Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We sleep separately and I find it hard. I miss falling asleep in DH arms or waking up to some morning adult time.
This feels like it was written by a husband
I did not write the above. I"m a man.
I will only date women who could write something like that. After almost a decade together, my ex wife asked me to sleep in the guest room. Her request coincided with a big reduction in her sex drive. Yes, I snore, but most women I've met since divorce can deal with it. I use an anti-snoring mouth guard, which is good enough for most women but not my ex wife. Separate bedrooms may have destroyed my marriage. Yes, she needed to sleep, but she stopped prioritizing us as a couple and the change in sleeping arrangements was part of a big change in her priorities.
What is your weight/body fat percentage?
I don't know. I'm definitely somewhat overweight. Some women don't find me attractive but quite a few do. I basically look like a former football player. Losing weight reduces snoring a little. The mouth guard reduced it more.
This sounds like a lot of man mumbo jumbo justification for "I'm extremely fat". A lot of these football players would be obese by any standard, and they need to be in order to be able to run into other 300 lb men on the football field. But it has about the same sexual appeal (to women) as a sumo wrestler. No one finds that attractive, and if it's literally causing you to snore and have issues breathing... it's bad.
Maybe that's how my ex felt about me.
Now she's with a guy who's thinner than I am but ten years older than I am and dumb. I don't know about his snoring. I'm with a woman who's ten years younger than she is and smart, and also better looking. She also sleeps through my snoring.
That's not the ending I wanted when I married my ex.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We sleep separately and I find it hard. I miss falling asleep in DH arms or waking up to some morning adult time.
This feels like it was written by a husband
I did not write the above. I"m a man.
I will only date women who could write something like that. After almost a decade together, my ex wife asked me to sleep in the guest room. Her request coincided with a big reduction in her sex drive. Yes, I snore, but most women I've met since divorce can deal with it. I use an anti-snoring mouth guard, which is good enough for most women but not my ex wife. Separate bedrooms may have destroyed my marriage. Yes, she needed to sleep, but she stopped prioritizing us as a couple and the change in sleeping arrangements was part of a big change in her priorities.
Anonymous wrote:Truth is if you're in a loving or great marriage not sleeping together sucks. But, most marriages after a while aren't all roses and flowers. I know plenty of people who sleep separate or even sleep in the same bed but they do not cuddle at all not even close. My parents slept in two rooms because my dad would get home very late from work around 1-2am and would sleep in so my mom would sleep in the guest room. After years and years it became normal.
Anonymous wrote:It impacts the relationship. No way around it.
If the relationship is loving, intimate, very physically affectionate, has plenty of good sex, and is all around really solid, it might be ok. If not -- it could be the beginning of the end. Or of significant atrophy, anyway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We sleep separately and I find it hard. I miss falling asleep in DH arms or waking up to some morning adult time.
This feels like it was written by a husband
I did not write the above. I"m a man.
I will only date women who could write something like that. After almost a decade together, my ex wife asked me to sleep in the guest room. Her request coincided with a big reduction in her sex drive. Yes, I snore, but most women I've met since divorce can deal with it. I use an anti-snoring mouth guard, which is good enough for most women but not my ex wife. Separate bedrooms may have destroyed my marriage. Yes, she needed to sleep, but she stopped prioritizing us as a couple and the change in sleeping arrangements was part of a big change in her priorities.
What is your weight/body fat percentage?
I don't know. I'm definitely somewhat overweight. Some women don't find me attractive but quite a few do. I basically look like a former football player. Losing weight reduces snoring a little. The mouth guard reduced it more.
This sounds like a lot of man mumbo jumbo justification for "I'm extremely fat". A lot of these football players would be obese by any standard, and they need to be in order to be able to run into other 300 lb men on the football field. But it has about the same sexual appeal (to women) as a sumo wrestler. No one finds that attractive, and if it's literally causing you to snore and have issues breathing... it's bad.
Maybe that's how my ex felt about me.
