A Conversation for How To Survive Working A Night Shift
Peer Review: A13361618 - How To Survive 'Night' Shift
U168592 Started conversation Jul 26, 2006
Entry: How To Survive 'Night' Shift - A13361618
Author: Matt [Help the AViators A13264670 fly] - U168592
Just a fun little Entry I lnocked up this morning. Comments, suggestions etc. as always
A13361618 - How To Survive 'Night' Shift
lil ~ Auntie Giggles with added login ~ returned Posted Jul 26, 2006
Ooo... a lickul typo
>>All in all, look after your body and it will oook after you. <<
oook = look
Who is feeling a tired boy today then?
A13361618 - How To Survive 'Night' Shift
Wyatt Posted Jul 26, 2006
After 'Neighbours/pub/grandmas' would there need to be an apostrophe in grandmas as you probaby mean 'grandma's house' or something?
But great entry!
A13361618 - How To Survive 'Night' Shift
lil ~ Auntie Giggles with added login ~ returned Posted Jul 26, 2006
A13361618 - How To Survive 'Night' Shift
There is only one thing worse than being Gosho, and that is not being Gosho Posted Jul 28, 2006
Night work - something I know far too much about and have promised myself I'll never do again as long as I live. I used to enjoy it at first because my night job involved driving around London between about 11pm and 5am and, of course, there's next to no traffic at that time of the day I found that the coppers were often a lot more lenient regarding speed limits as long as a) you looked like you were a working vehicle and b) you weren't taking diabolical liberties. An extra five to ten mph over the limit would usually be overlooked. But towards the end of my 12-year stint I found increasingly difficult to drag myself off to work when both my body and my mind were screaming 'Bedtime' at me.
One thing sort of hinted at in the entry but not really expanded upon is this: if you're able to, start winding things down at work about an hour before you're ready to clock out. If you work in an environment with bright lights, lower them if you can to fool your mind into thinking that it's sunset. Change the kind of music you're listening to from grindcore/harcore punk/thrash to something a bit more soothing. And in these days of the Internet, perhaps stream Radio 4's Book at Bedtime
A13361618 - How To Survive 'Night' Shift
McKay The Disorganised Posted Jul 28, 2006
Vitamin C tablets can also help the body cope with night shifts, and some people on long-swing nights (7 or more consequtive shifts) find vitamin D helps - (have loads of margerine on your butties.)
A13361618 - How To Survive 'Night' Shift
Bambi_Killer Posted Jul 31, 2006
I work the night shift, midnite till noon for 42-49 days straight, on a ship. Been doing this for 7 years...
A GOOD multi-vitamin is an absolute necessity! Strong coffee at wake up and Sleepy-Time, or chamomile (sp) tea at end of shift are also musts. The best thing I have found for sleeping after shift is a punishing exercise routine just before you hit the rack. I would reccomend sex
as a much better alternative, but alas THAT is not available out here
Also, avoid carbs
as much as possible when on the night shift.
A13361618 - How To Survive 'Night' Shift
Fiona Posted Aug 3, 2006
Good entry, Matt. :D Well amusing. Here's hoping it ends up in the Edited Guide.
A13361618 - How To Survive 'Night' Shift
Sho - employed again! Posted Aug 3, 2006
I used to find that as long as I had something to do I was ok. Being in the Army there was always something to paint or polish when all else failed.
However in the job I did we almost never worked more than one night shift in a row, which really messed up my system.
Good tips though, and since I can't think of anything to add...
A13361618 - How To Survive 'Night' Shift
Milos Posted Aug 3, 2006
Chock-full of excellent information
One of my favourite night shift jobs was for a gas station - just me in a little 6 x 12 kiosk from 10 to 6. The worst part was that I had to inventory everything in it every night . Other than that it was great, except for the eerie time the power went out... (totally off subject, sorry)
A very persuasive reason people like to work nights (and the reason most of my "night shift" friends love it) is to avoid workplace politics.
On getting sick: we call them 'Mental Health Days'. That's when we call in because we're sick of work. (of course, we might throw in a cough or sniffle for "authenticity" when we call off).
A note about drugs - if you're not used to taking them use caution - more likely than not you will be unprepared for how they will affect your system. The first time I took a caffein pill I swore I'd never do it again. And I haven't.
Another method of getting through a night shift (also good for getting through exceptionally long day shifts - my shift is 13 hours) is to follow a routine. Don't look at a clock and lament that there are 6 hours left on your shift, instead try doing certain tasks at specific times, take breaks on schedule, even the peripheral stuff. On nights I used to listen to a specific radio programme that was on from 3 - 4 am. It helps to go from event to event instead of blindly trying to fill the hours.
If making you're own way >> your
And I've read this twice and haven't yawned yet
Great stuff, Matt!
A13361618 - How To Survive 'Night' Shift
Rev Nick { Only the dead are without fear } Posted Aug 5, 2006
Reference post #16, I too did many different military locations that demanded rotating shifts. Commonly 2 graveyard shifts, 24-hours break, 2 days, 24-hr-break, 2 evenings, and then what-ever the off time was. I know there have been studies that say if you MUST work a rotating one, ensure it is a 'forward' one as I've just described. The worst one I worked had the final day run followed by the graveyard, ... 8 clock hours later. The body didn't have time to adapt, and by the time you were halfway through the 2nd graveyard run, you were running on caffeine and will-power alone.
Anyway, a great and light read. That might include a mention of rotating shifts, and a need to allow transition time from one stage to the next.
A13361618 - How To Survive 'Night' Shift
Sho - employed again! Posted Aug 5, 2006
*displays ignorance*
what's the graveyard shift?
My last shift work went like this:
day 1: 13:00 - 21:30
day 2: 07:30 - 13:00 then 21:30 to 07:30
day 3: sleep day (until 14:00 at which time we were often called upon to do stuff like sport)
day 4: 13:00 - 21:30
day 5: 07:30 - 13:00 then 21:30 to 07:30
day 6: sleep day (with the same proviso as before)
day 7: off! yippee!!
Key: Complain about this post
Peer Review: A13361618 - How To Survive 'Night' Shift
- 1: U168592 (Jul 26, 2006)
- 2: lil ~ Auntie Giggles with added login ~ returned (Jul 26, 2006)
- 3: U168592 (Jul 26, 2006)
- 4: Wyatt (Jul 26, 2006)
- 5: U168592 (Jul 26, 2006)
- 6: lil ~ Auntie Giggles with added login ~ returned (Jul 26, 2006)
- 7: U168592 (Jul 26, 2006)
- 8: AlexAshman (Jul 28, 2006)
- 9: There is only one thing worse than being Gosho, and that is not being Gosho (Jul 28, 2006)
- 10: McKay The Disorganised (Jul 28, 2006)
- 11: AlexAshman (Jul 28, 2006)
- 12: U168592 (Jul 30, 2006)
- 13: Bambi_Killer (Jul 31, 2006)
- 14: U168592 (Jul 31, 2006)
- 15: Fiona (Aug 3, 2006)
- 16: Sho - employed again! (Aug 3, 2006)
- 17: Milos (Aug 3, 2006)
- 18: U168592 (Aug 4, 2006)
- 19: Rev Nick { Only the dead are without fear } (Aug 5, 2006)
- 20: Sho - employed again! (Aug 5, 2006)
More Conversations for How To Survive Working A Night Shift
Write an Entry
"The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is a wholly remarkable book. It has been compiled and recompiled many times and under many different editorships. It contains contributions from countless numbers of travellers and researchers."