The “Jet Lag” Protocol: Resetting Your Circadian Rhythm for Longevity

I recently returned from an incredible two-week holiday in Thailand. It was a deeply restorative trip filled with sunshine, ocean swims, and some of the most amazing, anti-inflammatory food I’ve ever eaten (I am still dreaming about the local Morning Glory stir-fries!).

But as any seasoned traveler knows, the hardest part of a beautiful vacation is the journey home.

Returning to Vancouver meant crossing multiple time zones and enduring a massive 15-hour time difference. When I stepped off the plane, my brain thought it was tomorrow night, but the Vancouver sky said it was sunrise.

Most people accept jet lag as a temporary annoyance—a few days of feeling groggy and reaching for extra coffee. But from a Longevity Medicine perspective, jet lag is actually a profound biological event. If you don’t actively manage your recovery, crossing time zones can accelerate cellular aging.

Here is the exact “Doctor’s Protocol” I use to reset my internal clock.

The Mechanism: Why Time Zones Age You

To understand why jet lag feels so awful, we have to look at your Circadian Rhythm.

Your circadian rhythm is the 24-internal clock governed by the master pacemaker in your brain (the suprachiasmatic nucleus). This clock dictates the ebb and flow of your hormones, specifically your Cortisol (your “wake up and go” hormone) and your Melatonin (your “repair and sleep” hormone).

In a healthy body, cortisol spikes in the morning to give you energy, and slowly drops by evening. Melatonin does the exact opposite, rising when the sun goes down to trigger deep sleep and cellular repair.

When you cross time zones, this elegant curve is entirely inverted.

  • Your body produces cortisol at 2:00 AM, leaving you wide awake and anxious in the dark.
  • Your body produces melatonin at 2:00 PM, leaving you hit with crippling brain fog in the middle of a meeting.
The Longevity Connection:
Your cells only repair their DNA and clear out metabolic waste while you are in deep sleep. When your circadian rhythm is disrupted—whether from a 15-hour flight to Asia or just the shift into Daylight Savings Time—that cellular repair process halts. Chronic circadian disruption is a known driver of oxidative stress, inflammation, and accelerated biological aging [1].

The "Jet Lag" Protocol: My 3-Step Reset

You cannot just “sleep off” jet lag. You have to actively signal to your biology that the time zone has changed. Here is how I reset my clock:

1. Strategic Fasting (Resetting the Gut Clock)

While your brain’s clock is controlled by light, your liver and digestive tract have their own “peripheral clocks” that are controlled by food.

The Fix:
I practice strategic fasting during long travel days. Once I land, I force my meal times to perfectly match the new time zone, even if I am not hungry. By eating breakfast at 8:00 AM local Vancouver time, I am sending a powerful biological signal to my gut microbiome and liver that a new day has officially started, pulling my peripheral clocks into alignment [2].

2. Aggressive Morning Sunlight

Light is the most potent tool we have to manipulate the master clock in the brain.

The Fix:
The morning after I return, regardless of how tired I am, I get outside within 30 minutes of waking up. Sunlight hitting the retina acts as an immediate shut-off valve for melatonin production and signals the adrenal glands to produce a healthy, morning spike of cortisol. Do not wear sunglasses for the first 15 minutes of exposure!

3. Targeted Melatonin (The "Chronobiotic")

Many people misuse melatonin by treating it like a heavy sleeping pill. In reality, melatonin is a chronobiotic—a time-shifter.

The Fix:
For the first 3 to 4 nights back in Vancouver, I use a targeted, low-dose melatonin supplement about 90 minutes before my ideal local bedtime. This doesn't just make me sleepy; it chemically pulls my inverted circadian rhythm back into the correct time zone, ensuring my body actually enters its cellular repair phase [1].

Travel Well, Age Well

Seeing the world is one of the greatest joys in life, and you shouldn’t let the fear of jet lag hold you back from your dream vacation. By understanding how your hormones respond to light and food, you can actively hack your circadian rhythm and protect your cellular health, no matter where your passport takes you.

Need a Post-Vacation Reset?

If you are struggling with chronic fatigue, “wired but tired” burnout, or disrupted sleep, your cortisol curve might be misaligned. Dr. Jennifer Luis offers comprehensive DUTCH hormone testing to map your adrenal health and build a personalized longevity protocol.

References:
  1. Arendt, J. (2018). Approaches to the Pharmacological Management of Jet Lag. Drugs, 78(14), 1419-1431. 
  2. Wehrens, S. M., et al. (2017). Meal Timing Regulates the Human Circadian System. Current Biology, 27(12), 1768-1775.

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