3. Remove your shoes once the plane takes off. Your feet swell at high altitudes, making your shoes a tighter fit during air travel. Slipping out of your shoes and loosening belts or other tight-fitting clothing can increase your comfort level. (That said, stinky shoes are better left on than off—just loosen the laces instead.)
5. Drink plenty of water when you fly. With the dry air in planes, water is your great weapon against fatigue, dehydration, and combating that overall feeling of staleness. Just remember that water from the airplane lavatories is not meant for drinking.
8. See if melatonin is for you. Consider taking the nonprescription drug melatonin. Research suggests that the body uses this hormone to set its time clock. Because melatonin seems to control when we go to sleep and when we wake up, a number of scientists advocate supplements to alleviate jet lag. Some studies suggest that taking 5 milligrams of fast-release melatonin prior to bedtime for several days after arrival in a new time zone can ease the transition.
9. Stay in your seat until it’s your turn to leave the plane. This may seem obvious, but it’s worth stating that many travelers needlessly work themselves up when they get up out of their seats and stand, hunched over beneath the luggage bins, for five or ten minutes while waiting to leave the plane. Standing up isn’t going to get you out the door faster. Why not sit back, relax, and wait to stand up when there is actually room to do so.
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excellence tip, will definitely use it on my next trip to Bangkok
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[...] like this idea, we already know how to make your flights more comfortable. Besides I don’t think it’s practical to pay a bundled price and not use all the [...]
Great read if your trying to avoid fatigue on long trips!
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