Are you Ignoring your Snoring?

Meanderer

Supreme Member
I am an occasional snorer.... mostly after watching old Zorro episodes.
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Snoring is a worldwide problem faced by millions of people on a daily basis. Not everyone who snores has sleep apnea. It’s been proven that about 40% of adult men and 24% of adult women snore. What can you do?
 

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My husband snores and sometimes yelps like a dog. When my daughter moved out I moved into her room.
Suits us fine.
He can snore till the windows rattle, I can read until two in the morning. I have the windows open with snow on the sill. His room is 90 degrees.
No more complaining about each other in the morning.
Just perfect.
 

My husband snores and sometimes yelps like a dog. When my daughter moved out I moved into her room.
Suits us fine.
He can snore till the windows rattle, I can read until two in the morning. I have the windows open with snow on the sill. His room is 90 degrees.
No more complaining about each other in the morning.
Just perfect.
same thing in this house... absolutely the same , right down to his penchant for heat and mine for cool
 
I know I snore as I've woken myself up with it. Dr. wants to do a sleep study but at home. I don't go for those machines for apnea and don't think I have it anyhow. I wouldn't want to be hooked up to a machine all night..it's hard enough for me to get to sleep normally and with all that apparatus I think it would be impossible..plus I don't much sleep on my back.

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I dunno if I snore or not. My dog hasn't mentioned it to me. He does snore sometimes, but very softly and I find it strangely comforting.
Our dogs snore softly as well, and it is rather relaxing, sometimes the cat harmonizes.
My wife tells me that I snore sometimes, but so does she.

She talks every now and then and on a couple of occasions she has spoken in "tongue." It was not any language that I have ever heard. A couple of years ago, she had quite a conversation. It is far more interesting than simply snoring.
 
There is an unspoken theory that once a couple start sleeping in separate rooms, it’s the end of a marriage but I don’t believe it. I wish there were more examples of how couples who sleep in separate rooms still maintain a happy sexual relationship and debunk the stigma once and for all.
 
Well let's see. Either the wife or the husband or possibly even both the wife and the husband become sexually aroused then either the wife or the husband both get up out of his or her bed, cross his or her bedroom to his or her or both his and her door, open it or their bedroom doors, climb into his or her bed and make love. When their lovemaking has ended and the afterglow wears off the husband falls asleep snoring quite loudly while the wife lights up a Virginia Slim cigarette and watches Johnny Carson.

Thanks for reading.

www.kinseyinstitute.org/collections/archival/masters-and-johnson.php
 
DH snored (never a wall rattler), it was just enough to keep me awake.Then he got the C-pap machine and it too was just noise enough to keep me awake. However we don't need seperate rooms, I wear ear plugs, Problem solved!
 


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