working life I had a 40 hour work week, often combined with lots of involuntary overtime, I also figured out that I was not my job. No matter how much time I spent at it, the job was not what defined me.

pnwmom

(108,959 posts)
8. Not true. I lived through it here, and year round was better. Getting dark by 5:30 is better
Mon Nov 4, 2019, 01:20 AM
Nov 2019

than 4:30, at least for many people.

PoindexterOglethorpe

(25,816 posts)
22. How about the morning?
Mon Nov 4, 2019, 02:43 AM
Nov 2019

An important reason why year round DST was abandoned was because the sunrise was so freaking late in the middle of winter. Not to mention kids waiting at bus stops in full dark were being mowed down.

If we're going to go to a single year round time, better that it be standard time. The real problem, in my opinion, is that right now DST starts too early and lasts too long. It should start no earlier than mid April, and end at the end of September. By waiting until November, we're already deep into fall, with short days rapidly getting shorter, so the change is far more jarring than it would be a month earlier.

I do like the later daylight in late spring and throughout the summer. After that, no need. Go back to standard time.

I recall what it was like before 1966, when different places went on and off DST at different times. It was a nightmare. A uniform DST was a huge improvement, but I still maintain that the current system starts too early and lasts too long. Alas, I am not Dictator of North America.

pnwmom

(108,959 posts)
24. School times can be changed more easily than work schedules.
Mon Nov 4, 2019, 02:52 AM
Nov 2019

Our elementary schools don't start till 9. No one was getting mowed down in the dark.

PoindexterOglethorpe

(25,816 posts)
27. Wow. 9 am. Where do you live?
Mon Nov 4, 2019, 03:22 AM
Nov 2019

So many schools start well before 8am, and for high school students that's deadly. Kids that age need about 9 hours of sleep every day, and since their natural circadian rhythm makes it almost impossible to fall asleep before about 11pm, they are chronically underslept. As are most adults, although for somewhat different reasons.

Almost my entire life (and I'm now 71) I've tried to get sufficient sleep. Not always possible, between work schedules and personal responsibilities, but I've generally done a decent job of it. I'm honestly convinced that getting enough sleep is an important reason why I am so very healthy.

But elementary school not starting until 9? I'm genuinely impressed. What time does the high school day start? 10am, I hope because the high school students naturally tend to stay up later and need to sleep later than the little kids.

pnwmom

(108,959 posts)
30. Seattle area. I agree that high school students need sleep, and they've been trying
Mon Nov 4, 2019, 03:25 AM
Nov 2019

to fix that. But I'm more comfortable with a high school student waiting for a bus in a half-light than I am with a 6 year old.

https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2018/12/12/676118782/sleepless-no-more-in-seattle-later-school-start-time-pays-off-for-teens

In Seattle, school and city officials recently made the shift. Beginning with the 2016-2017 school year, the district moved the official start times for middle and high schools nearly an hour later, from 7:50 a.m. to 8:45 a.m. This was no easy feat; it meant rescheduling extracurricular activities and bus routes. But the bottom line goal was met: Teenagers used the extra time to sleep in.

Researchers at the University of Washington studied the high school students both before and after the start-time change. Their findings appear in a study published Wednesday in the journal Science Advances. They found students got 34 minutes more sleep on average with the later school start time. This boosted their total nightly sleep from 6 hours and 50 minutes to 7 hours and 24 minutes.

PoindexterOglethorpe

(25,816 posts)
31. I do agree with that.
Mon Nov 4, 2019, 03:28 AM
Nov 2019

But still, high school students are the ones who should start at the later time, not the little kids.

I honestly think that a lot of issues, not the least of which is overall health, are strongly connected to most people not getting enough sleep. Whenever I see the sentiment "You can sleep when you're dead" I want to do damage to whoever says or believes that. Because lack of sleep will seriously kill you. So yeah, get dead a whole lot quicker so you can sleep.

Anyway, I'm going to guess that at your schools the high school students start at 8, which is still a huge improvement over the schools that start at 7am.

pnwmom

(108,959 posts)
32. I guess you missed this part of the post. The starting times for middle and high schools
Mon Nov 4, 2019, 03:38 AM
Nov 2019

have been moved to 8:45. (Elementaries in Seattle now range from 7:55 to 8:55.)

