Raise your hand if you have ever got out of bed after enduring a sleepless night because of your partner’s snoring, tossing and turning, doona hogging or flinging, or other annoying nocturnal behaviour that interfered with your right to a good night’s sleep?
For all of you that have your hand raised, keep it raised if you would ever consider sleeping separately from your partner to get a good night’s sleep? I’ll bet a few hands have dropped – but I’ll also bet there are a few still raised – some a bit tentatively.
Keep those hands proudly raised folks and say “I love my partner, but I don’t love sleeping with them.” It’s time to claim back your right to a good night’s sleep.
A 2011 National Sleep Foundation Survey reported that 41% of people had their sleep significantly impacted by a snoring partner and 27% significantly impacted by partner movement.
The shared bed can be a battlefield, but night after night, many keep returning with the spirit of Winston Churchill – ready to fight on stoically, “whatever the cost may be”.
Challenging the ‘shameful’ secret of sleeping separately is becoming my personal crusade. In my late 30s I became less and less able to share a bed with my partner. I tried ear plugs, natural remedies and just ‘sucking it up’, but when it got to the point that I was prescribed Stilnox, I knew something had to change. The pressure associated with wanting to sleep separately was one of the key reasons that relationship ended. The boyfriend accused me of not trying hard enough to ‘get over’ my problems and made it quite clear that he would not be sleeping in a different bedroom to me – happy couples don’t do that! Eventually I had to say goodnight to him and the relationship.
My husband and I met a few months later and when we first started living together, sharing a bed each night was again, a bit of a nightmare. His snoring and my routine of retiring to bed late at night, and then wanting to read, interfered with our ability to sleep well. We were both miserable, and after a couple of weeks sharing a bed, totally exhausted and unable to function as reasonable, rationale members of society. Fortunately I discovered that my future husband (as he was at that time) approached sleep with the same pragmatism as I did.
We decided that separate rooms were going to save both our sanity and our relationship. Seven years later we are still very much in love with each other – and our own bedrooms. We still enjoy the intimate aspects of a normal, healthy couple, and share the pleasure of lying with each other in bed at night and in the mornings, when one of us will slip in with the other for a cuddle. But the bit in the middle—where we just sleep— is an activity we happily and unashamedly do alone.
We have developed rules to ensure any closeness missed by sharing a bed each night is made up for in other ways. Whoever is up the latest (mostly me) has to make sure they spend a bit of time in the other’s bed before they sleep—with a goodnight kiss as a minimum. Whoever is up first (mostly him) must go to the other person’s room and give them a good morning kiss. These rules are non-negotiable. And then there’s the battle about whose bed is visited for the sex! It can make for a bit of fun when approached in the right spirit.
In its most basic form, sleeping is essentially an individual activity. But it’s an activity that many people lie next to another person to do. Ironic, isn’t it? Paul Rosenblatt, professor at the University of Minnesota, suggests that couples need to learn to share a bed if they are having difficulties sleeping together. Unfortunately, just as we all can’t master the complexities of quantum physics, not everyone can learn to endure night after night of minimal or broken sleep simply for the sake of sharing a bed with the person they love. I certainly worked and worked to learn to master the skill, but would have failed Professor Rosenblatt’s exams on stoicism.
Happy couples who want to sleep apart challenge social norms. I believe the fear of how others might judge a relationship is what keeps people returning to the same bed every night with a level of nervousness and, in some cases, sheer dread, that they are not going to get a good night’s sleep. I know—I have been there. However, having the strength to take the step to sleep separately is a practical choice that may just keep your relationship, your health and your sanity in one piece.
Sleeping apart does not mean your relationship is falling apart. It just means that you, along with a growing percentage of the population, are realising that sleep is more important than spooning.
Are there any more hands raised now?
Jennifer Adams is a a mid-40s, married woman, who is very open about the fact that she sleeps in a separate room to her husband. She is currently writing a book called “Sleeping apart – not falling apart: A practical guide for happy couples who want to sleep separately.”
Do your partner’s sleeping habits affect your quality of sleep?








