Try GOLD - Free
Why changing clocks runs counter to our nature
Los Angeles Times
|November 02, 2025
IT'S THAT TIME again. Time to wonder: Why do we turn the clocks forward and backward each year? Academics and scientists, politicians, economists, employers, parents — just about everyone you interact with this week — are probably debating a wide variety of reasons for and against daylight saving time.
The reason is right there in the name: It’s an effort to “save” daylight hours, which some express as an opportunity for people to “make more use of” time while it’s light outside.
But as an Indigenous person who studies environmental humanities, this sort of effort, and the debate about it, misses a key ecological perspective.
Biologically speaking, it is normal, and even critical, for nature to do more during the brighter months and to do less during the darker ones. Animals go into hibernation, plants into dormancy.
Humans are intimately interconnected with, interdependent on and interrelated to nonhuman beings, rhythms and environments. Indigenous knowledges, despite their complex, diverse and plural forms, amazingly cohere in reminding humans that we too are an equal part of nature. Like trees and flowers, we also need winter to rest and summer to bloom.
As far as humans know, we are the only species that chooses to fight against our biological presets, regularly changing our clocks, miserably dragging ourselves into and out of bed at unnatural hours.
The reason, many scholars agree, is that capitalism teaches humans that they are separate from, and superior to, nature — the point on top of a pyramid. And, I argue, capitalism wants people to work the same number of hours year-round, no matter the season. This mindset runs counter to the way Indigenous people have lived for thousands of years.
Indigenous views of the world are not the pyramids or lines of capitalism but the circles and cycles of life.
This story is from the November 02, 2025 edition of Los Angeles Times.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
What’s next for Warner Bros. Discovery? A few scenarios
Other bidders and Writers Guild could stand in Paramount’s way
3 mins
November 03, 2025
Los Angeles Times
STEPPING UP AND ONWARD
Gregg T. Daniel directs a fine production of August Wilson's powerful Joe Turner's Come and Gone' at A Noise Within
3 mins
November 03, 2025
Los Angeles Times
After a challenging year, city embraces cause for celebration
You didn't have to be watching the seventh game of the World Series to know that the Dodgers clinched backto-back wins.
4 mins
November 03, 2025
Los Angeles Times
Party time: Dodgers' parade, rally on Monday
The wait for the first Dodgers parade of the century: 36 years.
1 mins
November 03, 2025
Los Angeles Times
Larson takes home second NASCAR championship
Kyle Larson denied Denny Hamlin his first career championship when a late caution at Phoenix Raceway sent the title-deciding finale into overtime.
3 mins
November 03, 2025
Los Angeles Times
High court could limit president on tariffs
President Trump sees tariffs — or the threat of them — as a powerful tool to bend nations to his will.
4 mins
November 03, 2025
Los Angeles Times
Hydrogen plan is likely a bad deal
Re “DWP shifts toward hydrogen despite concerns,” Oct. 30
1 min
November 03, 2025
Los Angeles Times
A team with global flair, from the city of immigrants
What's not to love about an L.A. team featuring a trio of players made in Japan? And a slugging right fielder heralding from obscure Cotui in the Dominican Republic? And a Puerto Rican with rock star hair who plays any position? And a substitute second baseman from Venezuela who fielded like a Gold Glover and hit a movie-moment homer to force the final game into extra innings?
3 mins
November 03, 2025
Los Angeles Times
10 new books to light up November
Great writing, even when an author sets a story in early 20th century Maine or during ancient uprisings, often sheds light on our own, era.
3 mins
November 03, 2025
Los Angeles Times
'Dracula' goes on a mad romp
Radu Jude’s latest satire targets AI and capitalism, but it might leave you feeling drained.
2 mins
November 03, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