In Seattle, school and city officials recently made the shift. Beginning with the 2016-2017 school year, the district moved the official start times for middle and high schools nearly an hour later, from 7:50 a.m. to 8:45 a.m. This was no easy feat; it meant rescheduling extracurricular activities and bus routes. But the bottom line goal was met: Teenagers used the extra time to sleep in.

Salviati

(6,008 posts)
25. I really would like it if WA state can switch to DST full time
Mon Nov 4, 2019, 02:59 AM
Nov 2019

I think it would be marginally nicer in the winters, but I'd really hate to be on standard time in the Summer, it gets bright out too damn early as it is, it would be awful for sunrise to come an hour earlier, and I like the late night sunlight.

pnwmom

(108,959 posts)
26. It was nice while it lasted! I agree. The late night summers are wonderful,
Mon Nov 4, 2019, 03:21 AM
Nov 2019

and we definitely don't need the sun waking us up an hour earlier.

PoindexterOglethorpe

(25,816 posts)
29. The problem isn't so much the early daylight in the summer, but the late daylight in the winter.
Mon Nov 4, 2019, 03:23 AM
Nov 2019

I've lived in Arizona, which is on standard time year round, which genuinely makes sense. I lived there the one year (1967) they did DST, and because it's so freaking hot in the summer, there's no point. But the daylight starts awfully early, I'll agree.

Lucky me, I don't live there any more.

pnwmom

(108,959 posts)
33. WA has never had late daylight in the winter -- even on DST -- but why would that be a problem?
Mon Nov 4, 2019, 03:41 AM
Nov 2019

I love long evenings here in the summers.

PoindexterOglethorpe

(25,816 posts)
35. Long evenings in the summer are great, I agree.
Mon Nov 4, 2019, 04:54 AM
Nov 2019

The problem with those who advocate DST year round is that they don't look at what sunrise and sunset times will be in the middle of winter on DST. And they forget what it was like when we had the brief experiment with year round DST, which was cut short because of silly things like kids waiting for school busses in the pitch dark or the morning and being mowed down by careless drivers.

pnwmom

(108,959 posts)
42. I haven't forgotten. Year round DST was good in Seattle.
Mon Nov 4, 2019, 02:02 PM
Nov 2019

Arizona stays off DST even when everyone else goes on it. Maybe WA and some other northern latitude states would rather be on it full time,

DFW

(54,302 posts)
34. Geography matters a lot
Mon Nov 4, 2019, 04:19 AM
Nov 2019

Here in Northern Europe, we have short days in the winter, and there is no way around it, DST or not. From now until late February, I leave for work in the dark and get home (when I do at all!) in the dark. Today, sunrise was at 7:30, sunset will be at 17:01 (5:01 PM), In six weeks, sunrise will be at 8:33 and sunset at 16:25 (4:25 PM). It's even more extreme in Scandinavia, especially around Oslo or Stockholm, which are both a two hour flight to the north of me, not to mention points north of there.

We just don't have a lot of daylight in the winter here. It drives some people crazy--literally. In Norway, it is called "mørketiden (the dark time," and is when most suicides occur. The flip side is the glorious time of June and July when it's light outside before 6 in the morning, and still light out at 21:45 or even 22:00 (9:45 PM to 10:00 PM). Some people here in northern Europe just head south for the winter. Anywhere from Spain--though Barcelona is the same latitude as Boston--to North Africa, the Canary Islands, or all the way over to North America. In the 1970s, the German Chancellor, Helmut Schmidt, sometimes used to take his vacations in Florida, and Canadian PM Pierre Trudeau sometimes went to Mexico.

Major Nikon

(36,818 posts)
48. I was in Thule, Greenland in June many years ago
Mon Nov 4, 2019, 07:47 PM
Nov 2019

The sun never set for the 10 days or so that I was there. There wasn't even twighlight. Broad daylight at 3am.

DFW

(54,302 posts)
50. Once you get above the Arctic Circle in late June
Tue Nov 5, 2019, 03:04 AM
Nov 2019

The midnight sun is pretty wild. I once traveled all the way to Kiruna in Sweden just to have seen it. But I sure as hell wouldn't want to be there in the dead of winter, when the sun doesn't rise for a couple of weeks straight.

Major Nikon

(36,818 posts)
54. Thule is about halfway between the arctic circle and the North Pole
Tue Nov 5, 2019, 05:42 AM
Nov 2019

I think they get over a month of zero sun so I was told.

