Ditto on needing a top sheet here too. I always have one except on those rare occasions when it's hot enough that sleeping naked under the ceiling fan would be preferable.
Natter 71: Someone is wrong on the Internet
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
I always have one except on those rare occasions when it's hot enough that sleeping naked under the ceiling fan would be preferable.
Even then, it's still on the bed; I just shove ALL the covers down, including the top sheet. But I still put it on when I make the bed.
I use a top sheet too. However - I am reading the comments on that article
some people, are just different
Yeah, I sleep on my back (to start) and have size 12 feet, so tucked in sheets are torturous.
Actually, this brings up a topic I've been meaning to put to the community:
How do you go to sleep?
What is your bedtime routine? How long does it take? Jammies or naked? Socks or no socks? Tucked sheets? Electric blanket? Music on? Dead quiet? Fan or white noise machine or air filter on?
My college roommate loved multiple heavy blankets and quilts and the window open in winter.
My friend Alison cannot sleep with her feet under the covers. They have to be out and naked or she gets too hot.
I knew a girl in Boston that slept face down with her knees tucked under her and her butt in the air like a toddler.
Side sleeper, back sleeper, front sleeper? Everything under the covers or arms out? Feet out? Arms over your head?
Do you have a brain quieting approach? They say it helps to shift your brain from words to images. Guided imagery (counting sheep?)
So, how do you go to sleep?
are you the kind of person that draws broad conclusions about personality from one ambiguous comment written subsequent to a rattling experience?
I don't know--do you have an example of an ambiguous comment I could test myself with?
I mean, on the list of super patriots, I don't think Coates ranks relatively high.
Either this is based on reading the one post I did, and therefore I don't understand how you reached this conclusion, or it's based on a broader knowledge of Coates than I have and therefore is precisely the information I was looking for before coming to a conclusion, otherwise I wouldn't have asked that question.
I deliberately buy blankets that feel nicer on my skin than my sheets, so no top sheet for me.
I can't sleep if my feet are cold. Since moving to CT, I usually sleep with my Alaska socks (thanks Drew!) since they are super warm. I like a nice firm pillow, usually king sized. I don't really have a ritual, unless you count taking out my contacts and setting my alarm. I like at least one open side so that I can kick my leg out, but I generally only do that in the summer. I like a glass of water and some qtips near the bed, because if I wake up thirsty or with an itchy ear, I can't motivate to get up for a long time, so I just lay there in annoyance, but if I can get a sip of water or get a qtip in there, I fall right back to sleep. Generally a stomach or side sleeper, and I move around in my sleep.
My college roommate loved multiple heavy blankets and quilts and the window open in winter.
My friend Alison cannot sleep with her feet under the covers. They have to be out and naked or she gets to hot.
This is me.
I'm not big on top sheets because I move too much and hate when they tangle.
Very concise, Vortex!
if I wake up thirsty or with an itchy ear,
Q-tips! Who knew it was essential for a good night's sleep.
I'm not big on top sheets because I move too much and hate when they tangle.
Matilda gets tangled. She's all askew in the morning and sometimes sideways across her bed. It was horrible when she slept in our bed. The worst.
At different points in my life I dated two different women who did not move all night long.
One literally would lie down on her back and sleep in that position without moving. The other might do one half rotation during the course of the night.
Oh, it was so nice to sleep next to not-restless people.
Hubby and I have separate sheets and blankets and have had since the early days. He gets much colder than I do. I haven't warn anything more than underwear or socks to bed in decades. Even in winter, I can cope with a sheet and a blanket if I have socks on. Without socks, multiple blankets aren't enough to keep me warm. That's the designator of summer, when I no longer need socks.
I don't need a ritual, I crawl in, take the evening meds and a small snack to buffer my stomach, pull on the CPAP mask, turn it on, pull up the covers, snuggle in, and I'm out. Hubby, poor thing, has insomnia.
Melatonin, an eye mask, and a pillow to clutch.