Comments
123 Comments so far
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We’ve slept apart for 2-3 years now. I’d really much rather sleep with him, but my snoring keeps him awake. He’s a light sleeper, and I have mild sleep apnea (too mild to warrant cpap machine). We have lost a lot of intimacy since sleeping apart. I really dislike it, but it’s better for us if we’ve both slept well. When we’re at the coast we sleep together. He says he can handle it then cos he doens’t have to think intellectual thoughts the next day, and because the sound of the waves hides my snoring. I love being at the coast and co-sleeping. I also would prefer to sleep with him as he helps me to go to sleep earlier. It’s no fun sleeping apart for us, we do it out of necessity.
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my ex boyfriend was awful to share a bed with. He would sleep diagonally, with his head on MY pillow! ARGH! very annoying. And he didn’t really try to change, one of the reasons he is now my ex!
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After the first night I spent with my now husband, he was such a terrible sleeper i told my friends there was no way I could even consider him as a possible boyfriend!! To compromise we now spend maybe two nights per week sleeping apart so we can catch up on sleep and spend the other nights together
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I love sharing a bed with my fiance and we mostly sleep well next to each other. However, we’re both fairly quiet, unassuming sleepers. If either one of us was being kept awake night after night, I hope we’d be able to discuss the possibility of separate bedrooms.
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Think when you find your soulmate you go with the flow – come on you are married share a bed – not difficult.
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You sound very much like someone who has never experienced much sleep-deprivation. If only life was as black and white as in your simple little world.
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We have been sleeping in separate bedrooms since I became pregnant with our first child (now 3.5). I just couldn’t sleep during my pregnancy so I’d get up and go to the spare bedroom to sleep. Then when bub came along, hubby would sleep in the spare room so I could feed bub during the night and not disturb him and he could still function properly at work (he’s a doctor). But we never reverted back to sleeping in the same bed again. We both LOVE our own beds and bedrooms. We are still very intimate and enjoy sharing a bed together … UNTIL it’s time to sleep. I can’t recommend this highly enough if one or both couples are struggling with sleep. It has mostly definitely been the saviour in our relationship and there is nothing, NOTHING to be ashamed of in having separate bedrooms.
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My husband and I have slept in separate rooms now for about 3 years. It’s absolute BLISS, especially as a got the king sized bed
The only trouble is that we are both so used to sleeping on our own that when we go away on holiday, we have to get a 3 bedroom serviced apartment – one room for me, one for him, and one for our 1 yr old, as even she keeps both of us awake with her baby noises throughout the night. My friends thought this arrangement was really strange at first, but they’ve become used to it now.
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Fantastic idea! My husband has headphones listening to music when I am trying to sleep. I can still hear the music and it drives me nuts (also because I think it is very anti-social for him to have headphones in bed!). He also stretches out in his sleep- sometimes his legs end up way over onto my side.
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thanks so much for this article. my boyfriend and i dont live together and dont stay at each others houses because we are both terrrible sleepers; we take ages to fall asleep and wake again easily. and he needs something crazy like 9 hours to feel rested! we joke that if we moved in together it would need to be separate bedrooms, so glad to hear other people actually do it.
i have felt worried that we are odd somehow or that we just need to learn how to do it, so glad to hear relationships can still work without sleeping in the same bed.
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This is a great idea – if we had a spare bedroom (the 2nd bedroom is full of bookshelves and computer desks), it would get used at least once every few weeks.
Most of the time I like sharing the bed with him – eg keeping our feet in contact as we fall asleep – but sometimes it’s a nuisance. He’s a chronic insomniac and falling asleep is a delicate situation, so I keep clear until he’s sound asleep or go to bed well before him. He’s also more snuggly at night than I am – often I’ve complained in the morning that I was right on the edge and had to tell him several times to move over, only for him to say he was just cuddling up. And I’m a hotter sleeper than him (hot flushes perhaps?) so this ‘snuggliness’ is so sweaty! Yes I know I’ve got my own sleeping faults, but I can only speak for myself LOL.
