5 Reasons Women Over 50 Are Using This 10-Second Bedtime Ritual To Stop Waking Up With A Dry Mouth
In twenty years as a cosmetic dentist, I kept seeing the same thing in women over 50 — dry, damaged mouths from sleeping with them open. Here’s the ten-second habit I now recommend to nearly every patient who’ll listen.
In twenty years of practice, I’ve lost count of the women over 50 who’ve settled into my chair and mentioned the same thing almost in passing: they wake up parched. Tongue stuck to the roof of the mouth. A glass of water by the bed they refill every single night. Lips cracked at the corners by morning.
For a long time I’d nod sympathetically and move on. Then I started paying real attention to what I was seeing in their mouths — more sensitivity, more decay creeping along the gumline, a dryness no rinse seemed to touch. Because here’s what most women are never told: after fifty the mouth doesn’t simply stop making saliva — we sleep with our mouths open and dry it all away.
The fix I now recommend is almost embarrassingly simple: keep your lips gently closed at night so you breathe through your nose. Here are the five reasons I put it in front of nearly every patient who wakes up dry.










