We'll do it.
The European Space Agency is searching for 20 women to 'float' in a bath tub style bed for five days straight.
Why? Well the agency is trying to study the effects of the impact of 'dry-immersion' baths - floating beds - on the female body, at the Medes facility in Toulouse France late in 2020.
Dry-immersion means that participants lie in the bath on a waterproof sheet, so don't actually get wet.
And the beds imitate the floating effect felt by astronauts on the International Space Station.
The reason they are searching for female participants only, is because they only have data for the effects on the male body so far.
Explaining the concept, ESA said: "Dry-immersion studies benefit from placing less pressure on the body as volunteers are supported and suspended evenly in the tub, a condition that mimics the floating astronauts experience on the International Space Station."
But if you think this is a joke, the researchers running the study make it clear that it is a serious scientific study and not a whole lot of fun.
ESA's human spaceflight team leader, Jennifer Ngo-Anh, said: "We get many requests to be a volunteer for these studies, but they are no joke.
''Lying in bed sounds fun but the pleasure wears off very quickly.
''We constantly salute the volunteers that sacrifice their daily lives for the benefit of human exploration.''
It is not yet known how much participants will be paid for the experiment, but you can put your name forward for studies like this here.
MEDES will then contact you if you match the criteria for an upcoming study.