• Jinarched@lemmy.ca
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    3 days ago

    I have a summer seasonal affective disorder. I know it’s a bit controversial diagnosis, but I absolutely have a terrible time during summer. It’s so bad I start to be increasingly anxious about summer by the end of February because I know it’s slowly approaching.

    I find daylight to be pleasant like everybody, but after a very short time I start to feel drained as if it was too much. I like cloudy days or when it rains. During summer, I basically don’t sleep. Even when the heat is not an issue I just can’t sleep.

    Lately I’ve been smiling and laughing more and more; I feel much more at peace. It’s always strange to finally feel energized and genuinely happy when most people around me feel the complete opposite.

    • TheBluePillock@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      I’m similar. Definitely way more sluggish and depressed in summer, and my sleep is very poor even if I control the temperature. I enjoy rain and darkness. I prefer night shift. Autumn is my favorite because summer is finally over and it’s the longest time before summer comes again, plus it has the best holidays. I sleep best in winter and I’m more productive, energized, and happy.

      But unlike SAD, it’s a lot harder to fix than just getting a sun lamp. I already do sleep in as dark a room as I can get during the day, but it’s never enough. Though the few times I’ve had access to a truly pitch black room to sleep in, it’s been really helpful.

      It’s a weird way to be and most people really don’t understand.

    • GuyLivingHere@lemmy.ca
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      2 days ago

      I feel for you. Although I never got an actual diagnosis, I am fairly sure I have traditional SAD. It doesn’t make a lot of sense, because I handle cooler temps better than warm ones, but I guess it’s a sunlight exposure thing.

      • Jinarched@lemmy.ca
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        2 days ago

        I knew someone who claimed that light therapy helped. I don’t know much about it, in your case it might be worth a short. Some people talked about melatonin, but I don’t think it helps that much if at all (but that’s just based my own experience).

        In any cases, I hope this winter won’t be too hard on you this year.

  • ExLisperA
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    4 days ago

    Where I live it gets dark around 19:00 now. End of December it will be around 18:30. It still leaves me time for a bike ride or a quick hike after work.

    Last year in December I was in Poland and at 17:00 it was completely dark outside. The bizarre thing was that it wasn’t just getting dark, there was no one outside. Walking outside at 18:00 felt like walking in the middle of the night. I would look out the window, decide it’s time to go to bed then look at the clock and see it’s 19:00. Pretty depressing.

    • SupraMario@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      Gets dark around 16:30 in most of the usa around dec/jan. It sucks. Wake up in the dark, go to work in the dark, and get home in the dark.

    • LittleBorat3@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      That’s exactly it, you can help somewhat with artificial lights but not really.

      Don’t know if anyone actually can stand this. The closer you are to the equator the better your mental health gets just because of this.

      In summer you have this nice thing that you wake up at 5am, also pretty shit for your mental health. I would have to get to bed at 10 to get 7h max.

        • LittleBorat3@lemmy.world
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          3 days ago

          Depends where you are but at 50N you will have both the winter depression and the summer craziness because you sleep 5h each day in summer. Or in winter 15h of sleepiness.

          I hate it both, the summer thing you can try to get rid of by installing something in front or your window.

          You cannot make winter less dark, I have not seen a light that does that. Maybe more cold blue in the morning.

          • BeeegScaaawyCripple@lemmy.world
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            3 days ago

            i have seen a light that makes winter less dark. i lived in this place where i had a streetlamp just outside my only window. blackout curtains did not work. i would wake up at midnight thinking it was noon and it was just that godsdamned street lamp.

            so like, there are solutions they just drive you the other end of crazy

  • Blackmist@feddit.uk
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    3 days ago

    And then you go to the Arctic circle, look outside in summer, see daylight, see 12:00 on the clock and have no idea which 12 it is…

  • snooggums@piefed.world
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    4 days ago

    For all the people who don’t understand how time works.

    Noon is supposed to be at 12:00. Let’s say someone lives in a place where that is literally true. If they lived on the equator then sunrise would be at 6 am and set at 6 pm. If it is the equinox anywhere on the planet would be sire at 6 am and set at 6 pm.

    If they are far enough north or south that the shortest day is 10 hours or less, then the sun will rise at 7 am and set at 5 pm. This includes most of the US and Europe. The sun setting at 5 pm during the winter is normal.

    The primary issue, at least in the US is that the typical workday of 9 to 5 or 8 to 5 has 5 hours in the afternoon and only 3 or 4 hours in the morning. Being afternoon heavy means getting dark at 5 seems early, especially after the stupid DST shift making it seem like evenings should have even more sunlight. We basically changed society based on banking hours and are angry that time works the way it does and instead of just shifting working hours to what we want we pretend that the sun is the highest in the sky at 1:00 pm for part of the year for no logical reason.

  • AlligatorBlizzard@sh.itjust.works
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    4 days ago

    I hate how early it gets dark, but I did get the third shift achievement of clocking out at 1:30 am and getting home at 1:20 am this morning, so that’s kinda neat.

  • RBWells@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    I find it much more dispiriting to come home in the dark, than to get up in the dark. So yeah I like “daylight savings time” more in practice. People arguing noon is sun at highest point aren’t arguing that 6 is sunrise and 6 is sunset, we don’t use sundials anymore.

    I’d be good with a world time. Just decide when a day starts worldwide and let local schedules be whatever works. So maybe the sun rises at 0100 in my longitude and so work starts at 4 or whatever. There’s no magic to the 12 being noon.

  • Therobohour@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    God try being in Northern Ireland, get goes from black to dark gray about 10.00 then goes from gray to back to black about 15.00. It’s so depressing

  • TrackinDaKraken@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    Work and school schedules could be adjusted to adapt so we’re not “going to work in the dark”. They could be, and probably everyone not getting rich off virtual slave labor would fine with that.