Trouble getting good latex configuration

Hi Phoenix - Yo have helped me twice before on here with some great advice. I am hoping you can help give some additional advice. I had purchased a 10,000 from Sleepez. All talalays, F./M/S. After trying it out for 3 months with different combinations, I decided it was too soft. I then exchanged the soft for a medium. And so far the best I have had so far is (from bottom to top) M/m/f. I realize that is unusual to sleep on the firm on top, but that is the only configuration that I can fall asleep on. But even with that I feel like something is not right, its almost like my body (Im a back sleeper 5’5 130 lbs) cannot get comfortable, or relax. I am now exchanging one of the mediums for an xf, and am going to try xf/f/m . I was just n a hotel for a week for work, and the bed was a regular mattress with a featherbed on it and I fell right asleep each night. I usually dont have issues falling asleep on any kind of bed. Anyways, I’m hoping this last configuration will work for me, i also purchased a 1 inch soft dunlop topper and am going to try that on top to see if it makes a difference. I keep reading about all these people that love their latex mattress and I would really like to love mine also. I just dont understand why Im having such issues with finding a right combo.

Anyways, given this info, is there any additional advice you could give me with options to try? Thank you so much.

Hi Newbedshopping,

I switched your post to your previous topic to keep them together (it’s easier to follow).

You seem to be going in a firmer direction and while each person is unique and not everyone fits inside the averages that would work well for other people that have a similar body type and sleeping style … the configurations you’ve tried would probably be too firm for most people in your weight range and would probably be firmer than the hotel beds that you slept on as well.

Did you try any of the suggestions in my previous reply? If you did it would be helpful if you could describe the specific symptoms that you experienced on each of them and how your symptoms and sleeping experience changed on each configuration relative to the others that you have tried (lower back pain, pressure points etc).

The changes in your sleeping experience between different configurations may provide some reference points that can help “point to” the layering combination that may work best for you.

Phoenix