Eleventh Day Home and Still Jet Lagged
There is a nine hour time zone difference between Spain and Vancouver. I conquered jet lag within three days of arriving in Spain. Since coming home over ten days ago, my body clock is still refusing to adjust back to this time zone. It thinks it is time to get up at 4 a.m. and it is constantly on fatigue/lethargy mode. At least the headaches, muscle spasms and joint pain have declined somewhat in the last few days.
Getting out of doors, later in the day or early in the morning, does not seem to be helping. It is hard to tell what Melatonin is doing. I am certainly not staying asleep at night; although it is very easy to fall asleep.
Here is what Dr. Google tells me:
The body naturally produces the hormone melatonin, but among older people levels of the hormone are on the decline.
Factors that increase the likelihood you'll experience jet lag include:
Number of time zones crossed. The more time zones you cross, the more likely you are to feel jet lag.
Flying east. You may find it harder to fly east, when you "lose" time, than to fly west, when you "gain" time.
Being an older adult. Older adults may need more time to recover from jet lag.
Is this is one more aspect of aging that, as older adults, we need to plan for longer recovery times or are there other solutions to reset circadian rhythms?
Yet, why was it easier to adjust on the east bound trip when I ‘lost’ nine hours and it is supposed to be harder on your body to lose hours. Could it have been that I flew ‘overnight’ going to Spain and returned ‘during the day’, departing 8:30 a.m. - arriving 4 p.m. (including 3 hours in Frankfurt).
On my next trip, I will fly east through three time zones. I wonder what jet lag issues that will bring.
