Circadian reset
It was already dark by the time train 499 reached Halmstad last night, so after commenting on a few student papers and taking some melatonin, I fell into a dreamless sleep, only to be brutally awoken by my Suunto watch at 6 a.m. After an epic struggle to get out of bed, I had no choice but to cut my planned run to Jansa Brygga short and instead go for a quick bread run to the local Bärlin sourdough bakery.
Under
beautiful blue skies, I then did my best to get as much sunlight as possible
between classes, and back home the tinted glass cast beautiful reflections on
the wall, a promise of what is to come. Still, with the jetlag monster never
far away, I headed out for five more kilometres at sunset to help further reset
my circadian rhythm.
Seeing the
images coming in from the Artemis II mission, showing the Earth from the far
side of the Moon, certainly puts my own jetlag struggles into perspective.
Instead of the mere twenty-two thousand kilometres that I have travelled over
the last week, the Artemis crew will have travelled millions of kilometres by
the time they splash down in the waters outside San Diego tomorrow. Like so
many times before, space exploration points to what humanity could become if we
directed our energies outward, toward building rather than destroying.
Labels: space


























