Tree bed by Shawn Lovell |
In Buddhism, there are five precepts or ethical trainings for lay people. They cover pretty familiar moral territory: you are asked to do your best not to kill, steal, have illicit sex, tell lies, or get drunk. However, if you go on retreat with Buddhist monks or nuns, you are usually asked to respect not just five, but eight precepts for the duration of the retreat. The extra three require you to avoid eating at certain times (such as after noon); to refrain from dancing, singing, music, shows, wearing jewelry and cosmetics; and to refrain from using high and luxurious seats or beds. The precept on sexual misconduct also gets upgraded to refraining from any sexual activity.
That was until I decided to buy a new
mattress.
On the advice of my brother, who had
recently bought one himself, I started my search at Snooze. A
sales assistant, who happened to be an attractive blonde woman rather similar
to the young woman who had successfully helped my brother, guided me through
the huge display room of mattresses to a special computerized test bed.
As you recline on the high and luxurious
surface of Snooze's bedMATCH® bed, a video plays on a TV monitor positioned on an angle just over your
head, informing you that although you may think you already know what kind of
mattress you want, *scientific research* has shown that 95% of people DO NOT
KNOW what kind of mattress is best for them. Having sown the seed of doubt
about your own capacity to successfully choose a mattress, the voice from the
monitor goes on to reassure you that it’s OK, because the bed itself will be able to identify the optimal choice for you, based on
a *scientific analysis* of your body shape and weight. The bed then gives you a
little massage, and like a modern day oracle, reveals whether you need a firm,
medium, soft, or super-soft mattress.
Armed with this revelation, the sales
assistant then leads you to a few mattresses of the designated type that cost
from $2,000 up. They are all, without exception, high and luxurious – so high
that you will probably have to buy new sheets, because the thickness of the mattresses
means a normal sized sheet would never fit over them. You are then encouraged
to lie on a few of these mattresses in an attempt to detect the subtle differences between
them. The sales assistant tries to stop you from lying on too many, though,
because (research has no doubt shown that) if you do, you’ll get confused and
leave without buying anything.
Actually, psychological research has shown
that making too many choices can lead to “decision fatigue” a state in which your
powers of self-control are depleted. In this condition, you may allow yourself
to be nudged towards an irrational decision by someone else, or your own automatic
impulses, or you may become overwhelmed and feel you just can’t make another choice. The
sales assistant, with the help of the test bed, has the tricky task of making
you feel sufficiently daunted by the huge range of mattress options to rely on
her advice, but not allowing you tip over into full scale decision fatigue, a
state in which you may become unpleasantly emotional as well as incapable of
remembering the pin for your credit card.
The risk of decision fatigue while
shopping for a new mattress is high. There are choices to be made, not only
between a multitude of brands, and ranges within brands (do you want something
from the exquisite, enhance or aspire collections?), but also between different
kinds of “mattress technology.” Do you prefer pocket-springs or coil springs? Do
you require silk, or can make do with wool, or perhaps organic latex in your
pillow top? Then there is the choice between ordinary, non-sentient mattresses and those made from "memory foam," a material developed by NASA in 1966,
and now used in some of the most expensive mattresses you can buy. You are
encouraged to weigh all these options with care since, as mattress sales
assistants will remind you, you spend about a third of your life sleeping and
the quality of your sleep impacts everything else you do.
The more time I spent trying out
mattresses, reading online reviews of mattresses and talking to friends about
their struggles to choose a mattress, the more I became convinced that our
society has an unhealthy obsession with high and luxurious beds: the Buddhist
precept is more relevant than ever! Anyone who can afford it, and many who
can’t, have become like the girl in Hans Christian Anderson’s story, who
arrives at a royal castle drenched by a storm and claims to be a princess. The
mother of the prince decides to test the young woman by surreptitiously placing
a pea under twenty mattresses and twenty feather-beds, and inviting her to spend
the night in this extraordinarily high and luxurious bed. The girl emerges in
the morning, complaining that she was kept awake all night by something hard in
the bed, which she is sure has bruised her. The prince is delighted: only a
real princess could be so sensitive.
Illustration by Edmund Dulac |
It would be easy to see contemporary princes and princesses, tossing and turning due to the lack of a silk pillow top, or a defect in their space age memory foam mattress, as products of contemporary consumer capitalism at its most psychologically manipulative. But it seems the problem is much older than contemporary marketing techniques. The folk tale recorded by Anderson suggests that the link between social status, hypersensitivity, insomnia and excessive bedding has been around for centuries; contemporary mattress sellers have simply tapped into an enduring human weakness. And as the ancient Buddhist precept suggests, it’s on a par with the desire to seek distraction through entertainment, or indulging in food.
For
those who have trouble sleeping, Buddhist teachings offer an alternative to expensive
mattresses in the quest to obtain an optimal night’s sleep. It is said that peaceful,
restful sleep (as well as a beautiful complexion) is a side-effect of practicing
loving-kindness meditation, which involves consciously wishing for the
well-being of oneself, others, and all living beings. So, may you be well and happy,
peaceful and at ease; may you (and any little ones in your household) come quickly to complete enlightenment, or at
least to sweet, sound sleep!
1 comment:
It has been a while since I have bought a new mattress, but it sounds like it has become complicated! I really like that Buddhist teaching that you mentioned that a good night's sleep will come from practicing loving-kindness meditation. That is an idea I have never considered before but I really like it!
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