Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do think this is a you problem. Wear ear plugs while you sleep if you don’t want to wake up, and use a white noise machine. Or just get up and leave for work. Sometimes I wake up super early and just go to work. Dh takes the kids to school anyways. Then I have more time in the evening to come home earlier.
I feel like people are missing the fact that OP has kids she takes to school. They are suggesting things like going to the gym, or just leaving for work, when she clearly needs to be home for childcare if her DH is leaving early.
That’s the problem with this site and many of its posters. They use their own narratives as advice instead of the information provided, or they claim it’s a lie, or whatever.
Just go to work, OP, forget about your kids. Surely you can wake up, get dressed, drive to the gym, get a workout in, drive home, all within the HOUR before her husband leaves for work.
People are so weird.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do think this is a you problem. Wear ear plugs while you sleep if you don’t want to wake up, and use a white noise machine. Or just get up and leave for work. Sometimes I wake up super early and just go to work. Dh takes the kids to school anyways. Then I have more time in the evening to come home earlier.
I feel like people are missing the fact that OP has kids she takes to school. They are suggesting things like going to the gym, or just leaving for work, when she clearly needs to be home for childcare if her DH is leaving early.
Anonymous wrote:I do think this is a you problem. Wear ear plugs while you sleep if you don’t want to wake up, and use a white noise machine. Or just get up and leave for work. Sometimes I wake up super early and just go to work. Dh takes the kids to school anyways. Then I have more time in the evening to come home earlier.
Anonymous wrote:My partner brings me coffee in bed, and then retreats to his solitude.
I agree with other posters that this is a convo for the two of you to have. We can't know what he considers disruptive. You sound reasonable and kind, a good foundation for working something like this out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I'd be mad that my husband is waking me before my natural wake time, OP! My sleep is sacrosanct.
I'd ask him to make less noise.
Someone has to wake up first to deal with kids, dogs, and get ready for work. It isn't that common that both people get to wake up at their natural wake time. He likely isn't waking up at his natural wake time either but the dogs need to be let out and he has to get ready for work. And for a lot of people it is movement, not noise that wakes them up. She said he goes downstairs to shower and get dressed to avoid waking her so he is clearly being considerate.
PP you replied to. I'm a night owl and my husband is an early bird: he does the morning routine, I do the laundry and walk the dogs at night. After difficult years making too much noise in the morning, he learned to be extra quiet. He has ADHD and tends to forget how loud he is, so it took a few years, whereas I walk like a mouse and know how to navigate the squeaky stairs.
Sorry, this post triggered a memory of that time![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Could you imagine if the roles were reversed and a woman was the one who wanted solitude in the AM and expected her husband to just lie in bed for an hour? We’d be all over her for being ridiculous.
Your husband is being ridiculous.
I know. It’s actually made me think twice about my own marriage. It’s like OP isn’t even welcome in her own home anymore. After her husband chooses to interrupt her sleep and wake her up an hour early every morning. Unbelievable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I'd be mad that my husband is waking me before my natural wake time, OP! My sleep is sacrosanct.
I'd ask him to make less noise.
Someone has to wake up first to deal with kids, dogs, and get ready for work. It isn't that common that both people get to wake up at their natural wake time. He likely isn't waking up at his natural wake time either but the dogs need to be let out and he has to get ready for work. And for a lot of people it is movement, not noise that wakes them up. She said he goes downstairs to shower and get dressed to avoid waking her so he is clearly being considerate.
Anonymous wrote:Talk
To
Him
Anonymous wrote:Could you imagine if the roles were reversed and a woman was the one who wanted solitude in the AM and expected her husband to just lie in bed for an hour? We’d be all over her for being ridiculous.
Your husband is being ridiculous.