palerider wrote:JustTia wrote:The grammar in my last post is annoying me, lol.
go back and edit it
Nah, I'll leave it. It's a reminder that I'm not perfect. I need that now and then or else my head gets so big that it won't fit in my car any more.
junior49 wrote:Congrats! I was surprised how fast I learned to sleep without it. One thing that helped me was to learn to nose-breathe. I never even knew mouth-breathing was not optimal. Over the first 3-4 weeks I had to consciously remember to keep my mouth closed at all times and after that it became automatic. Same with sleeping--took a few weeks with the chinstrap, but eventually was able to sleep without it. The greatest thing was that I was able to switch to a nose mask, and now I use nasal pillows. Much quieter and less cumbersome.
I don't normally mouth breathe at all. Awake, anyway. In fact, when I have a stuffy nose I find it nearly impossible to get to sleep because it doesn't feel natural to me to open my mouth and breathe through it. It takes conscious effort. Yet, for some reason, after I fall asleep my face seems to completely relax and my jaw drops. So my first mask was a full face. I hated it, though, and could NOT get the leaks to stop. So I tried my swift fx and loved it - except that it seemed that my mouth was still dropping open after I fell asleep. So I added the chin strap. But my teeth hurt every morning, even if I set the chin strap pretty loosely. Finally I decided to try it again without the chin strap and see just how often my mouth actually does drop open - and it hasn't done so (that I know of) in three nights now. Although, my teeth are still sore in the morning, so I may still need to get an oral appliance from my dentist to protect my teeth. It seems that I went from jaw-dropping to jaw-clenching.
One extreme to another. I guess I don't do anything "small".
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