I've certainly been noticing the change.
It's a seasonal shock to go from "light until 11 pm" to "pitch black at 6." We're not at that extreme yet, but the transition seems to happen much more quickly than it ought to. Perception, I suppose.
There's certainly a noticeable physical and psychological transition heading into a northern winter. For a short while, you kind of hunker down like you're heading into hibernation. Then, mind and body rear up, back into the fray, like a ship roaring upright after a broadside wave. You get your equilibrium back and get on with your day.
There are benefits too. We have four, very distinct seasons. And, people living in the higher latitudes get gorgeous sunsets that last an hour. When I was visiting Hawaii, if you turned your head to sneeze you'd miss it.
This'll make you laugh: when people living in Alberta (c. 53 degrees lat.) talk about people living in Yukon/Alaska, they say "man, I couldn't live there, it's way too dark in the winter." So it's what you get used to.
Edited by dougwalkabout (10/03/09 03:01 AM)