Disclaimer: This blog, all of its content and all of my posts are for Entertainment Purposes Only.
Approval of comments does not equal agreement with content.
Read at your own risk.
Please note that comments will not be approved unless you use your real name.
You can use first name only, if no one else has commented under that name before. Otherwise use first name and last initial.
If that has been taken, use your full first and last name.
No exceptions.
Thank you for understanding.
It’s called the recovery position, taught to me in 1960 by both Red Cross and St Johns, as a fifteen years old girl. It is the safest way to sleep for airways. And at 74, with heart failure, l use it still, for breathing problems. It’s also good for arthritis.
I am 71 this year and I also sleep like this as I have a lot of hip and joint pain and this is the favoured position for me for comfort.
I have slept like that since I was a small child, it was a natural position for me and it was so comfortable…also, I had to put a small teddy bear in between my knee area so they wouldn’t touch and now I use a mypillow which is so comfortable to sleep that way…I have 0 Negative blood…
I sleep exactly like this because it’s most comfortable for arthritic hips. B-
I always have slept this way, it is also easier for me to breathe. I am 75,O-.
Yes, breathing is an additional bonus for me too, Claudia. I am 74 and live in a high-lying city. I told my doctor I sometimes felt as if I were not getting enough oxygen, and should possible move to a lower elevation. Ever since then, she has treated me like a hypochondriac. The lack of knowledge among general practitioners is shocking. However, I have to admit that, at the time I spoke to her, I didn’t know about the oxygen and co2 effects of rh negative myself.
Okay, to open this and be looking at a stick figure of MYSELF sleeping is too funny. But what is the relation to Rh negative (if any)??