A Conversation for Ask h2g2
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Full moon affecting sleep
Gnomon - time to move on Posted Nov 18, 2005
~jwf~, is there any reason to believe that the invisible moonrays are stronger at the time of full moon?
Full moon affecting sleep
smartkasese Posted Nov 19, 2005
The full moon always affects my sleep paterens. It has for years. I do believe there is a reason for that. I don't know what it is but I don't follow the moon's patterns but when I don't sleep I look at the moon and realize that there is some sort of pattern.
Full moon affecting sleep
a visitor to planet earth Posted Nov 19, 2005
Recently I was told by colleagues about a very strong full moon shining through the bedroom curtains while they were in bed. It used to be believed that some people committed murder during full moons. I also remember reading about people on board ships sitting out under a full moon, getting a form of sun stroke. How true these tales are I cannot say.
Full moon affecting sleep
smartkasese Posted Nov 20, 2005
Come on everyone- You may debate all you want but the truth is The FULL MOON affects sleeping patterns!!!! Don't look at your lunar calenders, Hell Chuck them out. Next month when you are restless, then you may look at the Calendar. Chances are your sleep disruption will co-incide with the moon.
Full moon affecting sleep
midnightreddragon Posted Nov 20, 2005
Full moon near the equinox - a link to sleepwalking?
Full moon affecting sleep
Alfredo Posted Nov 20, 2005
When I walked in full moonshine in the mountains of Spain, I felt that I was chasing the moon, my best friend.
Just keep walking and you'll be úp the moon itself; that was the basic emotion when I walked.
A poem about me and the moon.
Full moon affecting sleep
Gnomon - time to move on Posted Nov 20, 2005
If it is the full moon only that disturbs sleep, and not the new moon, then it must be due to light rather than gravity. The gravitational effects of the new moon are exactly the same as those of the full moon, so if any disturbance were due to gravitational or tidal effects, they would happen every two weeks, not every four. But the extra light at night is something that happens in a four week cycle. So light from the full moon disturbing the sleeper seems the most likely.
Full moon affecting sleep
midnightreddragon Posted Nov 21, 2005
What strange power in those lunar photons causes mushrooms to appear in sudden abundance?
I've heard it said that nails and hair grow faster as the moon approaches fullness.
Some people reckon you shouldn' have a medical opeartion in the time of the new moon.
Is it the waxing and waning that affects us, I wonder?
Those who spend their evenings in cities should try and get into the countryside or at least into an area of parkland and observe the effect the phases of the moon on nature's creatures.
On the eve of the last full moon I observed an amazing increase in the number of moths.
Full moon affecting sleep
Gnomon - time to move on Posted Nov 21, 2005
Most of these effects you describe are imagined.
Full moon affecting sleep
midnightreddragon Posted Nov 21, 2005
It's true. The full moon with its silent Edvard Munch scream stimulates our imaginations and the imaginations of the mushrooms too. We imagine witches on broomsticks, miaowing cats, howling wolves, long shadows creeping in corners and so on. No flaming wonder we can't get off to sleep. What the mushrooms imagine I've no idea.
Full moon affecting sleep
Xanatic Posted Nov 21, 2005
I would get less sleep due to the light from the moon I imagine. And maybe the amount of nocturnal insects flying around in your room might change due to the light.
Full moon affecting sleep
Gnomon - time to move on Posted Nov 21, 2005
People who lived in the country in the old days looked forward to the full moon. That was the safe time, when you could walk through the countryside by moonlight. The evil time was the new moon, when it was completely dark at night and you had to stay shut indoors.
Full moon affecting sleep
Gnomon - time to move on Posted Nov 21, 2005
I'm not scared of werewolves. They haven't met me on a dark night!
Full moon affecting sleep
Is mise Duncan Posted Nov 21, 2005
So to sum up: People who were where werewolves were were worried, when people who weren't where werewolves were when people who were where werewolves were were worried weren't.
