BirdbyBird wrote:It is wonderful to hear from folks and if you can't tell by reading the posts, most of us don't have exciting adventures that are being reported on daily. Just the normal adventures of everyday living.
I think Tina said it best - as she usually does. Thanks, Tina!
Anyway, I am embarking on a "Normal Adventure of Everyday Living" of looking for a new bed. My kids were here for Christmas (it was glorious!) and my son and his fiance slept in my bed (my kids stayed overnight one night). When my son got up in the morning, he was looking a bit haggard, and said that my bed was so uncomfortable that he ended up sleeping on the floor (I slept on the couch which wasn't great, but I didn't end up on the floor).
I have known for a while that my bed was getting lumpy - with a definite and pronounced slump in the center (well, ok, a crater. . .). But you all know how it is - we kind of get used to something and don't really notice things going south until it bites us in the rear end.
I got to thinking. . . the bed is at least 12 years old, maybe 14. And it was a cheapo crap "pillow-top" bed in the first place, bought in haste ("buy in haste, repent at leisure") on one of those television shopping channels. Shoulda known better. At the time, it was expensive (for me) and I didn't have the option of returning it, and I didn't have the bucks to immediately replace it. So I just kind of learned to live with it (by adding a memory foam mattress topper, which helped a little. . . for a while).
I guess, after 14 years or so, one should just buy a new bed whether they need it or not. . .
Anyway, it seems that the latest and greatest way to buy a new bed these days is online. One tends to get the same quality (when lucky) buying a bed online as one does when buying a bed in a store. Only the online purchase can be hundreds less than a store purchase, because of the direct-to-consumer thing of reduced $overhead$. Both my kids' beds were purchased (by them) online, and they tell me that I can order a bed, sleep on it for 100 nights or so, and then return it if it doesn't work out. Both also said that they went through a bed or two before they found the "right" one, and that the returns of the rejects were a snap.
Looking a bit online, it seems that all beds are advertised as "the VERY best bed EVER made in the ENTIRE history of the planet" or some such.
I'm going to start with purchasing a month's subscription ($10.00) to Consumer Reports (they publish unbiased bed reviews) and start from there.
If any of you have recently purchased a bed, and either love it or hate it, I would appreciate knowing this too.
Thanks, everyone!
Anne