DFW

(54,302 posts)
55. That far up, four weeks sounds about right.
Tue Nov 5, 2019, 06:02 AM
Nov 2019

It's bad enough here in northern Germany. I wouldn't want to live any farther north than København. I fully understand why those that can arrange it and afford it "go south for the winter." Not just because of the cold, but also because of the darkness.

Historic NY

(37,449 posts)
11. I work 10p-6a shifted for 10yrs...
Mon Nov 4, 2019, 01:24 AM
Nov 2019

it sucked not having a hot sit down dinner because most places would close or stop serving. Night after night in some of the brutish subzero weather. I've been retired now over 12 yrs and still it gets to me, sometimes I find it screws up my sleep - wake cycle.

PoindexterOglethorpe

(25,816 posts)
23. The essential problem with shift work.
Mon Nov 4, 2019, 02:46 AM
Nov 2019

Most of my working life I worked shift work, although never an overnight. Mostly it was some kind of afternoon shift, with the exact hours varying depending on when or for what company I worked. So you have my sympathy.

Many years ago I did a paper on shift work, and the research was quite interesting. Perhaps the single most interesting factoid was that a lot of overnight shift workers preferred those hours, because management was home where they belonged. Not at the workplace, interfering with the workers.

 

rusty quoin

(6,133 posts)
13. I lived I Indiana post the time change east coast. That was about central Illinois it changed
Mon Nov 4, 2019, 01:33 AM
Nov 2019

They were on about the same sun as Illinois. I lived both places, and it’s weird when the sun goes down at 9 in the summer.

 

EveHammond13

(2,855 posts)
15. I try to think of it as "go to ground" time
Mon Nov 4, 2019, 01:50 AM
Nov 2019

this is my time to focus on my health, on good eating, on working out on my Total Gym, on centering myself in the dark and the quiet when things are calm, and when spring comes - I'm ready to re-emerge, with good health and mental rest.

progree

(10,893 posts)
18. Today was horrible -- pitch black at 530p, then the evening was so slow-w-w-w, was
Mon Nov 4, 2019, 02:07 AM
Nov 2019

tired, and looked at the clock, and it's only 800 pm but I'm feeling ready to go to bed. Then it's 820 pm, same thing, then 830 pm, on and on it dragged on. Finally took a nap, and now I've really screwed up my biological clock.

Sunset was 459 pm in Minneapolis today. Will bottom out at 431 pm or so on December 9.

For Green Bay, Wisconsin it was even worse (because they are further east but still within the Central Time zone).

Sunset was 438 pm in Green Bay today. Will bottom out at 412 pm or so on December 9.

People can find their times of sunrise and sunset any day of the year here:
https://www.timeanddate.com/sun/usa

dewsgirl

(14,961 posts)
36. This is my favorite time of the year. I realize how deeply
Mon Nov 4, 2019, 05:09 AM
Nov 2019

unpopular that is. I always have, I guess being more of a night person, I don't really know. There doesn't seem to be very many of us.😔

Shrek

(3,975 posts)
40. Potential safety issue with kids waiting for the school bus in the dark
Mon Nov 4, 2019, 10:35 AM
Nov 2019

But it's usually not dark yet for the afternoon drop-off.

So for them the switch makes sense.

Tribalceltic

(1,000 posts)
56. Why not just move the School times?
Tue Nov 5, 2019, 06:57 AM
Nov 2019

That would be a lot easier than Everyone having to change clocks.

Marthe48

(16,905 posts)
41. Hard on the cats
Mon Nov 4, 2019, 01:38 PM
Nov 2019

so it's hard on me. I have a perpetually starving fat cat who wakes me up every morning to be sure I feed her by 9 am. Guess what time she is waking me the last couple of days?

If I put extra food out the night before, she eats it along with her evening meal.

We will all get used to it in a few weeks, but it is never fun. I'm glad we had a very sunny day yesterday, and that it stayed clear into the evening. It was daylight longer than on the overcast days we had last week.

PoindexterOglethorpe

(25,816 posts)
43. Don't they make devices that will deliver
Mon Nov 4, 2019, 03:09 PM
Nov 2019

timed amounts of food for a cat or dog?

I've never understood the problem of being awakened by a cat or dog demanding to be fed, as mine always had dry food out that they could graze on whenever. I only started feeding my last cat canned food when she was elderly.

