🐱 Why Don't Men Ever Change Their Bed Sheets?

CatParty


There is a special place in my heart for the professionals who conduct silly studies that prove all my notions about men correct. Introducing the latest: Single men barely wash their bed sheets. In this new survey, it is revealed, as we all suspected, that boys are gross. The survey found that almost half of single men – in a survey of 2,250 British adults – don’t change their beddingfor up to four months at a time, with 12 percent of lads commenting it might be even longer. Turns out the “I cracked a blanket in half” joke from Bridesmaids is less exaggeration and more likely drawn from real life experience.


To be fair, the advice that we should be changing our bedding every three to four days – or at most once a week or every two weeks – feels like an extreme on the other end of the spectrum. I have neither the time or otherworldly Mrs Hinchambition to be washing and changing my sheets this frequently. And if I, a woman, with my innate adoration of household chores can’t be arsed – why should we expect men to be bothered?
Still, nobody is condoning taking four months to strip a bed of the standard boy duvet set of navy check and swapping it out with the other standard of grey bobbled bedding. But what the research is truly missing is the answer to the question non-men ask about men at least once a week: Why the fuck do they do that?
Johnny, a 27-year-old who would prefer to remain anonymous out of presumed shame, can’t remember the last time he changed his bedding. He confides that unless he is sharing his bed, he doesn’t see a reason to keep it overly clean. “What’s the point?” he says. “It’s only me getting into the bed every night, so what have I got to gain from changing them more often?”





While Johnny’s logic of “it’s my filth, I’ll lie in it” sort of adds up, Laura Baillie, an associate lecturer in social sciences at the Open University, says this may be a symptom of TikTok’s favourite diagnosis: weaponised incompetence.


“Weaponised incompetence generally refers to men pretending to be helpless in order to do less things in the home,” she explains. The idea that if you pretend not to know how to do something, that she will get frustrated and then take over the task for you and won't ask you to do it again.” Baillie can relate: “Personally, the men I have slept with who have had disgusting sheets have always relied on others to look after them: a mother, a previous partner, etc.”
While weaponised incompetence is an issue in relationships, Baillie says that the incompetence aspect continues for single men. While the survey says that almost half of single men see nothing wrong with not changing their sheets, it’s worth wondering if the men in relationships would bother changing their sheets if their partners didn’t make ‘em do it. (Or potentially, do it for them.) Bloody typical, am I right ladies?
I would be happy to leave it there, but my natural feminine empathy meant that as well as wanting to wash these poor souls’ bedding for them, I wondered if there may be something deeper to all of this.
Will, a 29-year-old who typically changes his bedding once a week, tells me that when his mental health suffers, washing his sheets is the last thing on his mind. “I knew how disgusting it was, but I would just feel so lost and have such little regard for myself that I wouldn’t care,” he says. “Not having any energy to do it is always about 75 percent of my problem, but I think punishing myself makes up for the last 25 percent.”





He adds: “I’m always acutely aware of whatever state I’m in and how cleaning and tidying of myself and my room needs to be done… The lack of energy is just so overpowering. There is a small part of me that tells me I don’t deserve anything nice likes to linger and inform any thoughts I have.”


Could Will’s experience be more broadly applied to the staggering difference in sheet washing rates between men and women? Baillie is sympathetic but shoots my theory down: “Rates of depression are actually higher amongst womenMen's mental health is obviously a serious issue as three-quarters of all suicides are by men, but if the argument here is that men are more depressed than women and therefore are less hygienic? It does not stand up against the actual data.”
“I want to point to social conditioning as the answer – women are not allowed to be smelly,” she says. “Women have to be presented exactly right. We have to do this to such a higher degree than men, or suffer social consequences.”
The idea that men don’t wash their bedding because, at the end of the day, they don’t have to face the same consequences as women resonates with me. Whether it’s because we’re conditioned to think we need to be cleanlier or to look after the fellas, the end result is the same. And in my humble opinion, we need to take an if we can’t beat ‘em, join ‘em approach. Goblin modeis for life, not just for fleeting meme tweet.
 
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Judging by the author of the article it's clear to see no bias. In short they're a tranny and misandry.
 
"don't ever change their bedsheets" in title versus article 'every four months' still a pretty long period, but for one person, if they shower as they should, what the hell is the complaint here? The hyperbole would be better if we were talking over a year each time here. What's even the lesson? That they should clean their bed more often for the none other people that will be in it? I still think it should be at least monthly, but I for one would want to see how often the author cleans other parts of their home. I 100% bet on them slacking a hell of a lot more than this in key areas.

Then you get to the bottom of the article. Fucks sake on trying to downplay men's suicides. Ah yes, I am sure your depression is so much worse if it isn't driving you to an hero. What about the 1/4th of those that are women?????

Notice how the article doesn't even cite the cleanliness habits of single women. Not that I would trust polls in the case for men or women.
 
I shower before bed, and don't jerk off or otherwise try to contaminate my bed. I also change my sheets and such as the season's change, because using winter sheets and blankets during the summer or vice versa would be stupid.

I also don't bring people over and bed them; no one to impress means I can go longer between changing them.

Notice how the article doesn't even cite the cleanliness habits of single women. Not that I would trust polls in the case for men or women.
Women are a strange breed when it comes to cleanliness. I did some time as a janitor while going through college; the women's restrooms were the worst. They may have clean houses and bathroom at home; but their public restrooms were worse than the men's, and those always smelled like piss no matter how much bleach you used.
 
What the fuck is up with these bedsheet articles? I wash mine at least every other week, usually a lot more as it's my "I need that thing clean for tomorrow but only have a few other dirty clothes to run and tiny loads suck" laundry filler.
Now that THEM! are going off about it I have to wonder what the real deal is
 
I wash my sheets every two weeks in the winter and once a week in the summer if needed. 4 months seems like a long ass time, but if the person in questions isn't gross as fuck it should be much of an issue.
in a survey of 2,250 British adults – don’t change their bedding for up to four months at a time, with 12 percent of lads commenting it might be even longer.
1. lol Bri'ish
2. That says "adults" so not just men were surveyed which means bitches be nasty too.

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Judging by the author of the article it's clear to see no bias. In short they're a tranny and misandry.
Judging by the author she's never changed bedsheets once in her life because a farm hand replaces her hay once a week.
 
Some of you may not even realize what your body does while you sleep, even if you shower before bed. Some people have horrible body temperature control and you may not even know it. A shower before bed won't do shit if you're the type who sweats in their sleep soaking your sheets/pillow/anything else.

Seriously, change your bed sheets at least once a month. Dust mites are a thing too.
 
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Judging by the author of the article it's clear to see no bias. In short they're a tranny and misandry.
I have to go find my eyes now. They rolled out of my head reading that shirt. They may be in China by now, the force of them rolling out of my skull was so great.
 
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If you don't sweat much (or smell in general), I don't see much reason to do it more than every 2-4 week.

Minor tidbit: There's a common myth that the waterweight lost overnight is primarily sweat, which reinforces the icky bedsheet idea. This has been disproven, it is mostly just moisture lost through exhalation.
 
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