What Our Weighted Blankets Tell Us About Our Late-Capitalist Angst

Existential crisis + magical thinking + Amazon Prime = the Gravity Blanket

Summer Brennan
Forge

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An illustration of a person sleeping on a bed with their arm dangling off the side. A weighted blanket covers their body.
Image: Malte Mueller/Getty Images

II first heard of the Gravity Blanket in a moment when the world outside my window seemed to be visibly falling apart. It was December 2019. I was living in Paris, which had ground to a halt amid the worst general strikes in decades. The news from my native United States was similarly anxiety-provoking. And things would only get worse in the coming month; from boiling tensions between the U.S. and Iran to the fires ravaging Australia, the state of the world was enough to make anyone want to dive under the covers.

Weighted blankets made it onto countless lists of popular gifts this past holiday season, and they dominate the top of Amazon’s most-gifted bedding list. You may well have found one under your own tree. Since they first started being mass-produced a few years ago, Americans have enthusiastically reached for the comfort and velvety heft of these $200–300 blankets. Because…well, science. Or Instagram. Or something.

The concept of the weighted blanket is refreshingly low tech. There are no sensors, no plug-ins, no apps to download. It’s just a quilted comforter filled with tiny pellets or glass beads, that rests on your body like a giant bean bag…

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