Recipe

Here are the consequences of sleeping with a… See more

That headline is another curiosity-gap clickbait post.

The phrase:

“Here are the consequences of sleeping with a… See more”

is intentionally incomplete so you feel compelled to click. Without the missing word, the claim has no clear meaning.

Common versions of these posts end with things like:

  • a fan on
  • wet hair
  • phone near the bed
  • pet
  • TV on
  • certain foods or drinks before bed

🧠 How to evaluate it

Ask:

  1. What exactly are they talking about?
  2. Are they claiming a specific health effect?
  3. Do they provide evidence, or just warnings and anecdotes?

🚩 Red flags

Be skeptical if the completed headline promises:

  • dramatic health consequences
  • guaranteed outcomes
  • “doctors are shocked”
  • “you’ve been doing this wrong your whole life”

✔️ Bottom line

As written, the headline doesn’t contain enough information to assess because the crucial part is missing. It’s designed to make you click, not to inform you.

If you tell me what comes after “sleeping with a…”, I can explain whether the claim is true, partly true, or completely misleading.

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