Timezones and Mindstates

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OK. You are in France at latitude 45. That is the south of the country, and we'll say that you are due south of Greenwich. Just so you know, I'm writing this whole thing with the map open big, so you should probably read it that way.

This is the very beginning, and things are already weird because, in Europe, the other countries that should also have GMT, France and Spain and Norway, do not. And the only other countries that do use GMT (Portugal, Iceland, and Ireland) are mostly or entirely too far west, over in GMT-1. If I woke up one day to find that everybody is insane except me, it would cross my mind that, well, maybe I'm the one that is crazy. These are the thoughts that the UK should be thinking.

Anyway, you are still at 45 degrees north, halfway up to the pole, and you starting flying east towards Russia, as the crow flies, but farther and a lot faster. Its noon in Greenwich, and lets say that you are going fast enough to circle the earth in a few seconds.

Its 1:00PM where you are, it should be noon, but its 1:00, until you hit Romania and it becomes 2:00PM. 2:00 PM starts late and ends late, you get about half as much 3:00PM as you should and it jumps to 5PM. Only some parts of Russia are having 4:00PM right now. None is this is wierd. In Kazakhstan you increment predictably to 6PM, which you are enjoying in GMT+5, an hour earlier than you should. Halfway through 6PM you find yourself in China at 8:00PM.

China is big, and it has one timezone, so you don't leave 8 until almost nine. That makes a lot of sense, right? Very sensible. Well, you leave 8 and go into 10:00PM in Russia. That isn't sensible, but Japan appreciates that, so when you reach Japan, having stayed at 45 degrees north the whole time, and traveling only directly east, you go Back into 9:00PM, you jump to 11:00PM, go back in time again to 10:00PM, then up again to 11:00, then to midnight, but instantly to midnight of the night before just west of mainland Alaska.

The Pacific is boring/sensible, switching when and where you might expect, excepting the 24 hour leap backwards in time. In the US, 8:00PM (PST) is truncated, and 6:00PM (Central) takes (a little more than) its time, but the rest of the trip, around to where you started, is sane. There is one exception. The whole timezone system is built around GMT, but you never actually entered GMT the whole trip. You skipped noon---no lunch. That might be wrong: it depends on what time it is over an ocean if (a) you are in GMT+0 (where it would be noon) but (b) within the waters of Spain and France (where it is 1:00PM).

I found this out because I'll be in Sapporo, Hokkaido, Japan, the big empty island in the north of Japan that looks like a birthmark. I don't have any friends just east in Vladivostok. But I do have family in Manila. The one is close to being due north of the other. But, while calling my family in Manila means subtracting an hour (like you'd expect), calling a friend in the other will mean adding an hour. That is backwards. Between Greenwich and Westphalia, there isn't room for both your time and your sanity.