I think a king single or double in a spare bedroom would be lovely…
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I have been going through the EXACT situation for the last few years. My husband performs amazing gymnastic feats in his sleep (which he would complain that he is too crippled to execute in his waking life) and even provides his own rip-roaring snoring soundtrack.
I am a night owl and not a great sleeper anyway, so any kind of rejuvenating slumber has eluded me for years. Not long ago, however, I was forced to make a stand in order to preserve my health (and sanity). I now sleep in another room, probably every second night. It has definitely made a big difference to my health and wellness…however, I did go through a lot of grief with my husband who believed I was over-reacting (I mean he couldn’t be THAT hard to share a bed with, surely?) and somehow devaluing our relationship!
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We share a king size bed so it’s all good now but when we had the queen my husband drove me crazy cos he is a full on snuggler – he still does it but not as much now.
I do have my own room though – for my clothes.
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I’m at the start of the trying to convince a newish boyfriend that sleeping separately is ok. Yes, I love the snuggling and the cuddling, but when its time to sleep I really dislike being touched. I’m a light sleeper and have rheumatoid arthritis so its hard for me to get comfortable enough to sleep well at the best of times. Having a boyfriend who feels the constant need to be touching me somehow rather complicates things. It’s a really hard topic to discuss with him without feeling like I’m being cold/mean!
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I didn’t want to sleep in separate rooms after learning that my now fiance is a very loud snorer and often stays up late reading, so I quickly learnt to sleep with ear plugs and an eye mask. I now enjoy blissful cocoon-like sleeps every single night in the same bed. Highly recommend it.
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software-man has to race to get to sleep ahead of me – my (really bad!) snoring will prevent him from being able to get to sleep if i drop off first
heehee. and i chase him across the bed for cuddles when it’s cold – he ends up too hot, and hangs off the edge of the bed before shoving me back across to my side – it’s kinda funny that i’m less than half his size, but can shove him out of bed.
which i guess is a good sign!
although he hasn’t had enough problems to want to sleep separately – in fact, when i’m sick (flu or food poisoning or whatever) i’ll go sleep on the lounge cos i’m up and down all night, and he gets really sad that he’s sleeping alone
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I used to be the snorer, and then had a jaw re-shape (for medical reasons) and lost about 5kg, and hey presto! Snoring diminished. Now it’s my husband who snores! Oh well, he’s got a decade of sleep to catch up on, I suppose…
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I cherish my time in bed with my partner. I love our little chats before we fall asleep. I love his snuggles in the middle of the night. To the point where I can’t sleep if he’s not in bed with me
But I also respect a persons need to sleep and if you need to do it alone, you need to do it alone! I think as long as the intimacy is maintained in the relationship then it’s fine!
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My husband and I have slept in separate beds for years now, if he doesn’t snore I get an OK night’s sleep, but when he snores (which is most nights) I wake up soooo cranky in the morning and can barely function during the day. Lots of people think we mustn’t be a close couple, but we actually are and we get on better when we’ve both had sleep than when we are sleep deprived and crabby.
A king sized bed has made the sleeping experience better, like one of the posters below I in our queen sized bed I always woke up with a cricked neck from sleeping facing away from him as I hate being breathed on in the night. But in the king size you barely know another person is there (unless they are snoring like chainsaw!).
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My husband and I have been sleeping in seperate beds for about 5 months now, due to my pregnancy-snoring. DH was struggling to sleep and cope with it, even though he himself has sleep apnea. Its had good and bad points – when I can’t sleep at night I don’t need to worry about keeping him awake with my tossing and turning or reading for hours in the middle of the night, but we both have really missed the intimacy and our routine of going to sleep together and waking up together. Bubs is due in the next week so hopefully things will get back to normal very soon! If my snoring doesn’t stop I will be heading off to get tested for sleep apnea also (it runs in my family).
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I spent eight years of hell sleeping with my previous partner who snored, thrashed about all night and continually pushed me out of bed but always woke up refreshed so it was my problem right?!?!
I now have a partner who is my perfect sleeping match. We cuddle for a while before retiring happily to our own sides of the bed. Heaven!!!
