Morning Time
Good Morning
Why Morning Time
To be simple: we as humans have forgotten what it means to get adequate rest, have whimsy, and tell time without a silly clock. And to
better follow nature and its cycles.
Morning Time is a solar-based time system designed to replace clock-centered time for local, nature-aligned living, dividing each day
from sunrise to sunrise into 16 segments.
Morning Time is not a replacement for global coordination or normal clocks. It is an experimental system changing how we
experience time day to day, based on the sun and natural cycles instead of rigid clock numbers.
What problems does Morning Time solve
One big problem with our current agreed-upon time system is that it just doesn't work.
1.Daylight savings time. Irrelevant. Why need farmers to tell you when the time moves when the sun can tell you like it is
supposed to anyway.
2.It works on your natural body schedule and works with the sun like time is supposed to
3.Solar High, sunrise, and sunset actually line up with the same time position every day
Why should we actually use Morning Time instead
Morning Time brings us closer to nature again. We don't have to worry about saying things like Afternoon, Night, AM, or PM because
every time is a new morning.
Where is Morning Time not useful
Planning things that aren't local like out of state meetings. Here, you should use something like decimal time.
That is all.
What does Morning Time look like and how is it notated
First there are 4 Mornings: suno Sin (new), suno Kasi (plants), suno Seli (warmth / vibrance), suno Lape (rest).
When does the day start? The day starts at sunrise at 1:1, at humans natural wake up time, and noon is at solar noon. Each Morning
has 4 parts all attributing to the main story that the day brings. For example, halfway between sunrise and solar noon would be 1:3.
Also, for example, halfway between 3:2 and 3:3 would be 3:2:50.
Each part is of equal length for that morning. Like all parts of morning one equally being around 105 minutes
Each precision unit is from 0-100 and you can add as many more precision units as needed
Sunrise and day starts till Solar Noon: Morning 1 (suno Sin)
From Solar Noon to Sunset: Morning 2 (suno Kasi)
From sunset to halfway between sunset and sunrise: Morning 3 (suno Seli)
From halfway between sunset and sunrise til sunrise next day: Morning 4 (suno Lape)
Fancy formatting would look like: suno Kasi 3, 54.68
Timestamp formatting would look like M2:3:54.68