Marthe48

(16,905 posts)
45. Mine are all seniors
Mon Nov 4, 2019, 04:33 PM
Nov 2019

Two of them were throwing up a lot, so I stopped feeding them dry food, over a year ago. And then cut out just about all of the canned flavors except chicken. No seafood at all. The diet changes fixed the problems for those 2. Fat cat didn't have trouble, but if I feed her dry, the other 2 will eat it, because they were asleep when I explained the connection between dry food and stomach upset. I basically spend my time at home telling the cats it isn't time to eat, or feeding them.

(nice to run into you! Hope you are ok)

PoindexterOglethorpe

(25,816 posts)
46. Ahhh. I understand.
Mon Nov 4, 2019, 05:52 PM
Nov 2019

When I had two cats, one would try to hog all the food and keep the other one away. She got fat, the other one got thin. I solved that problem by putting a dish of food up on a counter, showed thin cat where it was. She had no trouble jumping up and eating. I limited how much I put out in the dish on the floor, and fat cat lost weight. She did know where the other dish was, though, and periodically, she'd scramble up on that counter, which was tricky because she still was a bit heavy.

Anyway, when you have more than one furry companion in your house, food issues can easily occur.

Marthe48

(16,905 posts)
47. I put their food dishes in different spots
Mon Nov 4, 2019, 07:09 PM
Nov 2019

Kitchen, dining room and living room. They eat at their places and then they all check all the dishes. At least they don't bully each other over food and I get some exercise I used to let the fat one eat on the table. I think the jumps are getting too much for her, so her spot is on the floor.



PoindexterOglethorpe

(25,816 posts)
49. I'm impressed that they know their own places.
Mon Nov 4, 2019, 11:41 PM
Nov 2019

My fat one couldn't jump up to the counter where we put the one dish, and that worked well.

Eventually I had three cats, and then moved after a divorce to a much smaller place. In the large house there had been a lot of battling over territory. In the new place, none at all. They figured out very quickly that they were going to have to get along and so they did.

Right now I have no feline house mates, and I've been doing a lot of travelling so it would be irresponsible of me to have any. But someday, someday . . . .

Marthe48

(16,905 posts)
57. Cats are smart
Tue Nov 5, 2019, 04:36 PM
Nov 2019

Now, I have to brag. My boy cat was getting on the counter after the butter. I put it in the cupboard. He got on the counter while I was gone, opened the cupboard and helped himself. I saw lick marks. If the oven is cold, I leave it there. If it is in the cupboard, I have a rubber band around the handles. He is the smartest cat I've ever had. When he is hungry, he slaps his dish. He opens all of the lower cupboards every morning while he's waiting for me to feed him. If there is something on the floor, he stares at it, then me, until I pick it up. He is the best non-vocal communicator I know.

PoindexterOglethorpe

(25,816 posts)
58. Just imagine if he had opposable thumbs.
Tue Nov 5, 2019, 05:46 PM
Nov 2019

He'd own the world.

I often think that a lot of animals, both individually and species, are smarter than is often credited to them. None of them can manipulate things as well as humans, which holds them back. That and true language, but in a few more million years I bet some more animals will have developed language.

As an aside, one of my three cats was incredibly sweet. However, we used to say that even for a cat she wasn't a rocket scientist.

madaboutharry

(40,190 posts)
51. I'm thinking of buying one of those sunlight lamps.
Tue Nov 5, 2019, 03:08 AM
Nov 2019

The kind that you set like an alarm clock and it imitates sunrise. I have a friend who lives in Finland who has one and says it saves her sanity.

wishstar

(5,268 posts)
52. Good to have some early am daylight for going to work and school and household chores
Tue Nov 5, 2019, 04:13 AM
Nov 2019

Guess if we all slept in later it wouldn't matter but in my family we are early risers out of necessity and hated having to get out for the past several weeks in such dark mornings, so the return to standard time is much appreciated to be able to have some daylight to function in the 6:45 to 7:45 hour when we have to leave the house.

OriginalGeek

(12,132 posts)
59. I love standard time
Tue Nov 5, 2019, 06:11 PM
Nov 2019

got my hour back. Feel like I get more sleep in the morning and I don't really care what time it gets dark as I'm up late anyway. I would prefer it was this way all the time.

PasadenaTrudy

(3,998 posts)
60. I love it
Wed Nov 6, 2019, 06:01 PM
Nov 2019

It's still in the high 80s lately in SoCal. When it's dark, it's cooler out. I can get out and do things then.

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