Sunday, November 4, 2012

Loose Leafing: The Lost Hour

 
Ah, the time change has flickered by us once again, sprinkling bonus hours on whom it will, but I am still thinking about my lost hour.  Something about the time change makes the truth of my hour that may well be lost forever come crashing home to roost again.  What?  I haven't told you the story of the lost hour?  Surely, you must be the only one I haven't told. 

You see, once upon a time when I was but a college student, which I would like to think was recently but is growing ever further distant, I went to England for spring break.  Spring break in England, you say?  I know, it's not very tropical and not very stereotypically spring break, but I've never been super crazy about the beach, and the party scene is not for me, so what better time to visit my studying abroad best friend than spring break?

I toured some of London and some of Scotland and had the time of my life little knowing that an hour of my life would soon be robbed from me.  You see, apparently, and much to my surprise for some reason, the whole daylight savings time switch doesn't always happen concurrently between countries.  As it so happened, when I was in the UK the time changed, and the next weekend when I'd gotten home again, we sprang forward again.  Normally, you can console yourself with the loss of your springtime hour with the promise of getting said hour back again in the fall, not so with the extra hour you lost while springing ahead twice

And can I just say how great it is to deal with jet lag and the loss of an hour?  Not to mention, the pain of sitting squashed up in your middle seat between strangers on the plane ride home (where the time change has not yet occurred) not knowing what in the heck time it really is anywhere so having no way to gauge whether you'll have to play Dr. Mario on your Virgin Atlantic seat screen for only two more hours or whether it will be a whole three before your plane cruises into the gate at Newark.  Not that there's anything wrong with Dr. Mario, I find Dr. Mario to be an extremely enjoyable way to fritter away hours and was delighted to discover it available on my flight.  In fact, I find Dr. Mario so enjoyable and diverting that I almost feel sad for those of you who are thinking, at this moment, "What is she talking about?  Is something wrong with her?"  "Her" of course meaning me, but I digress. 

Most people in my neck of the woods are happy and grateful for that glorious extra hour of sleep this weekend afforded, and I'll admit to some passing joy in it, too.  I'm still a glass half empty kind of a girl, though, and every time we change the clocks I'm reminded of that silly hour that I misplaced between countries that I'll never get back in the fall.

Anybody else ever been a victim from this sneaky thief of time?  And just exactly how obvious is it that I am just now avoiding the pile of books beside me that wants reviewing?  ;-)

8 comments:

  1. I really wish we'd pick a time and stick with it. A week or two from now I'll discover some clock I forgot to turn back.

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  2. I mostly just wish we'd leave the "changing" of time alone. It always messes me up.

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  3. I agree with everyone. I love the "extra" hour we get but I hate the fact that it gets dark so early! Ugh! Lesson learned: never go to another country right before DSL goes into effect. ;-)

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  4. Sweet post! Love it. If I find that lost hour, I'll send it to you ASAP! :)

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  5. I hate the whole clock changing thing. Just leave it alone - the planet and it's inhabitents managed perfectly well with the seasons before we brought this change in!

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  6. I'm another one who wishes we'd just leave it be. Getting kids and dogs to adjust is more trouble than it's worth.

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  7. Sounds like you need an autumn-time trip back to England to regain your lost hour!!!

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  8. I get a little jet lag with the time change, but I've been struggling with insomnia so I welcome the utter exhaustion of daylight savings time and fall! :-)

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