Winter sleepwear
As we have
gotten older, my wife and I are fortifying ourselves with
heavier winter night gear. Several winters ago, she bought
flannel sheets; both top & bottom are flannel. But, each top and
bottom sheet peels little white fluff balls. These nits creep
into a variety of places. I am wild about them, because they
remind me of those rough flannels of former days.
Last year, she
added flannel pajamas for each of us. She had her mind focused
on being good and warm in winter nights. The result of this duo
turned out a bit differently than expected. The flannel pajamas
are quite nice. Mine is a two-piece: navy blue full top with
matching bottoms, which have slack-like pockets. (I asked her
what I was supposed to carry in these pockets during the
night…probably credit cards.) Hers are a cute two-piece pink
set. The upper has ribbons, while the bottoms have little
hearts. They are very feminine and sometimes very naughty. I can
untie her ribbons and have a heart-on at the same time.
Our flannel
pajamas are loose fitting, allowing for free movement during
sleep. That moving parts situation causes some annoyance during
sleep. For example, my trouser legs roll up above my knees. The
sleeves shinny up under my armpits. Both upper and lower parts
twist into tight rolls like wet towels. During the night, I have
to set up in bed, then tug flannel sleeves down the lengths of
arms, as well as unroll their knotted death choking from waste,
neck and legs.
Then the
crawling gets even worse, because they crawl into my very
private areas. Sometimes their front becomes the "jaws of death"
vice griping my manly man thing. These pajamas are unmerciful
about which item they snare. Then, some nights the rear seam has
crawled far, deep and wide. I suspect my wife experiences
similar erratic acts by her pair of nighttime wraps…. Except in
she never mentions anything about her vital areas being invaded.
Thinking back
into school days, only a first grade teacher could have
predicted the lethal combination of flannel layering on flannel.
In elementary school, teachers once used flannel boards to
illustrate stories. Teachers would stick flannel story figures
onto a flannel board, so students could see events. That same
law of physics applies to our nocturnal warm fuzzy sleep time.
These darned flannel pajamas stick to the darned, peeling
flannel sheets! However, we tell a different story: we are
Velcro-ed, stuck and locked on one spot. Whenever I try moving
from one sleeping position to another, a tug of war occurs
followed by a big un-sticking sound as flannel is pulled off
flannel.
Sometimes,
neither fabric will yield to the other; it is gridlock. For
example, when I awakened this morning, most of the bedding was
knotted in the middle at the bottom of the bed. There was a
giant mound of twisted flannel sheet, mattress cover, a blanket,
top flannel sheet, and down coverlet. Turned over so often, the
only solace was sleeping directly on the mattress. Yet, my
flannel pajama’s liked the smooth surface of our mattress, and
there was a continuous snickering from them as they defeated
BOTH flannel sheets!
Interestedly,
as I lay on top of the mattress outside flannel sheets, blanket
or fleece-down coverlet, room’s temperature was quite
comfortable. My body did not freeze, and there were no polar
bears stalking ice flows in our bedroom. All these nightly
tussles prove only the mattress wins the night.
By Dick Kettle