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Send travel fatigue packing
By Joel Widzer
Jets are great. They allow eager travelers and
hard-charging business people to travel thousands of miles in a matter of hours.
Some of them get used to the stresses of “transmeridian travel” (a fancy name
for travel across multiple time zones). But with summer around the corner and
flights to Europe filling fast, a lot of novice travelers are about to
experience the peculiar effect of being physically located in one part of the
world while their bodies and minds are left many hours behind.
I fly a couple of hundred thousand miles each year, so I
have experienced firsthand all the ills of long-haul flights: jet lag, lousy
food, cramped muscles, disorientation — you name it. A while back, I decided to
do something about it. Now, after three years of academic research ranging from
work with the World Bank to the U.S. Army, I have designed a method for adapting
to the ills of travel fatigue. By using a set of simple behavioral strategies,
travelers can travel better, safer and more productively.
Some physiology
The problem of transmeridian travel is simple: Our bodies
are not designed to cross multiple time zones in mere hours. For everyday
living, the body is set to a natural sleep/wake cycle, which takes its cues from
the passage of the sun. Under normal conditions, the body is set to be alert
during daylight hours and to sleep when it’s dark. Any disruption in this cycle
throws off the body’s “circadian clock,” its internal timekeeper, causing
fatigue.
Before modern jet travel, it took travelers weeks or months
to cover any significant geography. For example, the average trans-Atlantic
ocean liner crossing took four weeks. Leisurely travel like this gives the
body’s circadian clock time to reset naturally, following a gradual change in
the day/night cycle. Jet travel over more than three or four times zones, on the
other hand, almost always results in travel fatigue.
Travel fatigue is known to affect memory, performance and
digestive function; it can cause irritability, stress and sleep deprivation.
Cumulative travel fatigue, resulting from frequent or consecutive trips, can
result in such physiological and psychological conditions as anxiety, obesity,
depression, cardiac disease, reduced performance, job burnout and interpersonal
difficulties. In fact, the World Bank concluded from one study that travelers
taking five or more trips a year experience a 66 percent increase in
family-related psychological disorders.
Consider a typical trans-Atlantic itinerary. You leave
Chicago at 5 p.m., fly for nine hours and arrive in Paris at 9 in the morning.
You should be ready for a full day of meetings or sightseeing, but your body
thinks it’s still in Chicago, where it is 2 in the morning and you are fast
asleep. You may drink a double espresso and do a hundred jumping jacks, but
without strategic intervention, your body is going to win. Your business deal
will be blown, and that afternoon tour of Notre Dame will be nothing but a blur.
The bad news is that travel fatigue is inevitable. The good
news is that with a little effort, you can train your body and mind to better
adapt to the rigors of travel.
Here are a few tips to keep you going.
Train like an athlete. During the regular season, a
professional baseball player flies from city to city and plays 180 games under
constant pressure to perform. Although your trips might not mean the difference
between a World Series championship and a long off-season, your million-dollar
deal or valuable vacation time is just as important. So, train like an athlete.
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Get 40 winks. Sleep is the key to restoring your body
to a healthy level of functioning.
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Eat right. Carbohydrates tend to promote sleepiness, so
eat some cookies before your nap. Protein, on the other hand, helps with
alertness, so order some eggs or cheese with your power breakfast.
-
Limit alcohol intake. One glass of wine might help you
sleep on the plane, but too much can disrupt your sleep waves and prevent
you from reaching the restorative stage of sleep known as REM (Rapid Eye
Movement) sleep.
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Get your exercise. Once you reach your destination,
getting outdoors in the sunlight can help reset your circadian clock and
speed your adaptation to the new time zone. Exercise can also help reduce
stress and gear you up for an important event.
Lighten your load. If possible, leave the computer
at home and carry a USB key or some sort of flash memory device. Since most
major hotels and office complexes have computers available for use, I like to
carry a USB key loaded with a software program called
Pass2Go, which allows me to safely store my passwords on a USB key and
securely log in to online accounts from any computer anywhere in the world. A
big advantage of this little key is that you don’t have to screen your computer
through security.
Carry the right bags.
Travelpro has a nice line of luggage that is ergonomically designed to
relieve physical fatigue with cleverly designed handles and rollers that adjust
to the way you carry your bags. The Travelpro Platinum 4SE bag features a “weigh
less, stress less” handle that greatly reduces the chore of lugging around
carry-on baggage.
Reduce ambient noise. A pair of noise-canceling
headphones can eliminate the loud drone of the airplane. My personal preferences
is for “Solitude” headphones from
ProTravelGear.com. I have found them to be comfortable and I enjoy their
superior sound quality. Cue up your favorite music or listen to a
sleep-promoting program such as Barb Badolati’s “Resting
on Cloud 9.”
Stay healthy. An airplane is a great place to pick
up dirt, germs and other nasties.
TravelKleen has a nifty reusable headrest protector that puts some distance
between you and any germs or head lice that previous passengers may have left
behind on your seat.
Develop an overall travel fatigue strategy. Serious
travelers need a serious program. Look for a comprehensive book on managing
stress and fatigue at your bookstore. Better yet, check out my e-book “The
Art of Transmeridian Travel” on
TransmeridianTraveler.com.
To overcome travel fatigue, you need to call on the body’s
unique powers of physiology, psychology, sleep and stress reduction. By properly
managing these functions, you can attain optimal performance while traveling.
Links
Pass2Go
http://www.roboform.com/pass2go.html
Travelpro
http://www.travelpro.com/
ProTravelGear.com
TravelKleen
http://www.travelkleen.com/
The Art of Transmeridian Travel
TransmeridianTraveler.com
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