Here’s Why We hate Mondays

Posted on January 22nd, 2008

Scientists have discovered a cure for the dreaded Monday morning blues - stop sleeping in on weekends.A new study has found that lazy Saturday and Sunday lie-ins can disturb your body clock, leaving you fatigued at the start of the week.Flinders University sleep expert Leon Lack said people often used the weekend to catch up on sleep lost during the week.But he told the Australasian Sleep Association Conference in Perth that while this might help pay off a “sleep debt”, it came at a cost. “We’ve discovered that these sleep-ins are actually putting your body out of whack enough to change your Sunday night bedtime and set you up for Monday blues,” Professor Lack told AAP.

His research team tested the theory by tracking 16 people over a weekend, asking them to go to bed a little later than they would on a weeknight but sleeping-in an extra two hours. By comparing saliva samples and hormone tests he found participants’ body clocks had been delayed by 45 minutes. “That might not sound like a lot but it means that you’re not quite as sleepy on Sunday night at the normal bedtime and you’ll be much sleepier the next day,” Prof Lack said.

Questionnaires completed on Monday and Tuesday showed much higher levels of self-reported fatigue and tiredness compared with pre sleep in days. This was because the subjects’ circadian rhythms - which determine patterns of alertness and tiredness - had been disturbed, creating an effect similar to jet lag. By mid-week most people manage to get back on track but then they start staying up later, getting into “debt” once again and perpetuating the cycle.

“These days, we’re pushing ourselves a lot, particularly during the week and the weekend is our only refuge,” Prof Lack said. The problem, he says, is that this comes at a price. “It’s a bit like paying off a mortgage - you take out a big one and you’ll have a lot to pay off later on.”

New Order: Blue Monday (music & lyrics)

Posted on January 22nd, 2008


How does it feel
To treat me like you do
When youve laid your hands upon me
And told me who you areI thought I was mistaken
I thought I heard your words
Tell me how do I feel
Tell me now how do I feel

Those who came before me
Lived through their vocations
From the past until completion
They will turn away no more

And I still find it so hard
To say what I need to say
But Im quite sure that youll tell me
Just how I should feel today

I see a ship in the harbor
I can and shall obey
But if it wasnt for your misfortunes
Id be a heavenly person today

And I thought I was mistaken
And I thought I heard you speak
Tell me how do I feel
Tell me now how should I feel

Now I stand here waiting

I thought I told you to leave me
While I walked down to the beach
Tell me how does it feel
When your heart grows cold
(grows cold, grows cold, grows cold)

Der Spiegel Online: Experts Warn of Stock Market Hysteria

Posted on January 22nd, 2008

Markets crashed all across Europe Monday, with Germany’s DAX losing 7 percent of its value. But analysts advise against panic — in fact, they say, now might be a good time to pick up some cheap stocks.

Five percent, 6 percent, 7 percent: For the German DAX stock market index, Monday was a day of steep falls. A €1 billion loss at the bank WestLB, combined with the fears of a global recession, helped push the DAX beneath the psychologically important 7,000-point mark.

It wasn’t just the DAX which was hard hit. London’s FTSE 100 index also fell 4.5 percent, while in Paris the Cac-40 dropped 4.6 percent. Elsewhere the Tokyo Nikkei 225 index fell by 3.9 percent. US markets were closed for a public holiday, however.Is the DAX now set to keep falling? No, say experts. “It looks dramatic at the moment, but it is not as bad as it seems,” Matthias Jörss, head of equity strategy at the leading private bank Sal. Oppenheim, told SPIEGEL ONLINE. “We have gotten used to rising prices over the years — especially in Germany. Now we are simply seeing a correction.”

Read the whole article @ Spiegel Online >>

This is one of the businessmen’s reasons to hate Mondays.