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  • AhThe sound of your buzzing alarm yanks you out of sleep. You swing your arm over

  • to shut the thing off without looking. “Get up, no snoozing! Youll be late for work…”

  • When you pull open the curtains, instead of facing the pleasant orange hues of the rising

  • sun, youre met with bright burning light that boils the room. You shield your eyes

  • and close the curtains fast.

  • Did I oversleep?!” The panic rises in you as a bead of sweat rolls down your forehead.

  • You run to your phone, still on the nightstand. The screen shows 6AM, yet it feels (and clearly

  • looks!) like lunchtime. You check the window again.

  • The trees are forcefully pushed by gusts of wind, and their branches are scattered throughout

  • the streets. The birds struggle to fly, and they drift away with the wind. And you just

  • now notice that your stomach is feeling a little queasy. Either the panic of oversleeping,

  • not knowing what’s going on, or something else

  • Bing!” – You get a notification on your phone that reads: “EMERGENCY ALERT!

  • THE EARTH’S SPIN HAS CHANGED, DAYS COULD LAST ONLY 6 HOURS!”

  • You read it several times just to make sure your eyes aren’t deceiving you. “What

  • in the world…”

  • Hey, it wouldn’t be the first time for this planet! Yup, a long, long time ago, when the

  • Earth was just formed, a day only lasted 4 hours. When our young little rock turned 30,000

  • years old, the day had gained 2 more hours. You see, in the beginning, the moon was closer,

  • and it influenced how long a day would be throughout our planet’s history. As it moved

  • away, the days got longer.

  • Indeed, our Earth used to spin faster, but weve never experienced that first hand.

  • Our human ancestors came to existence 4 million years ago (I wasn’t around then), but I’ve

  • heard that a typical day was close to 24 hours. That’s all weve ever known!

  • So, here we are. If youve ever complained about there not being enough hours in the

  • day, well, youll only get a quarter of that time now. Our own planet has decided

  • to try and relive its youth by spinning faster. Were now back to 6 hours in a day. That’s

  • less than we need for a good night’s sleep and less than a typical work shift. But, most

  • importantly, how will we adjust? Will we survive?...

  • 6 hours breaks down tohours for sleep, anotherfor work, and just 1 hour for

  • chill time. If there is any, because well also have to shower, eat, and clean! Even

  • the daily commute to work will be a huge waste of our precious time. (well that won’t change…)

  • Unless you work from home, or live right by your office and the workplace is just a flight

  • of stairs away. Those will be the lucky ones

  • The real problems start with thehours of sleep. Well constantly feel tired, and

  • those dark undereye circles will become our speciesnew trademark. There won’t be

  • enough time to rest or reach REM sleepthat usually happens 90 minutes after weve fallen

  • asleep, and it has 5 whole stages lasting 10 to 20 minutes each. If the buzzing sound

  • of our alarm clocks interrupts that every day, we might lose the ability to dream!

  • Andhours to be productivewhat a challenge! Well have to squeeze our whole

  • schedule into just 150 minutes and work fast! But that too will be impossible. Without enough

  • sleep, well struggle to concentrate and remember things. So, overall work performance

  • will likely drop.

  • I bet the coffee industry will thrive on these new 6-hour days! Well be reaching for cup

  • after cup to keep us productive on such little sleep. But well have to forget about lunch

  • breaksthere’s no time. If we could have one, itll only last 8 minutes. On

  • that note, let’s talk meals

  • It won’t be feasible to fit breakfast, lunch, and dinner into our 1-hour chill time. So,

  • well probably need to choose 1 of the 3. Well eat a full meal every 6 hours, which

  • might be difficult, but not impossible to get used to! Our eating schedule will be:

  • breakfast on Monday, lunch on Tuesday, and dinner on Wednesday.

  • Our weekends will only be 12 hours, so well have to make a tight schedule. Will it be

  • a football game? What about the movies? Or running errands? You can only choose one of

  • the three this time!

  • Entertainment will be a luxury. Maybe the industry will collapse altogether. A movie

  • will last as long as our sleep time. So, for this to work, films will need to be cut short.

