Archive for the ‘gender’ Category

On the Bright Side of Bedbugs

Tuesday, December 25th, 2007

My mother always told me to look on the bright side of things, especially when those things aren’t so great. Well, bed bugs aren’t so great, are they? But here’s some reasons to be thankful for bed bugs. I know I’m grasping at straws here, but play along.

  1. For those ladies living with their man, bed bugs will make him think twice about leaving his socks or underwear on the floor.
  2. For those men not living with their significant other, bed bugs like to bite women more, as discussed in a past post, so this should encourage you to invite your girlfriend to sleep over more often.
  3. If you’re really into the minimalist thing, bed bugs should not be that much of a problem for you. In fact, if you really believe less is more, than watch your living space grow and grow exponentially as your over infested bed and other furniture disappear.
  4. With bed bugs seeming to explode in numbers in cities across the world, I can’t imagine that homeless people are feeling as bad about their living situation as they used to.

Not too many good things to say about bed bugs, are there? I believe that if you don’t have anything nice to say about bed bugs, then pour yourself, a stiff drink. If you can think of some offbeat positive results of living with bed bugs, please drop me a comment so you can share with the rest of the class.

Merry Christmas!

Gender, Not Race?

Saturday, June 2nd, 2007

In a previous post I theorized that people with fairer skin have more severe reactions to bed bug bites than people with darker skin. I based this theory on the fact that M who has very fair skin has had a far more severe reaction to bed bug bites than I, who is a shade or two darker. I also gave the example of my black neighbor who had his own infestation and had almost no visible sign of any bites, although he did complain about the itching.

In the Comments area for this post, Nobugs suggested that it may very well be gender, and not race or more specifically, one’s presence of pigmentation in their skin. It changed my view and made me consider that females may indeed have a more severe reaction to bed bug bites than males.

Interesting–I don’t have any data about race, but that’s partly because most of the sufferers I know are known to me on the internet so I have no idea of their race :-)

My hunch is that men are less likely to react to bites, or be allergic to bites (and possibly even less likely to be bitten) than women. Of the people who come on Bedbugger, women often say the men they live with aren’t bitten. Men are more likely to say they aren’t reacting to bites and their female partners/relatives are. -NoBugs

Other posters stepped in to offer their own stories to support Nobugs’ theory.

I would agree with Nobugs.

I am darker skinned than my boyfriend. I have visible bites but he doesn’t.

I think he’s being bitten but isn’t reacting. -Anonymous

Could anyone lend any additional personal accounts to support this theory? It sounds far more plausible than the one I supported in my previous post.