Listen Live
CLOSE
Asian woman feel frustrated from husband snoring while sleep at night. Attractive insomnia angry wife lying down on bed, cannot sleep due to noise and put cozy blanket on her ears in bedroom at home.

Source: Kiwis / Getty

There are people who can sleep . . . on their own terms . . . no matter what else is happening around them.  And if there’s a secret, those people are not sharing it with the rest of us.

In a new poll, a whopping 82% of people in relationships say their partner’s sleeping habits “consistently” keep THEM up at night.  Snoring is the biggest issue.  52% of people say their partner’s snoring keeps them up.

33% say they’re bothered by their partner messing around on their phone before bed . . . and another 33% say they’re disturbed by their partner getting out of bed at night, to go to the bathroom or something.

Other issues include:  Hogging the covers . . . tossing and turning . . . or “starfishing” across the bed.  (I’d never heard that term before, but it’s a funny way of describing AREA CONTROL on the bed.)

Still most couples do sleep together.  79% of people in relationships share a bed with their partner . . . 10% sleep in different rooms . . . 6% say it “depends on the night” . . . and 5% “sleep separately in the same room.”

https://swnsdigital.com/us/2024/03/4-out-of-5-people-in-relationships-admit-their-partner-keeps-them-up-at-night/