Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:This has been going on for months.
He snores, LOUD. It generally wakes me up some time between 1 am and 3 am, and then I can't get back to sleep. When I wake and hear it, I tell him, he adjusts his sleeping position a bit and snoring stops....for about 2 minutes. Then it starts again. I tell him again. Repeat. Usually I just give up after about 4 or 5 rounds of this and just come to terms with the fact that I'm not getting any more sleep that night.
He denies he snores as much as he does. He says he realizes that he snores but it wakes him up to and he immediately stops. Wrong. He goes on and on for hours.
We have no spare room/guest room. I am seriously considering getting a hotel room tonight. I haven't got a full night's sleep in months and I'm exhausted. I get next to nothing done all day because I'm so tired. This is worse than when we had newborn babies.
I just need to vent. Thank you.
This is probably the best reason I've read for buying a house with an additional bedroom so you can sleep in it.
Not really, my DH is a horrible snorer too and we can hear from all over the house. The basement is the only space it doesn't travel too. If only he'd lose 10lbs....the snoring would disappear
Dumb and grossly exaggerated. Sleeping in a different bedroom (especially if it has a few walls between yours and his) will drastically reduce the noise. If you use earplugs, I guarantee even the lightest sleeper won't hear him.
NP here. Either you're partially deaf or your spouse is a light snorer. I guuarantee you I wear earplugs and can STILL hear DH snore. When we visit my in-laws, I can hear my FIL snore in the room next door. Even when I have earplugs.
And by the way, earplugs keep me up at night, too. Because I have tinnitus and wearing earplugs makes the ringing sound louder, which is a bummer, especially because it still doesn't drown out the snoring.
I am, needless to say, an extremely light sleeper.