Love Separate beds sometimes attached to couples
Not infrequently, couples sleep separately. Over time, romance is lost and interest in falling asleep side by side falls. However, one partner often snores and the other person gets insomnia. Or the one has to get up at night to go to shift work. So there are good reasons not to sleep in a shared bed at night. But is that the beginning of the end, or can a relationship still be sexy and romantic? And when is it better to sleep separately??
How important is it for the love happiness that the couple sleeps in a common bed? This question often comes up, for example, when the partner snores loudly, constantly rolling from one side to the other, or having to get up at night due to shift work. "Shall I submit to the situation and stay in the same bedroom? "Or does it hold the relationship, if we sleep in separate beds?" In the discussion with the news agency "dpa" experts shed light on both sides of the coin and give tips for dealing with the sleep problems.
Loud snoring often keeps her partner from sleeping
There are many reasons why it can lead to stress and poor sleeping conditions in the common bedroom: One has to get up very early in the morning or is generally unable to calm down and constantly gets up again. It is also possible that someone has to go to the bathroom more often at night or to toss and turn forever. "Very often, however, there are complaints about the partner's snoring," explains Friedhelm Schwiderski, a couple and sex therapist from Hamburg. And here are primarily the women who are suffering: "Men snore frequently and louder than women," adds sleep specialist Thomas Pollmächer, chief physician at the Center for Mental Health at the Ingolstadt Hospital.
In cases like these, the idea of having a separate bedroom seems like a little paradise to many sufferers - but the inhibitions to openly address the topic are often too great. Because often men and women have the fear that the desire for separate beds automatically an unhappy relationship means or at least lead to the fact that the partnership is suffering. But what is the solution? Despite all the hardships in the double bed stay? Or dare the unusual and sleep better again?
Women are more likely to suffer from sleep disorders
Regardless of which makes sleeping difficult, the situation should be taken seriously. "If one partner constantly feels disturbed while sleeping through the other, it can put a strain on the relationship," says Schwiderski. The reason for this is that one makes the other responsible for his sleep disorders, moreover, the feeling arises that e.g. The strong snorer's own well-being is indifferent. Subjectively, women would suffer from a sleep disorder more frequently, adds Johannes Mathis, Head of the Sleep-Wake Center at the Inselspital in Bern. And that although it is assumed, "that healthy women need more sleep rather and sleep longer and have a little more deep sleep than men," Mathis told the "dpa".
Rethink other possible solutions before separating the bedrooms
In order to solve the problem, the partners should absolutely get together and discuss different scenarios. However, couple therapist Friedhelm Schwiderski recommends that you do not prematurely give up your shared bedroom - at least not without considering other options. Conceivably, e.g. Earplugs or an additional room, which can be avoided if one has to get up earlier. Separating the bedrooms completely, however, signals that "the partners are physically at a distance," Schwiderski continues. This would initiate a process that is difficult to undo within the relationship, warns the couple therapist.
Dorte Foertsch, on the other hand, looks at the problem from a different perspective. For from the point of view of the Berlin psychologist and family therapist, it would be much riskier for the relationship, if one of the unpleasant situation and add lie each night sleepless next to the snoring partner. Instead, according to Foertsch it is important that in a relationship, the different needs for autonomy are accepted, accordingly, this "[...] also work with separate bedrooms." But instead of just wordlessly to grab the bedding and "take off", should be on the advice of Psychologist first made an open conversation in which the partner is enlightened. "You could say it like this, 'I just can not sleep well in a shared bed. And I do not want to jeopardize our relationship, "says the expert.
Lack of physical closeness can change the communication
Clearing the motives is also important from Schwiderskis point of view, because under certain circumstances it turns out that snoring is not the real problem. "Perhaps one partner in fact lacks the relationship to space elsewhere," says the couple therapist. Generally speaking, a relationship can certainly work with separate bedrooms - provided, of course, both partners agree with the changeover. But the spatial distance also leads to restrictions, because the lack of physical proximity renounce "on levels of communication that simply can not be reached in a conversation," Schwiderski continued.
The shared bed is important for the feeling of togetherness
Even the US researcher Paul C. Rosenblatt came to the conclusion that sleeping in a room is important for the attachment to the partner. This is also confirmed by the Swiss sleep researcher Mathis, who also believes that the shared bed is important for the feeling of togetherness. According to the expert, not only is sexuality in the foreground, but joint sleeping is linked to a series of other soothing rituals. In order to better deal with the situation, sleeping physician Thomas Pollmächer recommends to stay relaxed - even if it takes a little longer to fall asleep. "We often have too high demands for a good night's sleep." (Sb, nr)