What is “social jet lag”?
It’s the gap between your weekday schedule and your weekend schedule.
Sleep and wake times move. Your body clock shifts with them.
On Monday, your alarm goes off while your biology thinks it’s still night.
Why a 90–120 minute shift hits hard
Your brain runs on timing cues.
Morning light sets the day. Melatonin sets the night.
When you stay up late and sleep in, those cues slide later.
A 1–2 hour slide acts like flying one time zone west.
You didn’t travel, but your brain did.
How it shows up on Monday
Slow start. Heavy eyes. Short fuse.
Higher resting heart rate overnight.
Cravings and extra coffee.
Workouts feel “sticky,” not sharp.
What actually helps (no perfection needed)
You don’t need a spotless routine. You need two anchors.
1) Morning light—every day you care about feeling good
Get outside within an hour of waking.
5–10 minutes is enough. Clouds are fine.
This tells your clock, “Daytime starts now.”
Do it Saturday, Sunday, and Monday. That’s the win.
2) First meal timing—keep it near your weekday time
Aim to eat your first real meal close to your normal workday window.
Protein helps (25–35 g).
This locks in daytime metabolism and steadies energy.
Small choices that stack in your favor
Keep weekend sleep and wake within about an hour of weekdays.
If you stay up late, still get morning light the next day.
Have dessert with dinner, not at 11 p.m.
Make your last caffeine 8–10 hours before bed.
Use lamps at night, not stadium lights.
A simple Sunday landing
Dim the house 60–90 minutes before bed.
Put your phone at arm’s length.
Jot tomorrow’s top three on a note.
You’ll fall asleep faster and wake up cleaner.
If the weekend was chaotic
Pick one anchor on Monday.
Light outside after waking.
Or a protein-forward first meal on time.
One is better than none. Both is best.
The takeaway
Weekend drift of 90–120 minutes = mini jet lag.
Anchor your clock with morning light and a timely first meal.
Do that, and Mondays stop feeling like a red-eye flight—no perfect sleep required.
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