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| Surviving
The Red Eye - Information
and Tips |
Alcohol
and caffeine
If you're trying to sleep, neither alcohol nor caffeine help the
cause. Avoid both. Additionally, as a rule, carbohydrates make you
sleepy, proteins and fats keep you awake. Bananas and milk are
especially effective sleep-inducers.
Water
Water helps the flier's cause in all cases. However, if you're
trying to sleep, chugging a quart of water just before takeoff is
going to require a mid-flight trip to the toilet. Moderation is the
answer here; drink enough water to stay hydrated, but not so much
that you're traipsing up and down the aisle of the plane all night.
Layovers
Eating is not advised, but you should drink plenty of water to
stay hydrated. My approach is usually to brush my teeth, then head
toward the gate, sit near a speaker or the agent, wrap my luggage
handle around my wrist or ankle, and put my head back and try to
sleep some more. You might ask a gate agent to make sure you don't
sleep through the flight departure.
Skip the Movie
Most movies won't put you to sleep, but rather keep you awake. Pass
on the headphones, and close your eyes and try to sleep.
Sleeping Aids
An eye mask, inflatable neck pillow, ear plugs, and other devices
can help the cause greatly. Don't worry about looking funny;
bloodshot eyes at your morning meeting look much worse.
If you can fall asleep without the use of pharmaceutical sleep aids,
you'll be much better off upon your arrival, as drugs can cause
lingering drowsiness or sluggishness that make it hard for your body
to reset its internal clock. Gentle aids, such as the motion
sickness treatment Dramamine, can dramatically assist you in falling
asleep, however, if you have serious difficulties sleeping on
planes.
Check your carry-on items
A groggy, half-asleep traveler is much more likely to leave
belongings on the plane. Check the back of the seat in front of you
as the plane taxis to the gate. Check especially for important items
such as your wallet or purse, connecting or return air tickets,
identification, keys, and other similar essentials.
Reset your watch
You need to start living by your new time zone. Reset your watch
before you get off the plane. In fact, I prefer to reset my watch
immediately after I board the last leg of my itinerary, as arrival
times are always published in the destination time zone, and I know
how long to my destination if I wake up and check the time. This can
permit me to grab a few extra precious minutes of sleep.
Start your day with familiar routines
Rather than indulging your body's clock, live by your watch. If it's
7AM after an eastbound flight, have breakfast, coffee, whatever you
usually do at 7AM. Grab a newspaper if you typically read one every
morning. You probably won't feel hungry yet, and the coffee might
not go down as smoothly, but soon enough you'll be glad you're on
schedule. If it's 2AM after a westbound flight, head straight for
your hotel or home and go to sleep. |
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