In the quiet darkness of their shared bedroom, she battles a relentless enemy—her husband’s thunderous snoring. Each night, sleep slips further away from her grasp, stolen by the cacophony that turns rest into an elusive dream, magnified by her own struggle with insomnia. The intimacy of sharing a bed, once a source of comfort, now feels like a painful compromise, tearing at the fragile threads of their togetherness.
Caught between love and desperation, she wrestles with guilt and longing. She knows how much their shared nights mean to him, but the cost to her well-being is profound. Despite his efforts and medical consultations, the simple truths of weight gain and nightly whiskey cast a shadow over their nights. Her heart aches with the question: is seeking solitude in sleep a betrayal, or a necessary act of self-preservation?

WIBTAH if I tell my husband I want to sleep in the spare room every night because of his snoring?




According to Dr. Charles Morin, a leading expert in cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBTI), chronic sleep deprivation significantly impairs cognitive function, emotional regulation, and overall physical health. In situations where a partner’s behavior directly causes sleep disruption, maintaining the sleeping arrangement against medical necessity is often detrimental to the relationship itself.
The situation highlights a conflict involving differing needs and poor communication regarding accommodation. The husband’s snoring is a modifiable behavior, linked to weight gain and nightly alcohol consumption (whiskey), which are factors he has acknowledged by seeing a doctor. The poster’s distress is valid; sleep is a biological requirement, not a luxury. While the husband values co-sleeping, this value cannot supersede the poster’s fundamental right to restorative sleep. The inability to nudge the partner suggests an established pattern where the needs of the snorer dictate the accommodation for both parties.
The poster is not the ‘Asshole’ (AH) for seeking a solution to their insomnia. A constructive recommendation would be to frame the discussion not as a punishment or rejection, but as a medical necessity. They should propose a trial separation for sleeping arrangements (e.g., separate rooms or a temporary arrangement) while setting clear, time-bound goals for the husband to address the root causes of the snoring (weight management and alcohol reduction) before re-evaluating the shared sleeping situation.
THIS STORY SHOOK THE INTERNET – AND REDDITORS DIDN’T HOLD BACK.











OR
YOU DONT GET YO SLEEP WITH ME YOU SELFISH PRICK! There, I said it!


The individual is facing a severe sleep deprivation issue caused directly by their partner’s loud snoring, which is compounded by pre-existing insomnia. The central conflict lies between the need for self-preservation through adequate rest and the desire to maintain the shared intimacy and expectation of sleeping in the same bed.
Given the health impact of chronic sleep loss versus the emotional importance of co-sleeping, is the poster justified in prioritizing their physical well-being by sleeping separately, even if it goes against their husband’s strong preference for sharing a bed?







