Dentist Warns: Women Who Snore May Be Prematurely Aging Their Face Overnight — This Pink Strip Stops It
My dentist told me my snoring wasn’t just annoying my husband. It was a sign I was mouth-breathing all night — drying out my mouth, wrecking my deep sleep, and waking up with a puffier, older-looking face.
No woman wants to be the snorer. The one keeping her husband awake. The one he eventually, quietly, leaves the room to escape. For years that was me — and I blamed everything but the real cause: the eight hours that never felt like enough, the puffy face in the mirror each morning, the 3pm crash I drowned in coffee.
It was my dentist, Dr Fern White, who finally explained it. When you sleep with your mouth open, she told me, you never really drop into deep sleep — and broken sleep spikes the stress hormone cortisol and leaves fluid pooling in your face overnight. That’s the puffiness. And over the years, she warned, it can quietly age a woman’s face far faster than it should.
Her fix was almost embarrassingly simple: gently keep my lips closed at night so I’d breathe through my nose. I felt ridiculous — but I tried it, at first with a strip of ordinary tape from the bathroom drawer. The snoring stopped that very first night.
The only problem was the tape itself: stiff, harsh, and not something any woman wants to wear to bed beside her husband. So I made my own — a soft, lip-shaped pink strip with a gentle adhesive, designed for women. Here are the five reasons I’ll never sleep without it again.