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You know what? I sleep so much better when a man is not in my bed. My husband used to fart constantly, and it was really upsetting to me – smelly, gross and he stopped apologising too, so it was bad manners.
I like my bed all to myself and I only have to smell my own…bad feet!
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I giggled
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I don’t live with my boyfriend yet, and I always feel guilty about this, but I am sometimes happy when he goes home – I get my bed back!!
Makes me feel like a selfish bitch, but I need my sleep and I never get a proper one with someone else there.
Separate rooms sound like a great idea when we live together!
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My partner and I have been together 8 years and slept in separate rooms for about 3 years now. I used to and probably still would love sleeping with him but since we have had kids, 2 boys within 15 months that _both_ co-sleep, I’ve shifted to the spare room. We have a king sized bed but I was still constantly annoyed and as a result, waking up shirty too. He loves the kids in the bed and it honestly doesn’t bother him if he is woken up by a foot in the face or a cry for a cup of milk. I used to feel guilty but no I don’t, I reailse sometimes you gotta do what you gotta do!
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so the kids sleep with him then? cool!
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Wow Lola, I have been with my husband for eight years too and also have two boys 15 months apart! (They are 2.5yrs and 16mths). For the past 3 or so months we have been in separate beds because of his snoring. I love having the king sized bed to myself and get a way better nights sleep. The snoring makes me want to put a pillow over his head and I wake up incredibly grumpy and have a horrible day the next day. I never tell anyone that we sleep apart and if anyone notices the guest bed with rumpled sheets I just say that he sleeps in that bed the night before he leaves to work (works away on a roster).
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My grandparents had one bed each but they are the only ones I’ve heard of who have done it.
It would be great for me and my boyfriend though as he loves to have the fan on full strength and I am happy with having it on number 1. Not an issue that keeps us up at night though and none of us snores:)
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I am a big advocate of separate doonas! We share a bed, but not a doona.
I am a doona hog. I wrap myself up in it. Also a sleep hugger, have to sleep with something in my arms. Started with a teddy, then moved on to Belle (cat) and she only stopped being my thing to hug when Husband was having a reaction to her fur in the bed. So now I hug my doona. Husband is a bit too big to fit within my arms like a teddy bear, and he objected to my hugging his arm
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I sleep with my arms crossed over, wrapped around something, every night.
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i think you need one of these:
http://www.dealsdirect.com.au/p/the-boyfriend-pillow-54-50hcm/?cm_mmc=Shopping%20Comparison-_-Shopping-_-Manchester-_-Bed%20Essentials%20Pillows&utm_source=shopping.com&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=NA
heehee
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Everyone loves a creepy half muppet, but how could it compare to this?
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Clearly that is not meant to be upside down.
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Aww. Love! Sharing the bed with the kitty beats hubby any day.
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In Europe, or at least in Germany, separate doonas on a big bed is the norm. I was rather surprised to see this, but it does make sens.
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I love how they have separate doonas in Germany! Unfortunately they usually also just have single beds pushed together which I find really uncomfortable.
I keep a spare blanket in my bedside table drawer for doona-hogging emergencies! When my partner is asleep I can’t move him at all so it’s much easier to just grab my own blanket rather than wrestle the doona out from under him.
MissT, I have to hug something too! I have a toy giraffe
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I’m a sleep hugger too Miss T. I use a large firm teddy bear, but a pillow will do when I’m away
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Fellas, get yourself tested for sleep apnea. I did. Seemed I had a chronic problem that not only disrupted my wife’s sleep but also brought on risk of heart issues, depression and other probs. As for the tiredness, I could never shake it off, no matter how many hours I slept. For a year I’ve used a sleep apnea machine + mask and quickly got used to it. Result: I have more energy and I’m brighter and more energetic, and dearly beloved notices a distinct lack of my former gruffness in the mornings.
