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Moon Madness! How Does the Full Moon Affect Humans?

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The Full Moon's Effects on Your Behavior, Mood, and Health

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How does the Moon affect human behavior? Does it make us crazy? Does it influence our mood or our sleep? Let鈥檚 explore the myths and reality of the Moon鈥檚 power.

The Luna-Lunacy Connection

Ancient authorities like Aristotle, Paracelsus, and Pliny the Elder thought some humans were driven crazy by the full Moon. The Latin name for the Moon鈥luna鈥攊s the root of modern words like 鈥渓unacy,鈥 鈥渓unatic,鈥 and even 鈥渓oon,鈥 as in 鈥渃razy as a loon.鈥 

Even today, many doctors, nurses, EMTs, police officers, and elementary school teachers agree that full Moons will bring out bizarre behavior鈥43 percent of healthcare professionals believe in what some call 鈥渢he lunar influence,鈥 as do 81 percent of mental healthcare specialists. But is there really a lunar connection to abnormal behavior? 

Unless you plan to ask a werewolf (which we don鈥檛 recommend), it might be time to separate facts from fiction.

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The Moon and Sleep

According to one  conducted in 2021, people go to bed later and sleep for a shorter period of time in the days leading up to a full Moon. Specifically, people would go to bed 30 minutes later than average and sleep almost an hour less per night!

This makes some sense because the light from the Moon after sunset is brighter on the days leading up to a full Moon. However, here鈥檚 the surprising part: Studies found that it didn鈥檛 matter if you lived in a rural or urban environment (where you might find more light pollution)! Sleep patterns were compared between people in two very different locations, from the country to the city:

  1. Indigenous people in rural Argentina (the Toba/Qom communities) who don鈥檛 have any access to artificial light
  2. College students living in downtown Seattle, Washington, where the glare from city lights dims the light from the Moon and stars.

If the Moon鈥檚 brightness isn鈥檛 a factor, why do we stay up later and sleep less? One theory goes back to our ancestors and our long history before the Industrial Age. People paid attention to the Moon and relied on its 鈥渘ight light鈥 for hunting, fishing, and other social activities. Think of the 鈥Harvest Moon鈥 in the autumn, so named because it provided several nights of light for farmers to gather in their crops at the height of harvest. Every month, the nights leading up to a full Moon bring more light to the evening.

Our sleeping patterns are controlled by our natural circadian rhythms鈥 the day and night cycles driven by Earth orbiting the Sun. But there are also circalunar rhythms, which are tied to lunar cycles. Certainly, some animals will respond to both a circadian rhythm and a lunar clock.

Many animal species鈥 behaviors are influenced by the Moon, too. Think of birds that rely on the Moon for migration and that will even time their reproduction to coincide with the specific phases of the lunar cycle.

Anecdotally, you have to wonder if less sleep (whether interrupted sleep or going to bed later) for several nights in a row might lead to some irritability鈥攁nd what you might call moodiness!

The Moon and Lunacy

That leads us to weird behavior. There have been hundreds of studies about the Moon and lunacy. The few studies that suggest a connection are usually disproved or contradicted by others:

  • One study says more animal bites (from cats, rats, dogs, horses) occur at the full Moon; another says there鈥檚 no increase in dog bites.
  • One shows an increase in crime around the full Moon; others find no increase in arrests, calls for police assistance, prison assaults, batteries, or homicides.
  • Admissions for psychosis are lowest during the full Moon, and psychiatric emergency room visits decline, but calls to suicide prevention hotlines peak at the new Moon, not the full Moon.

We鈥檙e not quite sure how you鈥檇 actually prove the connection between the Moon and lunacy. However, one explanation might be what psychologists call 鈥渃onfirmation bias.鈥 In other words, people are more likely to notice things that confirm a preexisting belief.

  • If you鈥檙e working in an emergency room, and something weird happens on the full Moon, your older and wiser colleagues nod and say, 鈥淢ust be a full Moon.鈥 That鈥檚 what they heard from their elders when they were new at the job. (Psychologists have a name for that, too: 鈥渃ommunal reinforcement.鈥) 
  • But if something weird happens at a different phase of the lunar cycle, nobody says, 鈥淢ust be the third quarter Moon!鈥 And when nothing unusual happens on the full Moon, nobody says anything.

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We call widespread beliefs that are unsupported by fact 鈥渇olklore.鈥 Erika Brady, who teaches folklore at Western Kentucky University, says, 鈥淚t鈥檚 a way of imposing order on something that feels frighteningly out of control.鈥

How does a belief that strange things happen on the full Moon help us feel safer? The full Moon occurs only once every 29.5 days; that means the other four weeks of the lunar month should be less dangerous and unpredictable. See when the next full Moon is.

Therefore, this folk belief implies that our fears about everything from increased bleeding to werewolves may be limited to only 12 or 13 days per year. (Maybe 迟丑补迟鈥檚 why the number 13 worries people!)

What do you think about the Moon? Does it influence behavior or emotions? Or, is it all in our imagination鈥攁nd our dreams?

About The Author

Tim Clark

Tim Clark (1950-2021) began work as an editor and writer at Yankee Publishing in 1980. During his 41 years here, he was a prolific contributor to both Yankee Magazine and the Old Farmer's 蜜桃恋人. Read More from Tim Clark