This is going to be a pretty gross thread, so if you're not up for that, please just move on.
I've always been a pretty sweaty person. I don't stink, and I generally have good hygiene, but I just sweat a lot. The girl I'm with now has also always had the same issue. It works out pretty well because neither of us are put off by the fact that the other is always wet.
The only point where this becomes a real problem is when we sleep together. Either one of us sleeping in a bed alone leaves a wet spot outlining our entire body on the bed. Both of us together through, and we'll soak through blankets, pillows, and leave little pools in the sheets because the moisture can't get through the mattress protector.
When it's just one of us, the bed dries out during the day, and it's no big deal. Both together though, and things just stay wet. It's to the point where we've had to throw out about a dozen pillows and a blanket because they mold.
Is there anything we can do about this, without being separate? One obvious answer is to sleep in separate beds, but we really like being together.
Check with a doctor on that anon. I'm pretty sure they can use botox injections in certain parts of the body so if that's something you'd be willing to try it might be worth it.
>>17462377
There's a pretty good chance doctors won't be able to sort that stuff out.
What about just washing your sheets/pillowcases every day? Would that be a viable solution?
>tfw no sweaty gf to lick sweat off of
you're living the dream OP
>>17462436
It's not the sheets & pillow cases that are the problem. Those dry naturally. It's pillows and fluffy blankets that soak through, and hold on to it.
throwing some suggestions out there, idk if any of them will help, and feel free to disregard any that you are already doing:
put a folded towel inside the pillowcase on the side your head rests on, then take it out in the morning and hang it up/throw it in the laundry/whatever
find more breathable blankets - idk what kind of blankets you're using, but if you're using a duvet or comforter, you probably shouldn't, just use a light thermal blanket or something
get mildew-resistant pillows
run a fan or dehumidifier in the bedroom during the day to dry the air out faster
if you make the bed in the morning, don't
the botox thing that the other anon mentioned might be worth looking into, at least ask about it
>the moisture can't get through the mattress protector.
isn't the mattress supposed to take in moisture, then dry out again? Silly Americans.
>>17462914
where do you live? I want to know so if I ever visit there, I can bring my own mattress instead of wondering if it dried out adequately or if it still has sweat/jizz/whatever soaked into it.
>>17463053
Europe.
Just don't put the mattress directly on the floor like a savage.