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I wish my father had your enthusiasm, or acceptance. I guarantee that he has sleep apnea, but he’s not keen on the mask. Small price to pay for healthier living, but it doesn’t seem to get through to him
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My husband and I have been married nearly 22 years and he has a huge snoring problem. I put up with it for decades. Then there’s me…known for the 180′ “fish flop” (thank goodness we don’t have a waterbed anymore) and when I have a sleepless night, I like to read to get myself back to sleep. It’s been about 2-3 years that we’ve slept separately and it’s no big deal. There’s nothing wrong with it. We still love eachother, we still have plenty of intimate time. We’re humans…we need sleep to function!
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I am so lucky, my bf is a terrible snorer, so am I, but he falls asleep literally in 2 mins whereas I take 15-20. But his snoring doesn’t bother me so we share the bed fine. The only problem I had was he would start asleep in the middle, then during the night inch more onto my side so I had no room. I’ve started sleeping right up close to him though so by morning we’re both on our own sides.
My funniest sleep story is we crashed in a lounge room after a party with another couple, bf and I snored in rounds so there was constant noise so our friends got NO sleep. Poor things.
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Living with someone is definitely a compromise situation. After 37 years, we decided that we have a spare bed and whoever feels that they are lacking in a good night sleep they use the spare bed. I always stay up later than my husband ( I watch TV or read) he gets up early in the morning ( and sneaks out to not wake me)
Most nights we have little problems, but there are always those occasions where he snores, or I am restless. We did try the separate room thing but found that we got too lazy to go to the next room for cuddles and sex.
Beside how often do you wake in the middle of the night and think “yep, I will wake him up”!! so you don’t always have to have the separate rooms or together as the only alternatives.
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Love this idea! Most of the time I like sharing the bed, except when one of us is tossing & turning & snoring.
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I sleep on the couch because I SNORE badly. I’ve been to sleep clinics and a cure isn’t really in sight. Am I the only woman in the world with this affliction? It’s very embarassing, especially if I go away with friends or anything like that
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Not at all! My mother is renowned for her snoring. To the point where I can only describe it as a whipper snipper next to you! And she snores no matter what, front, back and sides! She has been to sleep clinics as well an has been told other then the noise there is nothing wrong (no apnea etc). My fathers only saving grace is he falls asleep really quickly and easily so it’s usually not a problem. We have all turned the problem into a little joke for her sake. It’s not something he can change so we all aim to see the lighter side of it now
I wouldn’t stress if I were you. Most people understand and if you make a light hearted pass at it people lighten up 
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i snore, but that’s because i was born 6 weeks early and my nasal passages weren’t very wide (when i was a 6 month old baby i keept the entire house awake with my snoring). since breaking my nose late last year and having reconstructive surgery though, i think it’s gotten better, cos they widened out my nasal cavities……
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I’ve heard that having your adenoids removed can drastically help snoring. Not sure if this is true though. Might be worth a visit to an ENT.
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You’re not alone Kate. I snore too. I hate it but I’ve had tests and there’s nothing I can do about it.
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Love your post………. I do not sleep with my husband either because of his inability to sleep and if I dare mentioned this to my friends or workmates they would be shocked. I hear women complain about their husbands snoring etc and I think why do you just not move into another room I never promised in my vows to never get any sleep. Why should we give up our sleep because it is the thing that couples should do (sleep in the same bed).
In this day an age where nearly anything goes this should not be looked down upon.
Here’s to a good night sleep
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Everytime I read or hear people talking about partners snoring or sleep battles I bless myself & am so very very thankful that my partner doesn’t snore (YAY!) and we tend to both always get a good night sleep with spooning too!
But I’ve had relationships with snorer’s in the past, I’m always sympathetic!!
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Here here! I think this is one of the reasons I am single. Sleep is my drug of choice.
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Hell yeah! Can never get enough..
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My husband and I regularly accidently punch or elbow each other in the face at night. We have a queen size but I think we need to upsize to avoid injury
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I think this (sleeping seperately) is an utterly fabulous idea and I can’t find a single fault with it… except if you are short of rooms in which to make it possible
As soon as one of our kids frees up a “guest room” I’ll be making it into a seperate room for my darling hubby, no qualms about it. Already we barely sleep together; he sleeps most of the night on the couch (his choice). When he does come to bed, in the early hours of the morning, I have my crappiest sleep from then on.
