On Friday Fives on Beds
Feb. 11th, 2019 01:01 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
1. What size (twin, full, etc.) is your bed?
We have a king sized bed. That used to be ample when it was just MLW and I. Now that the Captain is eight and quite robust it's not nearly big enough if he decides to come and visit and is then wriggly. Mostly this is him but, where ever he goes at night, Big Seal goes with him. Big Seal, as the name suggests, is quite big.
2. How many pillows do you sleep with?
I have two, one deep,f firm down filled pillow and one flatter, softer foam filled pillow underneath that.
3. Do you have a weighted blanket? If so, does it help you?
I don't. I have a duvet. MLW insists on "weighting" it by tucking it between the mattress and the bed frame. For the sake of marital harmony I pretend not to find this slightly uncomfortable or down right weird. I don't care enough. I've slept for long enough in bad enough conditions in the past that I don't find the physical attributes of the room I'm sleeping in don't much bother me.
4. Do you sleep with any stuffed animals?
Good god no!
Well only if Big Seal gets lonely and comes for a visit with the Captain. Big Seal is at least a peaceful sleeper who has never tried to sit on my head whilst both of us were asleep and then blamed the shape of my face for his own poor sleep.
5. Do you have to have the TV on to go to sleep?
Never. I very occassionally watch the TV in bed if I am tired or ill. I mean, once a quarter occassionally. Since the advent of streaming and digital recording much, much less so. If I'm tired I'll watch the second half of whatever it it I'm watching on catch-up. If I'm ill, I'm either able to make it to the sofa in the family room or I'm asleep.
I consider waking up to discover that I have fallen asleep with the television on to be personal moral failing.
no subject
Date: 2019-02-11 02:46 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2019-02-11 02:52 pm (UTC)We had a homework assignment to record the number of hours of television watched for the last two weeks of term and the two weeks of winter mid-term and present that data in a chart.
My chart was basically a set of axis and my teacher refused to believe that we didn't have a television and thought I had not done my homework.
no subject
Date: 2019-02-11 03:09 pm (UTC)I had a black & white TV at university, which the TV licensing agency kept threatening to come and inspect to make sure it wasn't actually colour, but they never followed through (presumably because people who are prepared to lie on these things just say they don't have one at all).
no subject
Date: 2019-02-11 04:26 pm (UTC)Back in the day when they were expensive I'd consider them a marker of middle-class prosperity. Thinking of the stories of people buying them for the coronation or crowding in to someone else's sitting room.
But I think now, *not* having a television I would consider a marker for a particular stripe of middle-class intellectual. Whereas I'd be surprised to find a working class household without one.
What was driving my mum's reluctance to have a television in the house I don't know. Her parents were exactly the sort of properous working class people who would have bought a television before the coronation whilst she herself, back then, took a dim view of the brain addling power of television. It's different now, she loves television now.
As always when my mum acted weirdly back when I was a kid I reckon my step-dad's controlling nature has some part to play in the process.
I didn't have one at uni. My flat mate had one, so we shared that, along with visiting my dad or my mate Marty for the watching of things like the cricket or Friends.
I think the first television I bought was the flat screen television that is currently in my bedroom. Technically a joint household purchase with MLW.
no subject
Date: 2019-02-11 05:46 pm (UTC)I didn't have one as an undergrad - we had a shared hired one for the flat - the B&W one was inherited from a friend and came to Aberdeen with me. My current flat screen TV is only the second TV I have ever bought, my previous one having gone on the fritz about 3 years ago after more than 10 years of service.
no subject
Date: 2019-02-12 09:09 am (UTC)I now have the newer, lighter, flatscreen TV on a angled bracket on the wall. The boardgames go in the press behind it and it sits above the little chatty chair. It's delightfullly practical.