On Sunday morning, March 8, the day of the changing of time, my husband gave me his biyearly gift—setting the new time on my thirty-nine clocks. Cell phone in hand, to keep the times accurate, he wound his way through the rooms of our house.
He changed them all—the counterclockwise clock, the word clock, and the geometry clock; miniature clocks, like the hand painted one from Delft and a homemade wooden one; the math-problem clock and a clock that shows days of the week; clocks that were gifts from students and friends and my husband.

He sprang all these clocks forward, one hour, ending standard time with its bright mornings and darker evenings, bringing our home into Daylight Saving Time with its darker mornings and brighter evenings, following a century-old system.
Not that he’s a fan of this change.
He’s against all this switching back and forth, in the camp with others who think we should choose one permanent time system—it doesn’t matter which—and just stick with it.
But some folks care which. The sunlight seekers—those who want permanent Daylight-Saving Time—say light in the evening matters. More people will shop and eat out and play golf. And fewer will commit crimes.
Many scientists opt for Standard Time. Morning light gives strength for the day, they say, and evening dark brings sleep. My ninety-three-year-old dad, still sharp in his thinking, sides with these scientists. The sun helps us track time, he says, so go with the sun. It should be straight up in the sky at noon in the middle of each time zone.
Daylight Saving Time? Standard Time? We haven’t agreed. So we keep switching.
Down the street from our house of many clocks stands the courthouse clock tower. It’s a handy way to tell the time when I’m working in my garden. I can hear the chimes and see the hands move.
A hundred years ago, the commissioners in our county just didn’t know what to do. Time wasn’t federally mandated then. Some shop owners operated on Daylight Saving Time, others on Standard Time. Many displayed two clocks in their stores. So what time should the courthouse clock show?
Both, they decided. And they ordered that a second set of eight-foot-long hands be added to the clock.
If I’d been in my garden a hundred years ago, I could have looked at the tower clock and read both times—fast time with the red hands and slow time with the black.
What will happen? Only time—some kind of time—will tell.
But perhaps next year my husband will be able to end this decades-long, twice-a-year gift he’s been giving to me.


