04-29-2012, 05:20 PM
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#9712
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Practically Lives Here
How Do You Identify?: Queer Stone Femme Girl of the Unicorn Variety
Preferred Pronoun?: She, as in 'She's a GEM'
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Hollylane
I cannot keep all of this this information to myself this morning...It would be selfish of me. So, I am kindly sharing it with all of you :insert beatific smile: :
Debris? How can sheets possibly get that dirty?
Human skin cells become food for dust mites. That is one of the biggest problems associated with bedding. Mites accumulate, along with their feces. But there is also animal hair, dander, fungal mold, fungal spores, bodily secretions and bacteria. Also: dust, lint, fibers, particulates, insect parts, pollen, soil, sand and cosmetics. "One person can perspire as much as a liter in a night—even more if you have a lot of covers," he says. And, of course, people eat in bed as they watch TV.
Edited to add...My bedding is in the washer right now. .gif)
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It's not just the bedding. All that sweat and skin flakes and dirt and mites get into the mattress too.
That's why I have a mattress cover on my bed and have for a very long time.
<--worked @ hotels and in the storage industry long enough to know how truly nasty people are, with or without their bugs
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I'm misunderestimated. 
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