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New Trend: married, sleeping separately

alexmst

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Dec 27, 2004
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http://www.cnn.com/2008/LIVING/personal/09/12/lw.sleep.alone.when.married/index.html


It was the sock in the jaw that finally did it.

An online survey found 1 in 4 people regularly retreats to a spare room or sofa to get a good night's sleep.

"We were lying in bed spooning when he had an elbow spasm and punched me in the jaw," says Barbara, a 55-year-old graphic designer from Lansing, Michigan, who asked that her last name not be used.

"I was already so sleep-deprived from his twitching and snoring that I was psychotic. After that, I just told him, 'It's all over, honey.'"

Barbara's husband of 22 years, who asked not to be identified, moved into another bedroom. They're among many loving couples who -- because of snoring, restless legs, opposite schedules or other nocturnal difficulties -- have decided to sleep apart.

A growing trend

How many couples sleep solo in a double bed?

A 2001 random telephone survey of 1,004 adults conducted by the National Sleep Foundation found that 12 percent of married Americans slept alone; a similar 2005 survey of 1,506 people found that number had jumped to 23 percent.

In addition, a March online survey of 1,408 couples conducted by the Sleep Council of England found that 1 in 4 people regularly retreats to a spare room or sofa to get a good night's sleep.

The preference for separate spaces has even begun to affect home design. According to the National Association of Home Builders, there's been a steady increase in the number of requests for "two-master bedroom" homes since 1990, prompting the organization to predict that by 2015, 60 percent of all custom upscale homes will be built with two "owner suites."

Paige Barr, 35, a New York City casting director, says she sleeps apart from her husband, Daniel Craft, 37, for two reasons: his sleep apnea and what Kramer on "Seinfeld" called "the jimmy leg."

"You know when you're just about to fall asleep and you jerk yourself awake? He does that like 36 times an hour for seven hours, 200 times a night," she says. "His hand will jerk or his leg will flail, plus he snores super loud."

Barr, who's lived with her husband, an online content provider, for five years, say they've never been able to sleep together.

"If I were forced to sleep with him, I would break up with him and kill myself," she says. "I need my sleep."

Bad for marriage?

Although many couples say separate rooms have been a blessing (Barr says her friends are jealous of her sleeping arrangement), Minnesota clinical psychologist and marriage counselor William F. Harley Jr. warns sleeping separately could spell trouble.

"Whenever I see a couple wanting private time -- they want to be alone, they want their own friends, they don't want to feel like they're joined at the hip -- my immediate question is, 'What is it about being together that bothers you?'" says Harley, author of "Love Busters: Overcoming the Habits that Destroy Romantic Love." "My feeling is that sleeping together is a very, very important part of being integrated with each other."

Jason Holloway, 29, an estimator from Greenwood, Indiana, who slept on the couch for about six months while his wife, Rebecca, was pregnant, agrees that separate beds have a downside.

"I had the TV, I had the dogs with me," he says. "But I didn't feel 100 percent like I was part of the loop. I felt removed from the whole situation."

A new kind of marriage

But Stephanie Coontz, author of "Marriage: A History" and director of research and public education at the Council on Contemporary Families, a nonprofit research organization, says sleeping in separate beds in order to get a good night's rest is reasonable and revolutionary.

"In the early 20th century, there was this idea that when you were married, you shouldn't have a separate existence," she says. "But in the last 30 years, we've come up with something absolutely revolutionary that says there's more than one way to do marriage. ... People are saying there are lots of ways to have a happy marriage and even a good sex life."

Alisa Bowman, a 37-year-old freelance writer from Emmaus, Pennsylvania, says that sleeping apart from her husband Mark, 42, a few nights a week -- something that began five years ago when she was pregnant -- has made their marriage stronger.

"I'm a better mom and wife when I'm rested," says Bowman, who says she's always had trouble sleeping with another person in the room. "I also think it makes you appreciate each other more."

Sleeping apart hasn't hurt Scott Hepburn's marriage, either, says the 29-year-old copywriter from Charlotte, North Carolina, who sleeps alone five nights a week because he's a night owl and his wife, Carolyn, is an early bird.

