Never, ever, ever, make your bed.

xoxoxoBruce • Sep 11, 2015 1:46 am
Making your bed in the morning provides protection and security for bugs.
The mighty house dust mite. Actually, it’s not mighty at all. These microscopic little buggers are running rampant in your bed (sorry, but it’s true). In fact, the average bed can be home to 1.5 million of them. House dust mites feed on human skin scales (ew), so they love to take up residence with us under the sheets. The allergens they produce (which are actually the mites’ poop) are easily inhaled during sleep and are a major cause of illnesses like asthma. They don’t exactly help dust allergies, either.

It only makes sense, then, that when we sweat and roll around during the night, our skin is flaking off everywhere, the sheets are dampening, and the mites are having a feast. In the morning, if we pull up the sheets and make our beds immediately, all of the skin scales, sweat and mites will be trapped underneath.

But, friends, if we don’t make our bed, the mites, the scales, the sweat, all of it, will be exposed to fresh air and light.

If company's coming at least wait till the end of the day to make it tidy.

Link

1,500,000 of...
Clodfobble • Sep 11, 2015 7:50 am
This is a battle I've been waging with Mr. Clod since the day we first shared a bed. The end result is we fold the sheet and blanket down very neatly half way, like turn down service at a fancy hotel.
Griff • Sep 11, 2015 7:53 am
Pete and I are anti-makers but at bed time she likes some organization. I'd rather sleep in a nest of leaves.
Gravdigr • Sep 11, 2015 1:36 pm
Never, ever, ever, make your bed.


I never, ever, ever, do. But I change my sheets more often than most guys do, though.
BigV • Sep 11, 2015 1:43 pm
Like much of the rest of our personal lives, Twil and I are of complimentary attitudes about bedmaking. Unlike much of the rest of our lives, I am regularly teased about my need to "specify" the sheets and blankets before bedtime (preferably upon rising). Like you Griff, she'd be happy to sleep in a nest of (1000 count Egyptian cotton) leaves.
BigV • Sep 11, 2015 1:44 pm
So they die of dehydration in the course of one exposed day.

*scoff*
xoxoxoBruce • Sep 11, 2015 4:10 pm

Preventive Strategies for Dust Mites
Use a dehumidifier or air conditioner to maintain relative humidity at about 50% or below.
Encase your mattress and pillows in dust-proof or allergen impermeable covers (available from specialty supply mail order companies, bedding and some department stores).
Wash all bedding and blankets once a week in hot water (at least 130 - 140°F) to kill dust mites. Non-washable bedding can be frozen overnight to kill dust mites.
Replace wool or feathered bedding with synthetic materials and traditional stuffed animals with washable ones.
If possible, replace wall-to-wall carpets in bedrooms with bare floors (linoleum, tile or wood) and remove fabric curtains and upholstered furniture.
Use a damp mop or rag to remove dust. Never use a dry cloth since this just stirs up mite allergens.
Use a vacuum cleaner with either a double-layered microfilter bag or a HEPA filter to trap allergens that pass through a vacuum's exhaust.
Wear a mask while vacuuming to avoid inhaling allergens, and stay out of the vacuumed area for 20 minutes to allow any dust and allergens to settle after vacuuming.

SOURCE: National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences - National Institutes of Health. Dust Mites..

link
Happy Monkey • Sep 12, 2015 3:44 pm
BigV;938627 wrote:
So they die of dehydration in the course of one exposed day.

*scoff*

You might not kill them, but you might decrease their reproductive rate.
Sundae • Sep 12, 2015 3:53 pm
I don't have any allergies I'm aware of. Oh - occasional hayfever, which affects me outside of my bedroom.
My main reason for sneezin' is only ever sunlight.

So if I want to share my bed with a cast of 1,500,000, I will.
it • Sep 13, 2015 4:51 am
[YOUTUBE]wI9CSHgGYtg[/YOUTUBE]

...I do realize that wasn't the OP point, but I am not high enough on self-preservation body-temple thing to really engage with the point. It's like watching documentaries about facebugs, my reaction is somewhere between a "cool" and a *shrug* .Now, the discomfort of having to actually make your bed, that I can relate too.
elSicomoro • Sep 13, 2015 11:30 pm
Griff;938603 wrote:
Pete and I are anti-makers but at bed time she likes some organization. I'd rather sleep in a nest of leaves.


My ex-wife started me on this. Sometimes I do it, most of the time not.
bbro • Sep 16, 2015 9:24 pm
Finally - an excuse for me to continue being lazy
monster • Sep 17, 2015 9:01 pm
when will you people discover duvets?
classicman • Sep 17, 2015 9:27 pm
I have one - King sized. Its like sleeping under dead hobos ... weighs a ton and makes one 1000 degrees. no no no
monster • Sep 17, 2015 10:11 pm
then you need a lighter one, duh!
BigV • Sep 26, 2015 11:11 am
I'll take one of those. I love heavy covers, and I'm mostly a cold sleeper. Twil disagrees, however, about the cold sleeper part.

Heaters gonna heat.
ashtonbrady45 • Oct 9, 2015 1:58 am
My daughter is really organize well on that moment. Happy to say
classicman • Oct 9, 2015 9:11 am
...
Griff • Oct 9, 2015 6:59 pm
:sweat:
Griff • Oct 9, 2015 7:02 pm
So I went into the girls house and saw a banner of communist China on the wall... it was a huge red flag for me.
xoxoxoBruce • Oct 9, 2015 10:30 pm
Was that the Cuban chick with the hammer and sickle tattoo? :rolleyes:
Happy Monkey • Oct 10, 2015 12:06 am
Griff;941439 wrote:
So I went into the girls house and saw a banner of communist China on the wall... it was a huge red flag for me.

She didn't offer it as a gift?
xoxoxoBruce • Oct 10, 2015 4:38 am
Only if you give her you email address and phone numbers, but she swears and affirms she won't share them outside her affiliates.