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View Full Version : Preferential battle of the shifts: 8 p.m. to 8 a.m. or vice-versa?


Redway
16-02-2025, 08:50 PM
Would you rather work from 8 p.m. to 8 a.m. or the converse (8 a.m. to 8 p.m.), say, 4 days a week (or even just as a one-off)?

I’m an extreme night-owl so the decision’s obvious for me. I don’t know why people look down on night shifts and night owls so much. If it wasn’t for us, you might as well forget about imperative night-time security and emergency medical treatment (people aren’t only sick or injured from 9 to 5), or even the option of being able to call Samaritans at 3 am, when the world’s largely asleep. And you can forget about nights out.

Night-owls get a really bad rap but … ya.

Benjamin
16-02-2025, 08:54 PM
I used to be a night owl (and do sometimes miss it), but I’ve got so used to getting up early now and enjoy the mornings as the sunrises, as the world is so calm and still.

Niamh.
16-02-2025, 08:59 PM
Preferably neither but if I had to choose, 8am-8pm. I do hate mornings but I don't want to mess around with my body clock that much

Ammi
17-02-2025, 06:57 AM
…preferably neither, either but 8am to 8pm would be the better…night time has a lot more restrictions in terms of social stuff/family time etc…

AnnieK
17-02-2025, 07:04 AM
I'd prefer a 6am-6pm if I had to do a 12 hour shift.
Couldn't do permanent nights, it messes with too much of your life.

MTVN
17-02-2025, 12:35 PM
I'm not sure night owls are looked down on, it's just that most people couldn't do it. I have a lot of respect for night workers but there's no way I'd ever be one

Tbh I'd never do a job where I have to work 12 hours in the day either apart from if it was exceptional circumstances

bots
17-02-2025, 01:22 PM
i've done stints of nightshift in the past and it always left me permanently tired. We are meant to live in daylight and anything else messes with your health

Cherie
17-02-2025, 01:34 PM
I'm not sure night owls are looked down on, it's just that most people couldn't do it. I have a lot of respect for night workers but there's no way I'd ever be one

Tbh I'd never do a job where I have to work 12 hours in the day either apart from if it was exceptional circumstances


We were talking about this yesterday in relation to nurses and police how can you be top of your game after a slog like that, the last few hours must be interminable

I have never worked more than 9 to 5 and mostly I have worked part time....hats off to anyone who does a night shift or a 12 hour shift, but no thank you

Crimson Dynamo
17-02-2025, 01:42 PM
The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) says that shift work may cause
cancer if it disrupts circadian rhythms.

Redway
17-02-2025, 08:32 PM
The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) says that shift work may cause
cancer if it disrupts circadian rhythms.

And yet, someone has to do it. That’s just the bottom line. Alcohol can cause cancer indirectly and cirrhosis, yet people still drink. I hope you never end up in A&E on a Friday/Saturday night because of some drunken mishap, or a heart-attack, only to find that no-one will treat you, because no-one works night shifts anymore. Don’t dismiss the essential and invaluable nature of night work just-because you couldn’t do it/take pride in being a morning lark.

Redway
17-02-2025, 08:36 PM
I'm not sure night owls are looked down on, it's just that most people couldn't do it. I have a lot of respect for night workers but there's no way I'd ever be one

Tbh I'd never do a job where I have to work 12 hours in the day either apart from if it was exceptional circumstances

I just don’t get what everyone’s problem is with night work (beyond the obvious). I’d rather do 12 hours on a Sunday evening/night and be greeted with bed and a cuppa on a Monday morning than the rush-hour. That’s one way to at least partially abate the Monday blues and the sheer boredom of Sundays.

Benjamin
17-02-2025, 08:56 PM
I just don’t get what everyone’s problem is with night work (beyond the obvious). I’d rather do 12 hours on a Sunday evening/night and be greeted with bed and a cuppa on a Monday morning than the rush-hour. That’s one way to at least partially abate the Monday blues and the sheer boredom of Sundays.

I don’t see anybody having a problem (beyond the obvious). Care to elaborate?

AnnieK
17-02-2025, 09:09 PM
I just don’t get what everyone’s problem is with night work (beyond the obvious). I’d rather do 12 hours on a Sunday evening/night and be greeted with bed and a cuppa on a Monday morning than the rush-hour. That’s one way to at least partially abate the Monday blues and the sheer boredom of Sundays.
You asked a question which people would prefer and then seem to be pissed that people don't want to work nights???

I know plenty of night owls who still prefer to work days so they can actually socialise woth friends in the evenings.

Your sleep patterns shouldn't necessarily dictate your work.

Redway
17-02-2025, 09:35 PM
You asked a question which people would prefer and then seem to be pissed that people don't want to work nights???

I know plenty of night owls who still prefer to work days so they can actually socialise woth friends in the evenings.

Your sleep patterns shouldn't necessarily dictate your work.

No but if they correlate, that’s a good thing.

MTVN
18-02-2025, 06:57 AM
I just don’t get what everyone’s problem is with night work (beyond the obvious). I’d rather do 12 hours on a Sunday evening/night and be greeted with bed and a cuppa on a Monday morning than the rush-hour. That’s one way to at least partially abate the Monday blues and the sheer boredom of Sundays.

Each to their own but that honestly sounds awful to me lol. Wouldn't be able to enjoy my weekend at all knowing I had to work all night on Sunday and I'd rather be working a normal day on Monday than spend it sleeping off a 12 hour night shift

Niamh.
18-02-2025, 07:27 AM
I like a good Sunday anyway, it's 50% of my days off [emoji23]

bots
18-02-2025, 08:07 AM
The other thing worth noting is that doing night shift completely destroys your social calender.

Redway
18-02-2025, 09:30 AM
The other thing worth noting is that doing night shift completely destroys your social calender.

Again, someone has to do it. If you want 24/7 medical care (or at least the opportunity of it), not everyone can be tucked in by 22.00.

user104658
22-02-2025, 11:44 PM
I like to experience the early bird and night owl life similtaneously, by getting up at 7am to work 9-5 fuelled entirely by caffeine... but then also not going to bed until 3am. And sleeping half of the weekend away.

Probably hacking years off my life tbh.