How lovely to wake up refreshed and avoid those nightly arguments over snoring! I can’t wait.
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Me and my partner just recently started sleeping in separate beds due to his insomnia and he thought he would sleep better alone. He did, but as the weeks have gone on I have felt a slight shift in our relationship. We are less intimate and as a result we feel like flatmates rather than lovers. I didn’t think it would change the relationship but it has. But I know he needs his sleep for his mental state so will put up with it for a bit longer.
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We too slept separately for 6 months, at my instigation, mainly due to his snoring. I, too felt the shift in our relationship for the worse. I finally solved our problems by finding the perfect earplugs – Mack’s. I’m in Australia and had to order them from the states, but I now get a full night’s sleep and we are intimate and close again. I had tried many, many types of earplugs – for those of you who have tried earplugs without success – don’t give up if you would like to find a solution that keeps you in the same bed. I also didn’t like our young children seeing us separating ourselves (not sure why – just didn’t feel right).
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My husband is an insomniac, has been for years (since before we met) so there’s not a simple solution regarding being stressed over something in particular. He would prefer to sleep alone and there have been times when I’ve gone to the spare room but I hate it. To me that’s housemates, not a marriage. He works lates and I’m often in bed when he gets home from work so we already spend less time together than other couples. I crave intimacy and feel rejected when he suggests I go to the spare room.
We have a nine-month-old daughter and he finds it impossible to sleep through her little ‘gremlin’ noises as we call them. I was in the spare room with her in a bassinette next to me for a few months and I learned to sleep through those little noises and only wake when she cries (or I’d be a zombie by now). I swear he thinks I’m a bad mother because I don’t respond to the snuffles and sighs. If I’m in the spare room (next to her nursery), there’s no need for the baby monitor to be on in our room so he would prefer me to be in there on weeknights. He’s started using earplugs but they don’t always work, I’ll suggest this brand to him though.
I also don’t want her growing up seeing us living separately in the same house and since we’re planning baby#2 in the next year, if it’s a boy we won’t have a spare room!
After saying all this – he DOES love cuddling as much as me, before and after sleep, it’s just the actual sleeping he’d rather do alone. I think my issue is that if we had separate beds the cuddling would stop too, given his working hours.
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Hopefully when the stress (or whatever) that’s causing his insomnia eases up, he’ll also be in a better mood and feel more like sex…
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My husband’s snoring is horrendous, so bad in fact that when I was pregnant i demanded he go do a sleep study as I refused to deal with a newborn and snoring at the same time. Unfortunately as it turned out he has severe sleep apnoea, bizarre given that he is a 6ft 2″ beanpole! Anyway now he has to wear a cpap mask to bed…there’s nothing like a newborn and a mask that makes you sound like darth vader and look like you are going scuba diving to kill the bedroom passion!
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It’s a great crusade to be on. I’m on it too. My husband and I do not sleep together. I put up with his snoring for years and he put up with my kicking him for snoring for just as long. We moved to separate beds after children came along and sleep was so much more precious that keeping up some cooked up appearance that sleeping in the same bed is the only right way. It has not impacted out relationship sleeping separately. Everything is still just as normal as it would be if we slept together- Except we don;t wake up angry at each-other after another ratty nights sleep.
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YESSSSSSSSSSSS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
My bf and I have been living together for four months and have separate rooms AND BEDS!
BEST. DECISION. EVER!
EDIT: And don’t even get me started on how good it is not to have to share a wardrobe..!
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Thankyou thankyou thankyou for this article. I have been suffering for 12 years with a snoring, tossing and turning partner who thinks that sleeping apart will be the end of our relationship. I am so sick of sleeping badly. I am making him read this as soon as he gets home!
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My partner and I have 2 rooms – it’s fantastic. I have a bad back and move around a lot while he is a light sleeper. We generally have weekends together plus any night we do something special. We don’t argue about cleaning or lack of sleep. We are conscious of the separation and if one of us is unhappy about it, the default is to come back together.
