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2torial #0703:
Learn2 Combat Jet
Lag

Flying in the face of the traveler's
bugaboo
It's four in the morning, and you're tossing and
turning between crisp hotel sheets. Then a few
hours later, just as you're walking into the big
meeting--important enough for you to cross six time
zones--you're finally ready to fall asleep. For the
next two weeks.
It's every traveler's nightmare. As people fly
more and more, both for business and pleasure,
circadian dischronism (otherwise known as jet lag)
is becoming something of an epidemic. Beside
exhaustion and insomnia, symptoms of jet lag
include nausea, aching joints, irritability,
decreased concentration, headaches and even
depression.
Fortunately, science is making inroads into the
mysteries of jet lag, and researchers have
developed a number of active steps you can take to
alleviate its symptoms. If you follow the
guidelines outlined in this 2torial, you'll find
yourself less shell-shocked, happier and more
productive when you reach your final destination.

The body's clock is an incredibly complicated
mechanism. Because so many factors--both biological
and environmental--are involved, scientists have
been unable to find a silver-bullet cure for jet
lag. Yet research shows it is possible to alleviate
symptoms by gradually "tricking" the mind and body
into abiding by the new time zone.
Conventional wisdom says that it takes one full
day to recover from jet lag for every time zone you
cross. So, if you travel across seven time zones
and don't take active steps to fight jet lag, you
can expect to spend a full week recovering from the
shock. However, you may be able to speed up the
process if you take the following steps.
Step
1
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