"She teases me about it, but it's never been a major point of contention in our relationship," he says. "We actually have a lot of fun with it. When I do something stupid, she threatens to punish me by making me sleep in the same bed with her."

My place or yours?

Couples who keep separate rooms may get plenty of sleep, but are they getting anything else -- like sex?

Absolutely, says Barbara, wife of the sleepy slugger.

"We create time for each other," she says. "We have 'dates,' and to be honest, it's pretty romantic. We're both awake for one thing, as opposed to people who think they've been intimate but they've slept through the whole thing. Now it's like, 'My place or yours?'
 

dajodo2

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Dec 18, 2005
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Two years ago when my wife and I needed a new bed I wanted to get separate beds for our bedroom, like on the Flintstones.

She scoffed at the idea thinking that was abnormal for married people so we got a queen. I don't know why it's not like much else happens in our bedroom.

I hate sleeping with someone. You stay in a deep sleep longer without being brought out of it by your SO's tossing, turning, etc.

I'll have my own bed soon enough now though.

As soon as a bedroom was free from kids leaving the nest my dad moved out of the master bedroom (got the boot from my mom is likely more accurate) and has slept there since
 

KWI

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Nov 2, 2005
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A queen bed is not even big enough for me alone, let alone sharing with someone.


Well expect my cat and dog.................... Since we all know how much I baby them, lol. ;)
 

alexmst

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Dec 27, 2004
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I sleep alone in a King bed. Lots of room in case someone wants to spend the night...plus having a King makes my ego sleep soundly at night too :D
 

KWI

YES - I am FEMALE!!!
Nov 2, 2005
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alexmst said:
I sleep alone in a King bed. Lots of room in case someone wants to spend the night...plus having a King makes my ego sleep soundly at night too

Someone can spend the night, doesn't mean any sleeping is going on.....

Well there shouldn't be any sleeping going on, IMHO ;)
 

S.C. Joe

Client # 13
Nov 2, 2007
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Sounds kind of OK with me but I would still like to share the room...have like 2 queen beds and sometimes sleep together, sometimes not..but in the same room...expecily when the other is not feeling well so you are there if needed.

Over here, still sleep in a little double bed alone, gives me more space in the room..but I'm a thin shorter 5 foot 6 guy....double bed with 2 king pillows...king bed just seems way too big, queen are just right...unless for threesomes :p
 

Moraff

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Nov 14, 2003
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Don't know why they're calling it a new trend. I know several people in my parents and grandparent's generation that slept apart. Most of the time it was because one partner couldn't get proper sleep if they were together.

The guy in the article doesn't like it because he thinks the romance will die if the partners sleep apart, but IMO if one (or both) isn't able to get proper rest there will be more problems arising from it. Trust me, if your partner is regularly waking you up (even unintentionally) you aren't going to be harbouring thoughts of love for them. :)
 

Ref

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Oct 29, 2002
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KWI said:
A queen bed is not even big enough for me alone, let alone sharing with someone.
Kiarra, let me spend a night on your bed and your slide show (which is hot BTW) will feature a series of me on your bed.
 

train

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Jul 29, 2002
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There is a long list of incompatabilities:

1) Snoring
2) Constant moving
3) Different preferences of matress firmness
4) Temperature - room , blankets and body heat
5) Reading in bed
6) Illness of one partner
7) Small bladder in women or swollen prostate in men requiring getting up at night
8) different work/commute schedules

The only good reason to sleep together after the first 5 years of marriage is sex. Since that happens usually no more than 3 or 4 times a week and, for variety, half of those times should not be on a bed - why would you feel it necessary to sleep together ?
 

letscruise08

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Sep 11, 2008
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Moraff said:
Don't know why they're calling it a new trend. I know several people in my parents and grandparent's generation that slept apart. Most of the time it was because one partner couldn't get proper sleep if they were together.
Same here. Mainly because one stopped smoking and the other one didn't. Growing up seeing that, plus watching a lot of old 50s shows on Nick at Nite....I thought sleeping separately was halfway normal.
 
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