This unhinged daylight savings hack is my favorite
And it's perfect for Halloween weekend



A few years ago I was bemoaning the fact that the hardest time after daylight savings isn’t the day of the adjustment, it’s the day after and that is a Monday. It seemed like a cruel joke.
And then I had an epiphany: we could just change one day early. So we did. And it has worked brilliantly.
First things first: if this won’t work for your family, or the thought of taking on more labor to benefit the other humans in your household is too much right now, then don’t do this. Some years, we do it, others we skip it; it often depends what our schedule is looking like.
In short, we do all the typical DLS prep we typically do, just on Friday night instead of Saturday night: adjust the clocks, tell our kiddo they make wake up at a time that feels off from what the clock says, etc.
And on our phones and tablets, I go into the settings and manually adjust the time zone so that everything in my phone, such as alarms and appointments, also gets adjusted.
What about things like soccer games, or playdates, or scheduled events? If possible, we still attend and it’s just one hour off from when they typically are; alarms come in handy for remembering those things since they won’t be at the “same” time as usual.
But like I said, some years we have too much going on so we skip it.
Since this year is Halloween weekend and we’re likely to just be lounging around, it’s a good year to give it a try.
“Fall back” is an easier transition for many than “Falling forward” in the spring, so, maybe skip it now and try it again come March.
If you give it a try, let me know how it goes for you!

Every time change my husband asks what our plan should be and my suggestions are either “pretend it's not happening and refuse to change our clocks” or “move to Arizona.” He doesn't find this helpful, shockingly.