I completely agree. It's a very nostalgic feeling. Not sure why, just dark cities and late nate carnivals etc make me all nostalgic. However, it really messes up my sleeping scheldule. Hypothetically, I could stop, but it makes me all depressed the next day if I don't walk. Any suggestions?
I'm not sure. I think we do it for different reasons. I don't really have a sleeping schedule. It's just something I do when I can. I'm the same with eating and drinking. It makes me feel like a freak.
I guess, for you, you could go with the Spanish model of sleeping twice a day rather than once (and which is generally thought to be better, anyway). Or you could just swing your day around by four hours so rather than go to bed at 11pm and wake at 7am, you go to bed at 7pm and wake up at 3am, and start your day with some night-thinking. For me personally, I'd rather end the day with the night, than start it though.
Is it normal that I constantly crave going for walks at night?
↑ View this comment's parent
← View full post
I completely agree. It's a very nostalgic feeling. Not sure why, just dark cities and late nate carnivals etc make me all nostalgic. However, it really messes up my sleeping scheldule. Hypothetically, I could stop, but it makes me all depressed the next day if I don't walk. Any suggestions?
--
Frosties
11 years ago
|
pl
Comment Hidden (
show
)
Report
0
0
I'm not sure. I think we do it for different reasons. I don't really have a sleeping schedule. It's just something I do when I can. I'm the same with eating and drinking. It makes me feel like a freak.
I guess, for you, you could go with the Spanish model of sleeping twice a day rather than once (and which is generally thought to be better, anyway). Or you could just swing your day around by four hours so rather than go to bed at 11pm and wake at 7am, you go to bed at 7pm and wake up at 3am, and start your day with some night-thinking. For me personally, I'd rather end the day with the night, than start it though.