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I LOVE sleeping by myself and when hubby is away I sleep 10 x better than when he is home but I don’t think I would like sleeping in seperate rooms when he is home – I know he definitely wouldn’t like it. Don’t get me wrong – I love my husband dearly, but I find I don’t sleep well with him. He is a hot sleeper and loves to be touching (spooning). While this is lovely pre-sleep I can’t sleep with him wrapped around me – makes me sound horrible… but he is double my size! I’m barley 5ft and he is 6ft 6″ and more than 40kg heavier than me and so when he is asleep he becomes a dead weight that I’m stuck underneath! He also snores.
Our solution was a king bed. We’ve only had it a couple of months but I love it. That way we can have a cuddle and then I can sneak over to my side of the bed where he can barely reach me.
I can totally understand sleeping seperately but for us I hope we can continue with this happy medium without someone having to move out. But do whatever works for you!
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I am still trying to get my husband to appreciate how heavy his arm is & that slinging it across my stomach is rather uncomfortable. I hear you, Ali on the disentangling & sneaking over to the other side of the bed.
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Our favourite line in summer, in bed, when we’re trying to sleep but it is so hot our fan just won’t cut it:
“I love you, but please don’t touch me.”
It also helps that we have a giant king sized bed.
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You know the song ‘it’s too darn hot!’? Find it, play it, I bet you and your bf will have a laugh…
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I always find this interesting… given that I’m trying so hard to teach my kids to sleep independently and yet I, a grown woman, get to share my bed with someone!
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I have no problems sharing a bed with hubby however really enjoy having the bed to myself for an afternoon nap. We aren’t fussy sleepers even share the bed with our 2 little dogs, our only must have is air con we both struggle when it’s too hot.
My parents both have their own bedrooms. They have done for the last 6 + years. My dad is a terrible snorer! Add to that teeth grinding & deadly elbows. I wouldn’t say they have a perfect marriage but it works for them….
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I just felt some of my own shame lift hearing someone else sleeps with 2 dogs in their bed!!
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As one half of a couple that live 1.5 hours apart, I love the nights we actually get to cuddle and share a bed together.
However it’s not all roses. He occasionally grinds his teeth so ferociously that I have to pinch him and roll him over to stop it. Usually he stops straight away and we both go back to sleep.
I on the other hand am a shocking sleep talker and walker. And often I’ll wake up half out of bed with him grabbing my wrist saying “It’s a dream, where are you going, come back to bed”… My jabbering throughout the night also drives him crazy. Apparently the other night I was sleeping-crying and it totally freaked him out – I have no memory of it.
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Our house is always a game of musical beds, ever since our son was born and got big enough to wriggle and sleep across the bed- head on Dad, feet on me. If I’ve learnt anything about sleep it’s that you should do whatever it takes to get enough
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As someone who grew up with a snorer (Dad) in the next room sounding like a 747 taking off, I have no problems sharing a bed with my husband!
I am lucky in that I generally fall asleep quickly, before the other half has started snoring. Even if he starts snoring first, I can usually deal enough to ignore. I can even sleep with the furchild on my feet (good in winter – saves on heating), who also snores.
We recently shared a hotel room with a good friend to save on costs, and when said friend fell asleep and promptly began snoring, husband was amazed that anyone could put up with it. And he thought I’d been exaggerating all these years – was good for him to get his own medicine!
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My husband and I have been married for 8 years and have never slept a whole night together due to his shocking snoring. We have slept in separate bedrooms for at least 6 years now. It’s the only way I am guaranteed a good night’s sleep. I do get a bit concerned when the kid’s friends come over to play but we all just refer to it as the ‘spare room’ and the kids know how much he snores because they also get woken up by it!
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My husband and I sleep in the same bed but we have very different sleeping habits. He will stay up until 2-3am and then drag himself to bed but I need to be in bed by latest midnight (doesn’t always happen!)
Plus I’m a very light sleeper and husband wakes me up when he comes to bed! Or I’ll wake up myself, see he isn’t in bed and go and bring him in or have to shout for him cause he’s fallen asleep on the couch!
I need my sleep more than he does so I always tell him if we ever get a bigger house we’re getting separate beds! Lol