The Sun is My Clock

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IF The MNCs want to profit from cheap Indian skilled labour, let them adjust their time-tables for the Indian workforce only during the day

Our brain carries the neural structure of the numerous metabolic processes taking place in our body. It also regulates the functioning of various vital organs in the body like the heart. It controls other phenomena like breathing. All this follow a pattern that remains the same day after day. There is an internal clock in our body, a mechanism in the brain that works according to the different times of day and night. This clock is variously called biorhythm or circadian rhythm. It affects various aspects of our body like the body temperature, sleep-wake cycles, eating habits, digestion, hormone releases, and so on.
The human brain has a biological clock, circadian rhythm, or biorhythm of a diurnal being. In other words, we are hardwired to be awake in the day and sleep at night. All our bodily functions are programmed to work properly when we sleep in the night and are awake during the day. That is, Nature wants us to make the sun our clock. Have we done that?
Our daily habits and lifestyle have drastically changed over the decades. Particularly in the case of millennials, the daily routine has been distorted to a large extent. Food habits, social behaviour, hygiene, sleep-wake cycles, and many other integral aspects of the daily life of a human being have been significantly changed. Human beings are not behaving as human beings, at least not as they were programmed to behave by Nature.
Sleep is crucial to the normal functioning of the human body. It is during sleep that the body breaks down the food consumed during the day in order to assimilate into the body. It is during sleep that the mind relaxes and releases stress. Only with proper rest can a person get the complete results of physical exercises and workouts. Circadian rhythms regulate the speeding up or slowing down of many bodily functions. For instance,during the day time, the body is prepared for more activity while the body is conditioned for lesser activity during night. Most of our organs, if not all, function according to specific rhythms depending upon different periods of the day and night. Therefore, any change in the sleep-wake cycles affects all these organs.

This is the only way India can save her youth from getting weaker by the day. This is the only way that Indians can return to their being human beings. This is the only way they can stop becoming owls and bats

It has been proven over and over again by researchers that the human body delivers its optimum performance only when it follows biorhythms to the maximum. Any change in the various cycles that we are supposed to follow naturally because of the way human beings are built leads to various problems in the body and the mind. The environment is crucial to maintaining the circadian rhythms. So, while you might think that you could just darken your room and go to sleep during the day, that would not work because the surroundings are not as calm or silent as during the night.
Circadian rhythms also influence the emotional behaviour of the human beings. Researchers have found a correlation between disturbances in biorhythms and accidents in factories or roads. When a person is in a critical phase of the circadian or biorhythmic cycle, that person is prone to commit mistakes and end up being a victim of an accident. Circadian rhythms or biorhythms have been known to operate in cycles that could be classified as physical, emotional, intellectual, intuitive, aesthetic, self-awareness, and spiritual. They can be also classified as time cycles of multiple years, annual, monthly, weekly, and daily.
What is the reason of this shift from diurnal activity of human beings to nocturnal activity? It is technology and the desire for achieving more than we can. We work when we are supposed to sleep. We sleep when we are supposed to be awake. Across the world, all traditional systems of schooling emphasise the importance of waking up early. In the Eastern traditions, waking up at least half an hour before sunrise and going to bed few hours after sunset was considered an essential habit for a healthy living. All students, both of the secular and spiritual sciences, were required to do the first study or spiritual practices for the day in the brahma muhurta, the time of Brahman, that is approximately from 3.30 a.m. to 5.30a.m.
The main reason for a major change in the sleep-wake cycles of Indians is the increase in Indians working for multinational corporations having their headquarters on the other side of the globe, where the day and night cycles are exactly opposite in timings to the Indian day and night cycles. In order to do work for these multinational corporations Indians have to remain awake when it is night in India, so that those in the West have no discomfort. In search of money and prestige, countless Indians are spoiling their physical and mental health beyond repair. Cardiovascular diseases, diabetes, cholesterol, and various other ailments are on the rise in India. Many of these ailments have been found to have a direct link with erratic sleep-wake cycles.
Today, India is one of the countries in the world with a young workforce. Indians are damaging this precious human resource by becoming greedy for earning more money by working for multinational corporations on their terms. These multinational corporations do not seek India for doing charity. They seek India because they get cheap skilled labour. Indians should have the wisdom of demanding healthier working hours. If multinational corporations want to profit from cheap Indian skilled labour, let them adjust their time-tables for their Indian workforce and let them get work from people in India only during Indian day time.
This is the only way India can save her youth from getting weaker by the day. This is the only way that Indians can return to their being human beings. This is the only way they can stop becoming owls and bats.

(The writer is a monk of Ramakrishna Mission and currently the editor of ‘Prabuddha Bharat’)

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