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Ms DD

B- People..What an excellent idea

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Ms DD   

Late risers unite in Denmark

By Chris Morris

BBC News, Denmark

 

 

If you find it hard to get up in the morning, don't despair - you're not lazy, you're just genetically programmed that way, says the B-Society in Denmark.

 

The sound of the alarm is dreaded by B-people everywhere

 

I have still got a rather nasty bruise on my shin at the moment after the flawed execution of my latest elaborate plan - to make sure I did not miss the dreaded early morning flight.

 

I was sleeping rather fitfully in the spare room downstairs, trying to avoid waking up the rest of the house, when the time ticked around to 4.30.

 

First the phone alarm on the bedside table chirruped. I soon dealt with that.

 

But then one minute later the alarm clock cunningly hidden on the other side of the room burst into life.

 

The trick is to place an obstacle - in this case my son's rickety wooden rocking horse - in your path, making immediate access difficult.

 

Now I know it is not my fault. I am a B-person

 

The idea, obviously, is that by the time you find the blasted clock you are awake.

 

The trouble was, in this case, in my bleary-eyed trance, I forgot about the horse altogether and crashed into it at some speed.

 

Searing pain, followed by muffled obscenities, left me lying in a heap on the floor, the alarm clock still beeping impatiently.

 

I made the flight, the sunrise looked lovely, but boy do I hate mornings.

 

But it is OK. Now I know it is not my fault. I am a B-person.

 

 

A B-person - as opposed to an A-person - genetically pre-disposed to operate better and to be more alert later in the day.

 

B-uprising

 

 

Denmark it seems is full of B-people. So where better to form the B-society?

 

Six months after it was set up, it already boasts several thousand members.

 

Now it is campaigning hard for businesses to sign up to its B-certification list.

 

The glazed looks on the faces of grumpy commuters are disturbingly familiar

 

 

"We're calling," the society proclaims in its manifesto, "for an uprising against the tyranny of early rising."

 

Mmm, sounds good.

 

But how does it work in practice?

 

Rush-hour in Copenhagen seems relatively sedate to me - it is certainly not central London on a wet Monday morning.

 

But the glazed looks on the faces of grumpy commuters are disturbingly familiar.

 

So, time to find some B-pioneers.

 

Flexible working

 

 

One strong cup of coffee later and I was on my way to meet Stephen Alstrup who runs his own B-certified company.

 

 

Empty tube trains are one of the joys for Denmark's B-people

By the time he gets to his train station the platform is empty and so are most of the seats on his commuter train.

 

"I'm useless early in the morning," he says cheerfully. "All I can do is drink coffee, and stare into space."

 

"People used to get up early because they had to feed the animals. But I haven't got any cows or chickens, so I can sleep late."

 

And when we get to Stephen's office, that is empty too - apart from one member of staff who has been there most of the night and is just leaving, and the company's only A-person who actually enjoys the early start.

 

The rest of them arrive when they choose - any time up to 3.30pm or so - each to their own rhythm.

 

Business benefits

 

It is a small hi-tech company and Stephen needs brains which are working at full speed.

 

It used to be called disorganised but not any more

 

 

"Everybody gains," he says, "they're here when they're fully awake, and the business benefits."

 

More confusing for me is the guy who works to a 25 hour clock.

 

If he is in at 10 today, it will be 11 tomorrow, then 12 - you can get the general idea.

 

I do not know where his cycle had got to when we called at the office but there was certainly no sign of him by midday.

 

It used to be called disorganised, but not any more, not in Denmark. His body clock is just different.

 

And it is not just businesses which are getting in on the act.

 

Are you a teenager who cannot get out of bed in the morning?

 

Or a parent who never quite gets the kids to school on time?

 

Fear not - the Danes may have the solution: B-classes.

 

Work-life balance

 

From next year a school in Copenhagen will offer classes which start later in the day - at 10 instead of eight. It is likely to prove popular.

 

Some people might think you're lazy - but there's more to it than that

 

Danish Minister Carina Christensen

 

Even the government seems to like the idea.

 

Work-life balance is a big political issue in Denmark, Families Minister Carina Christensen tells me.

 

And B-philosophy fits right in with the need for a flexible labour force.

 

When I confess that I think I am a B-person, she gives me a comforting smile.

 

"Don't worry," she says, "some people might think you're lazy - but there's more to it than that."

 

Well, I hope so. The B-society and its founder Camilla Kring are certainly convinced that they are on to a winner.

 

"It's a 24/7 society," she says, as we sit in a park and watch some swans... swanning around.

 

"Our institutions have got to move with the times."

 

Quite so. Which means the choice should be yours. As one famous Dane once said: "To B or not to B?"

 

In modern life, that really is the question.

 

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/from_our_own_correspondent/6749791.stm

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Malika   

Or a parent who never quite gets the kids to school on time?

 

YES

 

"I'm useless early in the morning," he says cheerfully. "All I can do is drink coffee, and stare into space."

 

Oh dear me, thank god am not alone

 

If you find it hard to get up in the morning, don't despair - you're not lazy, you're just genetically programmed that way, says the B-Society in Denmark.

 

I am so pleased to know there is a whole society of B people...aah, its about time we get acknoledged..

 

 

Lool, am kidding ya all,its amazing how people love to have little brand names for so many things.AD=Attention deficiency for a naughty child,MLD= Moderate learning development etc etc..

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Pujah   

I have never in my life used alarm clock to wake up. I wake up to my internal clock usually the same time every morning. ..like clock work ;)

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Zafir   

^ You my dear, are definitely N-person.

 

P, You need a check up from the neck up, you are sick. Btw, do you have a snooze button?

 

I am A-person my self, but without my daily nap in the late afternoon I am really a X-person.

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Baashi   

Place me in the B column. Just can do it...if I could stay in bed for more minutes I would but being lazy is not an option anymore for that sort of behavior will jeoperdize my employement so dani ba tiri.

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N.O.R.F   

Searing pain, followed by muffled obscenities, left me lying in a heap on the floor, the alarm clock still beeping impatiently.

Thats what happens when one tries to be too clever.

 

I'm niether A nor B. I just want a siesta for 3 hours a day :cool:

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Ariadne   

I sleep four hours at most and I always wake up with jolt around 5:30... 6:00 am ...except sometimes on special occasions I sleep in but then feel guilty

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Naden   

^ An N-person is like Zafir. He rushes to a morning seminar, sits eagerly by the speaker and starts snoring 90 seconds into the presentation. He is gently escorted out when his snorts scare the front rows. :D

 

I am an early riser if I get to do what the hell I want to do. If I have to drag myself out of bed, sit to noxious freaks on a bus, then speak to brain dead office mutts, then I have narcolepsy-on-order.

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