• Carnelian@lemmy.world
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    15 hours ago

    Here’s what you said, so you can’t delete your comment later out of shame.

    The study is about trapping moisture. It references mites in your bed from making it vs not. It’s a simple thing, closing something up traps moisture.

    You are a 100% proven liar. The study has literally nothing to do with making a bed vs not. It is about humidity in the whole home.

    Here is an actual quote from the study

    Use of mattress and pillow encasements, coupled with frequent laundering of bedding, practically eliminates mite allergen exposure from beds

    Crazy what ctrl f can come up with. Hey let’s keep going

    Reducing the RH [relative humidity] in the whole house should also kill mites in mattresses and bedding as well and prevent colonization of these breeding sites. Although we did not monitor mite and allergen levels in mattresses and bedding, the lack of mites and allergen in mattresses and bedding in dry climates, such as the Rocky Mountain States, supports this hypothesis.

    Great so they literally didn’t monitor mites in bedding whatsoever, and also note that it’s a complete non issue if you employ basic hygiene practices. Do you? You never answered my question btw, you said a made bed must smell “worse”. Does your bed smell at all?

    As an aside, are your blankets made of impermeable plastic? I have a theory as to how you have become so confused about the principles of evaporation

    • tyler@programming.dev
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      2 hours ago

      Good fucking lord you are a fucking idiot. It literally references the two studies in that quote you provided. Not only that but you are a human. You can make a fucking deduction. Why would you need frequent laundering in a humid environment but not in a dry environment like the Rocky Mountains (go ahead and ctrl f that in there).

      Great so they literally didn’t monitor mites in bedding whatsoever,

      I didn’t say it fucking did! I said it REFERENCES IT. Learn to fucking read! Like holy shit!

      also note that it’s a complete non issue if you employ basic hygiene practices.

      We’ll come back to this.

      As an aside, are your blankets made of impermeable plastic? I have a theory as to how you have become so confused about the principles of evaporation

      Unless you’re using pure cotton or silk sheets then yes, your sheets are made of mostly impermeable plastic. This isn’t some crazy thing. It’s a basic fact of life.

      You never answered my question btw, you said a made bed must smell “worse”. Does your bed smell at all?

      To cover this and the “basic hygiene practices” I point you here: https://www.sciencefocus.com/the-human-body/your-bed-s-hidden-biome-could-be-ruining-your-sleep and good fucking lord don’t just ctrl f. Read the whole damn article.

      Please learn how to fucking do your own research. And stop spouting off nonsense, especially nonsense that makes literally no physical sense.

      • Carnelian@lemmy.world
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        2 hours ago

        Unless you’re using pure cotton

        You’re close to a major breakthrough here

        Do you wear underwear btw or do you consider it unhygienic to trap so much moisture around your sensitive areas?

        • tyler@programming.dev
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          2 hours ago

          Yeah at this point it’s blatantly clear you are trying to throw as much shade as possible to distract from the fact that there’s zero evidence in your favor. You would have linked it otherwise. Maybe go take a basic physics class.

          Good bye.

          • Carnelian@lemmy.world
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            2 hours ago

            As a matter of fact, just wear pajamas to bed and the whole problem is avoided yes? All the moisture stays contained by the fabric covering your body?