  • The same goes for sporting events. And shopping? Stores will be open for just 3 tohours

  • maximum a day. I bet theyll all be packed.

  • Well work around 50 hours every month. Sounds like a good deal at first, but remember:

  • our traditional 30-day month is now down to a little over 7 days. And good luck remembering

  • to change the date so often! But that’s a minor inconvenience compared to the real

  • problems were about to encounter

  • Remember the emergency notification we got earlier? In real time, itll take days to

  • arrive because well also have issues with our satellites. They orbit our planet at the

  • same speed to match the Earth’s rotation. That way, they can always be at the same position.

  • If the earth starts spinning faster, satellite communications will be interrupted. Aviation,

  • banking, weather forecasting, TV, radio, GPStheyll all be thrown out of whack unless

  • we can readjust the satellites. But even more serious problems are on the way

  • Since the beginning of our existence, our internal clock has been on a 24-hour cycle.

  • There will be a little less than 3 hours of nighttime, and more than 3 hours of daytime.

  • That’s not enough sunlight for any living being to survive on earth.

  • For starters, plants will struggle to photosynthesize properly. Some of them will flourish, others

  • will grow but theyll be weak and yellow, and the rest will seize to exist. That will

  • affect the whole food chain.

  • Tomatoes, cucumbers, peas, beans, carrotsno longer on the menu. They need at least

  • 8 hours of continuous sunlight to photosynthesize. So, you might as well forget about that salad

  • you were going to have for lunch on Tuesday. But don’t worry, our beloved coffee trees

  • will still make it!

  • Some animals won’t be able to feed, and aquatic life will struggle. Types of catfish,

  • snails, shrimps, and algae-eaters will have a hard time finding food in the waters and

  • might go extinct.

  • Youll notice your hair growing at a slower rate, your nails becoming weak and brittle.

  • Fine lines will appear sooner on our skin, and our bones might start to feel weaker because

  • we lack the sunshine vitamin in our system. Well also see an immediate effect on our

  • mood too, what with the lack of sleep and sunlight . Hey whadaya you meanbad mood”?

  • I ain’t got nobad mood”! Oops, My bad.

  • But the real issue here is natural disasters. With the earth spinning 4 times faster, the

  • weather will be disastrous. With the new solar days, our current 12-mph gentle breezes will

  • translate to tens of miles per hour wind gusts. During hurricane season, winds that now travel

  • around 75 mph will pick up to more than 200 mph. Enough to take down trees, buildings,

  • and anything else that stands in their way.

  • Islands won’t do well either. With the earth spinning faster around its axis, there will

  • be higher tides. Small islands will sink below the waters, and coastlines will become submerged.

  • All the beaches we know today will seize to exist, and new ones will appear further inland.

  • Aquatic life in those shallow waters might not survive the change.

  • Continents might also move faster, and itll feel like were on board a cruise ship that

  • it’s heading to a collision with another vessel.

  • But it doesn’t end there. Oh. Golly. Right now, the spin of the earth gives our planet

  • its shape. It’s not a perfect sphereit bulges at the equator. The new rotation will

  • turn it into something like a squished dough ball. That could cause continents to split

  • and break in ways that will be impossible for any living being to survive.

  • Good thing there are pretty much zero chances of something like this really happening. But

  • it’s a fun thought experiment. Yeah. This is really not the kind of spin we want to

  • put on this. And, if it ever does, then maybe we could move to another planet in our solar

  • system and save ourselves the trouble? I hear Mars could be habitablewhat do you think?

  • Me, I’d take a Milky Way. Much better Candy Bar than Mars Bar. Just my opinion. Give me

  • yours in the comments.

  • Okay, weve saved the world once again here on the Bright Side. My work is done here.

  • If you learned something new today, then give the video a like and share it with a friend!

  • And here are some other cool videos I think you'll enjoy. Just click to the left or right

  • and stay on the Bright Side of life!

AhThe sound of your buzzing alarm yanks you out of sleep. You swing your arm over

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