ChatterBank1 min ago
night shift
28 Answers
i'm doing my first ever night shift (7pm - 7.30am). Not sure what to expect. Ive been told to maybe bring some energy drinks for my first night. Strange question but do shift workers normally have a meal....cant imagine being hungry in the middle of the night! thanks
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Is this a one off shift or the start of a regular night shift?If its a one off youll be all over the place,your body clock will tell you you should be asleep but you cant be.If its the start opf a regular shift then after a few sfifts your body clock will adjust and all will be well.At my work there are colleagues who work rotating shifts earliers,afternoon and night.I dont know how they do it.
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When I work at night I make sure that I never go to work hungry. If you eat at about 6pm, you shouldn`t need to eat until about 3 or 4 am. If you have a nap during your break during the night, a cup of tea and a chocolate will wake you up but you will need something more substantial a little while after. Maybe poached egg on toast or some other such thing either before you finish work or when you get home. If you get home and you don`t eat, you won`t be able to sleep due to hunger.
I worked three shifts at the pit for nearly 30 years, and for most of that time all I ever took for snap was a bottle of water, a bag of crisps and a few biscuits usually digestives,but it was straight into the canteen for breakfast or dinner at the end of the shift.I suppose a lot depends on what you are doing and the working conditions, when you were underground for instance the heat and humidity in parts of the pit sent most things of very quickly
I have only worked nights once in my life. It lasted about 3 months continuously.
I found going to sleep immediately I came home was best for me although I found this difficult; you may be different. I got home about 8:00 am and eventually resorted to tacking bin liners over the bedroom window to cut out all the light.
Also some contractor was re-laying gas mains in the street outside which didn't help.
You need to figure out what suits you. Nobody can give definitive answer.
I found going to sleep immediately I came home was best for me although I found this difficult; you may be different. I got home about 8:00 am and eventually resorted to tacking bin liners over the bedroom window to cut out all the light.
Also some contractor was re-laying gas mains in the street outside which didn't help.
You need to figure out what suits you. Nobody can give definitive answer.
Well anne at the end the conditions had changed so much even I find it hard to believe, the first face I went on was a 300yd x 3ft high "hand filled" face with props and bars, litererly hundreds of Jacks and girders with a man every 20 or so yards throwing the coal onto the belt with shovels. The last was 5m with fully automatic supports and a million pounds worth of coal cutter and and quarter of the work force producing three times the coal, but having sid that anne and most ex-miners will tell you the same we don't miss the pits but the men you worked with were something special and I do miss that