Sleep, Sun, and the Clock Debate
The idea of staying on one time all year sounds simple, but it is not.
In the United States we change our clocks twice a year to follow summer daylight, giving us more light in the evenings and darker mornings during winter. A new bill would lock this change for good, making daylight saving permanent. That means people would keep the extra evening light and have even darker winter mornings, but would never shift their clocks again.
Three Clock Systems
| Clock | What It Follows | How It Works |
|---|---|---|
| Solar | Earth’s motion around the Sun | Matches true solar time |
| Biological | Body’s internal rhythm | Regulates sleep, hormones |
| Social | Time on our walls | Governs work, school, etc. |
When the social clock moves ahead an hour for daylight saving, it can drift out of sync with the solar and biological clocks. Scientists call this mismatch “social jet lag.” Light in the morning is a strong signal that resets our internal clock. When mornings stay dark, the body has trouble staying aligned with social obligations.
The Debate Continues
Researchers call for more studies that look at both health outcomes and everyday behaviors under each time‑keeping system. Until then, the question of whether to keep or ditch the yearly clock shift remains open.