That’s another intentional clickbait teaser. “Here are the consequences of sleeping with…” is designed to make you curious, but it hides the actual topic so you click to reveal it.
On its own, the phrase tells us nothing—because it could be about:
- Sleeping with makeup on
- Sleeping with wet hair
- Sleeping with socks on
- Sleeping with your phone nearby
- Or something completely harmless that’s being dramatized
🧠 What these posts usually do
They typically:
- Exaggerate normal habits into “health risks”
- Use fear language (“dangerous consequences”)
- Avoid specifics to boost engagement
🚫 Reality check
Most “sleeping with ___ is dangerous” posts are:
- Overstated
- Not supported by strong medical evidence
- Or only mildly relevant in extreme cases (e.g., hygiene issues, allergies, or discomfort)
✔️ Bottom line
Without the missing part of the sentence, there’s no real claim to evaluate—just a curiosity hook meant to get clicks.
If you paste the full sentence or first comment, I can tell you exactly whether it’s real health advice or just social media hype.

