Copyright Los Angeles Times

It’s that time again. Time to wonder: Why do we turn the clocks forward and backward each year? Academics and scientists, politicians, economists, employers, parents — just about everyone you interact with this week — are probably debating a wide variety of reasons for and against daylight saving time. The reason is right there in the name: It’s an effort to “save” daylight hours, which some express as an opportunity for people to “make more use of” time while it’s light outside. But as an Indigenous person who studies environmental humanities, this sort of effort, and the debate about it, misses a key ecological perspective. Biologically speaking, it is normal, and even critical, for nature to do more during the brighter months and to do less during the darker ones. Animals go into hibernation, plants into dormancy. Humans are intimately interconnected with, interdependent on and interrelated to nonhuman beings, rhythms and environments. Indigenous knowledges, despite their complex, diverse and plural forms, amazingly cohere in reminding humans that we too are an equal part of nature. Like trees and flowers, we also need winter to rest and summer to bloom. As far as humans know, we are the only species that chooses to fight against our biological presets, regularly changing our clocks, miserably dragging ourselves into and out of bed at unnatural hours. The reason, many scholars agree, is that capitalism teaches humans that they are separate from, and superior to, nature — the point on top of a pyramid. And, I argue, capitalism wants people to work the same number of hours year-round, no matter the season. This mindset runs counter to the way Indigenous people have lived for thousands of years. The nature of time and work Indigenous views of the world are not the pyramids or lines of capitalism but the circles and cycles of life. Concretely, time correlates with terrestrial and celestial changes. Historic records and oral interviews document that in traditional Indigenous cultures, human activity was scheduled according to nature’s recurring patterns. So for example, a meeting might have been scheduled not at 4 p.m. Thursday, but rather at the next full moon. Everyone knew well in advance when that would arise and could plan accordingly. Such an acute sensitivity to nature’s calendar has symbolic meaning. To look up and see the moon in the night sky is to see the same moon someone once saw centuries ago and someone else will hopefully see centuries into the future. Time is interwoven with nature in a sense that far exceeds Western understanding. It embodies past, present and future all at once. In this Indigenous context, daylight saving time is nonsensical, if not outright comical. Time can’t be changed any more than a clock’s hands can grab the sun and shift its position in the sky. The sun will continue to cycle at its gravitational will for generations — and economic systems — to come. Like time, Indigenous approaches to work are also more expansive than the capitalist economy’s. They validate and value all life-sustaining activities as work. Taking care of oneself, of the sick, of the elderly, of the young, of the land, or even merely resting, for example, are equally valuable activities. That’s because the objective of most Indigenous economies is not to increase an economist-invented measurement of production by working from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. Rather, their goal is to find and generate a holistic well-being for all. Daylight saving time is exclusively designed for 9-to-5 workers. It attempts to boost economic activity by giving them, and them alone, more light. Think about it: Care workers, who are predominantly women, work beyond daylight hours year-round. Where is their temporal accommodation? Though probably not malicious, the political intervention of daylight saving time ignores the massive workforce that operates on the periphery of the mainstream economy. In some ways, it reinforces the discriminatory idea that only some workers are worthy of economic recognition and accommodation. In this sense, daylight saving time raises the question: Does the economy really need that extra hour of sunshine and worker productivity? The working of time and nature Since the invention of the clock, capitalism has increasingly treated time as an inanimate object largely independent of the environment. While the rest of nature rises and slumbers to lunar and solar cycles, humans work and sleep to the resetting of their artificial clocks. In their 2016 book “The Slow Professor,” humanities scholars Maggie Berg and Barbara K. Seeber connect this objectification of time to an inhumane culture of work. Modern workers, they write, are increasingly expected to treat time as a numerical asset that can be managed, measured and controlled. Time for rest and relaxation has no countable home in the capitalist economy. There are certainly practical benefits to using time as a measure and monitor of economic activities — such as knowing the precise schedule of a meeting. But Berg’s and Seeber’s work reveals how that practicality has been subverted to hold workers captive within an unsustainable, unnatural and exploitative environment. Work time and life time have blurred into one. In capitalism, work is expected to grow infinitely, despite existing within a finite world inhabited by limited beings. At a time when human activity depletes the world’s ecology — rather than sustaining it as it once did — this around-the-clock approach to work is simply incompatible with nature. Daylight saving time reproduces the same destructive logic that has led us into the present socio-ecological crises. Disobeying and dominating the laws, rhythms and shape of nature, as seen in the seasonal exploitation of human energy and labor via daylight saving time, perpetuates the unparalleled social and environmental decline uniquely characteristic to the current capitalist era. Looking backward, progressing forward Unlike the relatively recent inception of capitalism, Indigenous wisdom espouses a set of philosophies as old as time. It reminds humans that there are other ways of interacting with time, work and the environment — ways that existed before capitalism and that can exist afterward too. People might be better off if the discussion about changing the clocks in the fall and spring wasn’t about how much time we can “make use of” or how much daylight we might “save,” but rather about reducing the number of hours we are expected to be made useful — and profitable — to secure a more just and sustainable existence for all.