Mattresses aren’t the only thing you can sleep on. I’d consider picking up and installing a hammock—they’re not only cheap (~$100 for a top of the line one, $10 and 2 hours for making your own), but they also give you significantly more usable living space.
You can always have a hammock in addition to, rather than instead of, a traditional bed. Or you can use the next-best piece of furniture for that purpose.
Mattresses aren’t the only thing you can sleep on. I’d consider picking up and installing a hammock—they’re not only cheap (~$100 for a top of the line one, $10 and 2 hours for making your own), but they also give you significantly more usable living space.
Most people like to have a bed they can have sex in though
You can always have a hammock in addition to, rather than instead of, a traditional bed. Or you can use the next-best piece of furniture for that purpose.
Yes, they may be more space-efficient, but isn’t it more important whether they damage your sleep quality?
I’ve found it to be very comfortable, though I have not been keeping data on sleep quality so I don’t have a quantitative answer.
If you’re already tracking sleep quality, trying a hammock out is much cheaper than trying a new mattress out.