(There's probably some punctuation missing )
Full moon affecting sleep
Still Incognitas, Still Chairthingy, Still lurking, Still invisible, unnoticeable, missable, unseen, just haunting h2g2 Posted Nov 21, 2005
The 'full earth' effect.
midnightreddragon Posted Nov 22, 2005
Never mind the effects on the human psyche of the full moon; what nobody is talking about is the 'full earth' effect on the human brain.
In 20 years when the moon colonies are firmly established and the various military are all up there, sitting up there in the Sea of Tranquility with nothing to do except keeping a jaundiced eye on all those computers (those computers that will be keeping a digital eye on the weapons of mass destruction orbiting the earth in stand-by mode)what then?
We know the word 'lunatic' comes from the effect of the moon on the unpredicatble human brain.
The whole unpredictable might easily go haywire at 'full earth'? Is Armageddon only a generation away?
Come back Dr Strangelove - all is forgiven!
Full moon affecting sleep
Geggs Posted Nov 22, 2005
When I saw the title of this convo, I thought it was 'Full moon effecting sheep'. Which, now I think about it, a far more 2legs kind of title.
By the way, you do realise that the real title 'Full moon affecting sleep' means that a full moon is pretending to be asleep?
However, apart from that I half nothing to add, as I'll been sleeping fine for the sleep week or so.
Geggs
Full moon affecting sleep
~ jwf ~ scribblo ergo sum Posted Nov 22, 2005
>> ...is there any reason to believe that the invisible moonrays are stronger at the time of full moon? <<
Uhm.. yes. But perhaps we need to define 'stronger'.
All forms of energy 'radiate' away from their source in ever widening ripples (Eddy's not withstanding ) and their 'strength' is relatively constant albeit diminishing as the circle spreads thinner across the cosmos.
The moonrays I referred to are in fact reflected solar energies. And the strength of these at their solar source will be as variable as all solar activities which while remaining within certain parameters does indeed have 'stronger' days. And, whether the solar weather be flare or foul, our exposure to it via lunar reflection depends entirely upon how much of the moon's surface is exposed to us.
At a new moon there is virtually no reflected solar energy coming at us. No solar sourced light, x-rays, gamma rays, radio waves, 'solar winds', no EM plasmas of any kind are reflected back at us from a 'new' moon. And yet we still have tidal forces in action.
So even the moon sourced gravitational effects upon earth bound hydraulics do vary as the angle of incidence goes thru its monthly cycle. And every 28 days or so we get the full mirrored effect of reflected solar energies all night long! Higher tides and greener grass.
But 'stronger' is really more a question of volume than intensity, or quantity rather than quality. So it is not for nought that we call it a 'full' moon.
~jwf~
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Full moon affecting sleep
- 21: Gnomon - time to move on (Nov 18, 2005)
- 22: Baconlefeets (Nov 19, 2005)
- 23: smartkasese (Nov 19, 2005)
- 24: a visitor to planet earth (Nov 19, 2005)
- 25: smartkasese (Nov 20, 2005)
- 26: midnightreddragon (Nov 20, 2005)
- 27: Alfredo (Nov 20, 2005)
- 28: Gnomon - time to move on (Nov 20, 2005)
- 29: midnightreddragon (Nov 21, 2005)
- 30: Gnomon - time to move on (Nov 21, 2005)
- 31: midnightreddragon (Nov 21, 2005)
- 32: Xanatic (Nov 21, 2005)
- 33: Gnomon - time to move on (Nov 21, 2005)
- 34: Xanatic (Nov 21, 2005)
- 35: Gnomon - time to move on (Nov 21, 2005)
- 36: Is mise Duncan (Nov 21, 2005)
- 37: Still Incognitas, Still Chairthingy, Still lurking, Still invisible, unnoticeable, missable, unseen, just haunting h2g2 (Nov 21, 2005)
- 38: midnightreddragon (Nov 22, 2005)
- 39: Geggs (Nov 22, 2005)
- 40: ~ jwf ~ scribblo ergo sum (Nov 22, 2005)
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