Getting a ‘sleep divorce’ – choosing to sleep apart – is widely considered a sign of a loveless or sexless relationship.
The reality is, sleeping in separate beds could significantly improve your sex and love life.
Around 25 per cent of all US couples sleep in separate bedrooms and four in ten UK couples now sleep apart most nights.
Of those, 38% said sleeping apart improved their relationship overall because 34% had better quality sleep and more of it.
Research shows that when you’re well rested, you communicate better, are happier, more empathetic and appear more attractive and funnier.
UK sex expert Tracey Cox says that despite the stigma around sleeping separately, choosing to sleep in separate beds could actually improve your love and sex life dramatically. Stock photo used
Getting a good night’s sleep is particularly important for women: other research suggests it increases sexual desire and pleasure because it lowers stress and improves mood.
No-one wants sex when they’re tired
Science tells us when sleep is measured objectively, people sleep far better alone.
Tracey Cox (pictured) says separate beds doesn’t work for every couple though
But when asked, most people will still say they prefer to sleep with their partner. They like the closeness and security sleeping together provides – even if it does come at a cost.
Be warned, though: that cost can be high. Sleepless nights are dangerous to your relationship.
Mismatched sleepers – like a night owl matched with an early morning lark – have lowers levels of relationship satisfaction, more conflict and less sex.
People who have their sleep directly disrupted by a partner – snoring, restlessness, hogging the covers – report feeling angry and resentful for hours after waking.
Logically, you realise it’s not your partner’s fault, but brains deprived of sleep don’t tend to behave logically.
If ‘sleep fights’ are ruining your relationship, a sleep divorce could save it not harm it.
Here’s all you need to decide if it would work for you.
WE’VE HAD MORE AND BETTER SEX SINCE SLEEPING APART
Lucy, 29, and Richard, 31 have been together six years and sleeping apart for the last five.
‘People jump to conclusions when they know you sleep separately. A friend saw the ‘spare bedroom’ had been slept in and asked if everything was alright. When I told her I slept there every night and our relationship had never been better, she looked shocked.
I know her partner snores and suggested they also give it a go. Her answer was that she wouldn’t trust her husband to sleep alone. ‘God knows what he’d get up to in there on his own,’ she said. ‘There would be a hell of a lot of porn watched and masturbating done!’
My husband and I have a lot in common but have opposite sleeping personalities. He’s likes going to bed at 11pm; I vary dramatically depending on what I’ve done and when I got up.
He’ll read for a bit, then want the lights off. Night time is when I like to catch up on my socials and make phone calls (my family are night owls as well). My energy level is at its highest between 8pm and 11pm.
At the start, we’d try to accommodate the other but, for me, that meant trying to sleep way earlier than I wanted to and lying in bed, eyes wide open, listening to him snore. I felt resentful and he was woken up by my constant fidgeting.
It made us both really irritated with each other to the point where I worried we weren’t compatible. Not sleeping well brought out the worst in both of us. We argued a lot and our sex life took a dive as well.
I’d suggested that I sleep in the spare room a few times, but he wasn’t happy about it. He said it wasn’t ‘natural’. But one night, I just did it. I woke the next day – late – feeling great but guilty and walked into the kitchen not knowing what response I’d get.
He’d also had a great night’s sleep and begrudgingly admitted it wasn’t such a bad idea to do it ‘now and then’. Within a month, we were sleeping apart every night – and we’ve never looked back.
I found it tremendously liberating not to have to change my sleep personality to fit in with someone else. I respected him for accepting that it didn’t matter that we were different.
It made us both think about our relationship and how important our time together is. We naturally fell into a rhythm where I’d come to bed with him and read or scroll while he read, then leave for my own room when he wanted to sleep.
In the mornings, he comes in with a cup of coffee when I’m ready to get up and gets in with me to chat or have sex. Nearly all our sex is now morning sex which suits both of us because he drinks and that affects his erection at night.
I prefer morning sex because my orgasms feel more intense. We have a lot more sex now than when we slept in the same bed and it’s better sex.
There’s a lot of shame around sleeping apart but there shouldn’t be. Far from making us feel distant, it brought up closer and we’ve stayed that way.’
OUR SLEEP DIVORCE LED TO A REAL ONE
Harriet, 43, and Dario, 45, were married for four years and have two children but are now separated and divorcing.
‘Sleeping in different bedrooms was the kiss of death for our relationship – though I admit we’d been struggling for a while before that happened.
His job involves dealing with the US markets, so he starts work late and often works until 2am. I have a day job and look after our children. I’m exhausted by 9pm and ready for bed.
Sleeping in the same bed with him was a nightmare. He talks in his sleep, hogs the covers, kicks, snores and sleeps sprawled across the bed. He drinks and smokes and this contributes to the snoring which makes me feel even angrier and more resentful because it’s his fault.
After two years of this, we finally accepted sleeping separately was the only solution. We both slept way better but the divide between us grew. We fixed the sleeping problem but didn’t tackle our relationship problems: that was the big mistake.
Sex was never that frequent because we had kids so quickly, but it become non-existent after that.
I think it’s fine to sleep separately if you’re happy and in love and still having sex. If you’re having issues and not communicating well and feel insecure in your marriage, it just makes things worse.
Even if you’re arguing and not having sex, just having someone’s body lying next to yours is comforting.
Sometimes, I’d wake up and spoon him while he slept. I don’t think he ever noticed but it gave me some comfort during those low points and it was better than nothing at all.’
- Visit traceycox.com for Tracey’s blog, books, podcast and details of her two Tracey Cox product ranges with Lovehoney
***
Read more at DailyMail.co.uk