TIPS & TRICKS
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| Jet Lag
Jet lag is nature's way of making you look like
your passport photo. JET LAG: EAT, WASH OR SMELL IT AWAY? As with remedies for bald heads, so too there are dozens of factual, fictional and fanciful antidotes for jet lag. You can try, for example, to get rid of jet lag by fasting and feasting, by not eating, by sleeping, by staying awake, and more. One cure I read about advised passengers to "wear brown paper grocery bags inside their shoes." Do any of these work? Yes and no. Some probably don't work at all (like the grocery bags), some work some of the time, and some only work in combination with others. Most, however, even if they don't completely cure it, do curtail jet lag. So try some of the following techniques for yourself to find out which jet lag cure works best for you. Here's another way to describe jet lag: it's
like getting off a not-so-merry-go-round only to discover you're not
even at an amusement park! WHAT IS JET-LAG? If you suffer from jet lag, you are not alone. One study showed that as many as 94% of long haul fliers experienced some form of it. Other research indicated that even flight attendants are not immune. Jet lag includes such physical symptoms as fatigue, insomnia, disorientation, swelling limbs, ear/nose/eye irritations, headaches, bowel irregularity and light-headedness. In other words, your body is out of whack. So much so that it can impede both your physical and mental performance. Greg Louganis, the world champion Olympic diver, for example, blamed jet lag as the cause of his accidentally hitting his head on the diving platform during the 1979 Olympic trials. John Foster Dulles, the American Secretary of State, blamed jet lag for his poor judgment after he flew to Egypt to conduct negotiations on the Aswan Dam. Jet lag occurs because changes in time zones confuse the body's 24-hour inner clock known as "circadian rhythms." If you live in Perth, for example, and fly to Sydney, it is three hours later. If you are now on the East coast and you are ready to go to bed at your usual time of 11 P.M., your body knows it is only 8 P.M. and thus has a hard time getting to sleep. Then in the morning when you arise at 6 A.M., your body is saying "Wait a minute, it's only 3 A.M." It can take as long as one day to adjust for each time zone you cross. It is not the length of your flight that will determine how much jet lag you might experience but how many time zones you have gone through. Jet lag seems to be worse flying eastward. Travelling north to south within the same time zone, on the other hand, produces none. In addition, your general health, personal habits and age play a part in your susceptibility to jet lag. For example, babies are scarcely bothered by it. For adults, being well rested can help reduce jet lag symptoms while overeating, smoking and drinking alcohol can make it worse. I have jet lag. That's when you arrive and your luggage is in better shape than you are. Jet Lag Tip 1: Sleep-away jet lag If you are flying from the West coast to the East coast, adjust your sleep time before you leave on your trip. For example, if your normal bedtime is midnight, then three nights before you travel go to sleep at 11 P.M. Two days before you travel, retire at 10 P.M. And the night before your trip, go to sleep at 9 P.M. (which is midnight on the East coast). On international travel, seasoned passengers either book overnight flights when heading east, so they can sleep most of the flight, or flights that arrive at night, so they can go to bed at their destination. (Take an eye mask to enhance sleep on the plane and at your destination.) Jet Lag Tip 2: Change-your-watch cure Adapt to your new time zone as quickly as possible, especially at meal and sleep times. On the plane- change your watch to your destination time zone. Sleep on the plane if it is bedtime in your arrival city, stay awake if it isn't. When you arrive- don't think about what time it is "back home." Also, resist taking a nap; it delays adjustment to your new time zone. If you must nap, keep it short. If you are on a business trip and need to keep track of the time in "the office" I suggest a watch with two time zones. Jet Lag Tip 3: Pop-a-pill cure Jet Lag Tip 4: Supplement-away jet
lag Jet Lag Tip 5: Eat-away jet lag Jet Lag Tip 6: Don't eat cure Jet Lag Tip 7: Let-there-be-light
cure Jet Lag Tip 8: Exercise-away jet lag Jet Lag Tip 9: Wash-away jet lag Jet Lag Tip 10: Think-away jet lag
Flight Tactics If you're assigned to a seat you don't like, go back to the desk when all the pre-reserved seats are released (usually 15 minutes before flight time). All the prime seats for passengers who didn't show up are available then. If on the plane you discover that you don't like your seat, don't wait until the plane takes off to find a better one. Look around the plane, and the second before they close the door, head for the empty seat of your choice. Don't wait until the seat-belt sign goes on. By pre-reserving a single seat on a non-jumbo where the seats are three across, you'll increase the odds of getting an empty seat next to you. Ask for a window or aisle seat in a row where the window or aisle is already reserved by a single. The middle seat between two singles is least likely to fill up. Desperation measure.- Say you're very overweight and need an empty seat next to you so you won't crowd the other passengers.
Duty-Free Shops at Airports and Docks Check the prices at duty-free shops against prices in local stores. Airport and dockside shops generally charge higher, rather than prevailing, prices for their products. In addition, top-of-the-line products are sold, meaning that the prices are high to begin with. So buy only otherwise heavily taxed items in these stores. Top of page
Alcohol has more punch during an airplane flight than on the ground. Reason: Body fluids evaporate quickly in the pressurized dry cabin. And under pressure, the alcohol absorbs more fluids in the intestinal tract, thus malting itself felt more quickly. Alternative: To reduce the dehydration caused by a long flight (six hours or more), drink three or four pints of water during the flight.
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