Sentences with phrase «wrong time of day»

Today I have gained about 20 pounds and I consider it mostly due to eating badly and unhealthy foods at wrong time of the day and spoiling my metabolism.
There is absolutely no wrong time of day for banana bread.
«It has a chance to elevate interest in the sport, especially in markets where our game is on at the wrong time of day,» said Hunt.
Maybe you're just playing during the wrong time of day.
Blue light is known to improve alertness, mood and energy, and is important, but can be harmful if used at the wrong times of day.
Over time, my cortisol levels became elevated at the wrong time of day and I suffered the consequences for years.
The first concerns a recent study seeming to show that saturated fat disrupts our circadian rhythms, especially saturated fat at the wrong time of day.
When your body is subject to elevated cortisol levels, or plummeting cortisol, or cortisol levels simply all over the board at the wrong times of day (stare at the ceiling at 2 am much?)
After reading your article on insulin, I'm thinking that I eat carbs at the wrong time of the day.
When you are constantly under stress, your adrenals release a hormone called cortisol in larger amounts and at the wrong time of day than normal.
Try adjusting your cat's mealtimes to a later hour so it doesn't have to wake you up and beg for food at the wrong time of the day.
The longer a day goes on, the less XP you will earn once these boosters wear off, which can be a little annoying to be honest, as even hard - won fights against tough opponents can provide little reward if done at the wrong time of day.
Utilities prefer wind energy because the intermittent production at the wrong time of the day becomes a token excuse to build more fossil and nuclear fueled power plants.
The important organizational takeaway from these findings is that individuals may be more likely to act unethically when they are «mismatched» — that is, making a decision at the wrong time of day for their own chronotype,» Barnes, Gunia, and Sah write.
New research shows you are less likely to make ethical decisions if you are working at the wrong time of your day.
A recent paper by researchers from Johns Hopkins, Georgetown, and Harvard sheds light on how, left to your own devices, you may become an amoral monster if you have to make an ethical choice during the wrong time of day.
Is there anyone who wishes to be called by a sometimes unpleasant stranger, inevitably at the wrong time of day, to be sold something that is probably not required?
The smallest mistake, like the wrong time of day, could impact your case.
It's not that you applied at the wrong time of day.
A picture taken at the wrong time of day, with poor lighting or the wrong exposure on the camera can lead to an under - exposed or over-exposed picture, leaving home shoppers in the dark.
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