Some hypothesize that most "flus" are seasonal due to lower Vitamin D levels in the winter and shifting many gatherings indoors. Also not going to bed when the sun sets earlier in the wintertime. We are meant to have our circadian rhythms stay in tune with the sun rise and sun sets yet we artifically keep ourselves awake too late and then our melatonin production is interferred with as well.
Some hypothesize that most "flus" are seasonal due to lower Vitamin D levels in the winter and shifting many gatherings indoors. Also not going to bed when the sun sets earlier in the wintertime. We are meant to have our circadian rhythms stay in tune with the sun rise and sun sets yet we artifically keep ourselves awake too late and then our melatonin production is interferred with as well.
Are u serious? Sounds like a bit of an extreme. Although there are individual differences, anyone "needing" that much sleep is likely exhibiting a symptom of illness, or perpetuating same. If you live at the North Pole, you've got other threats to well-being. You just might want to go ahead and hibernate in that case. Questions like yours are either hilarious or ingenuous. Or both, from a certain perspective.
Some hypothesize that most "flus" are seasonal due to lower Vitamin D levels in the winter and shifting many gatherings indoors. Also not going to bed when the sun sets earlier in the wintertime. We are meant to have our circadian rhythms stay in tune with the sun rise and sun sets yet we artifically keep ourselves awake too late and then our melatonin production is interferred with as well.
In bed for 13 hours then?
Are u serious? Sounds like a bit of an extreme. Although there are individual differences, anyone "needing" that much sleep is likely exhibiting a symptom of illness, or perpetuating same. If you live at the North Pole, you've got other threats to well-being. You just might want to go ahead and hibernate in that case. Questions like yours are either hilarious or ingenuous. Or both, from a certain perspective.
Herpes? Pox that killed many millions in the Americas when the Spanish arrived?
If it's filthy living conditions ... and terrain ... why aren't the slums of the world overrun with epic death and disease