Now she's with a guy who's thinner than I am but ten years older than I am and dumb. I don't know about his snoring. I'm with a woman who's ten years younger than she is and smart, and also better looking. She also sleeps through my snoring.
That's not the ending I wanted when I married my ex.
Anonymous wrote:It definitely impacts the relationship although I can understand necessity. Why do youbwa to sleep seperately?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We sleep separately and I find it hard. I miss falling asleep in DH arms or waking up to some morning adult time.
This feels like it was written by a husband
I did not write the above. I"m a man.
I will only date women who could write something like that. After almost a decade together, my ex wife asked me to sleep in the guest room. Her request coincided with a big reduction in her sex drive. Yes, I snore, but most women I've met since divorce can deal with it. I use an anti-snoring mouth guard, which is good enough for most women but not my ex wife. Separate bedrooms may have destroyed my marriage. Yes, she needed to sleep, but she stopped prioritizing us as a couple and the change in sleeping arrangements was part of a big change in her priorities.
What is your weight/body fat percentage?
I don't know. I'm definitely somewhat overweight. Some women don't find me attractive but quite a few do. I basically look like a former football player. Losing weight reduces snoring a little. The mouth guard reduced it more.
This sounds like a lot of man mumbo jumbo justification for "I'm extremely fat". A lot of these football players would be obese by any standard, and they need to be in order to be able to run into other 300 lb men on the football field. But it has about the same sexual appeal (to women) as a sumo wrestler. No one finds that attractive, and if it's literally causing you to snore and have issues breathing... it's bad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We sleep separately and I find it hard. I miss falling asleep in DH arms or waking up to some morning adult time.
This feels like it was written by a husband
I did not write the above. I"m a man.
I will only date women who could write something like that. After almost a decade together, my ex wife asked me to sleep in the guest room. Her request coincided with a big reduction in her sex drive. Yes, I snore, but most women I've met since divorce can deal with it. I use an anti-snoring mouth guard, which is good enough for most women but not my ex wife. Separate bedrooms may have destroyed my marriage. Yes, she needed to sleep, but she stopped prioritizing us as a couple and the change in sleeping arrangements was part of a big change in her priorities.
What is your weight/body fat percentage?
I don't know. I'm definitely somewhat overweight. Some women don't find me attractive but quite a few do. I basically look like a former football player. Losing weight reduces snoring a little. The mouth guard reduced it more.
Anonymous wrote:How many of you sleep separate from your partner/spouse? My DH *HATES* to sleep separate and kicks up a huge stink about it, claiming he's unable to get rest in a separate bed. I prefer sleeping alone and don't see it as a big deal. He says it's abnormal and he loves to cuddle and wants to wake up next to each other. How have you handled this issue?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We sleep separately and I find it hard. I miss falling asleep in DH arms or waking up to some morning adult time.
This feels like it was written by a husband
I did not write the above. I"m a man.
I will only date women who could write something like that. After almost a decade together, my ex wife asked me to sleep in the guest room. Her request coincided with a big reduction in her sex drive. Yes, I snore, but most women I've met since divorce can deal with it. I use an anti-snoring mouth guard, which is good enough for most women but not my ex wife. Separate bedrooms may have destroyed my marriage. Yes, she needed to sleep, but she stopped prioritizing us as a couple and the change in sleeping arrangements was part of a big change in her priorities.
What is your weight/body fat percentage?
Anonymous wrote:My husband snores like a freight train, which made a sleep divorce inevitable. We're overextended and can't handle lots of interrupted sleep, so we agreed it was necessary. We both miss the cuddling and emotional intimacy piece, and have to be mindful to address that in other ways. Until there's a cure for snoring, not much else we can do. (DH can't handle sleeping with a CPAP).
Anonymous wrote:My BF snores and won't see a doctor. I end up in the guest room or on the sofa and he gets upset that I didn't wake him up to move but when I do he gets sassy and argues that he wasn't even asleep. I wish he would just sleep at his own house but would be so upset if I suggest it. LOL