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Helen Croydon Headshot
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Author, Journalist and Broadcaster

Snoring Is a Feminist Issue

Posted: Updated:
It's the middle of the night, the alarm will be erupting in four hours, it's an important day ahead, the children have finally gone to sleep and the neighbours' teenager's rock band practice has finally ended. But all you can hear are the guttural fricatives of your partner beside you. They're not even rhythmic so it's not like you can get used to it. Sometimes the noise is a gentle bilabial trill, the lips only gently parting, then it's all quiet, then suddenly there is a crescendo from the throat, so forceful that you have to check it is actually them you went to bed with and not a giant boar.

I am talking about the hell that is someone else's snoring. As well as sounding like a pig in the room, it also seems to be the elephant in the room. A survey out this week conducted jointly by YouGov and Snoreeze, has revealed that 93% of women in relationships say their partner snores. Three quarters of them complain it affects their life in some negative way.

Which begs the question, why are women taking this lying down? (boom boom). When I've found myself subjected to a boyfriend's sinus acrobatics in stereo, I've taken my slumber elsewhere. I prefer to start my working day without looking like I've gone two rounds with Muhammed Ali.

Once, on a five-day break with one particularly nasally-challenged ex, I paid for a separate room on day three just to get some catch-up. It saved the holiday, but oh the protests! Accusations of neglect; complaints of lost intimacy; repeated questioning of 'what is wrong?' There was no grudge on my behalf though. I was perfectly chirpy and still in love (just). The problem wasn't his snoring, but the fact that separate sleeping is seen as such a taboo. Mainly, I should add, by men.
A friend recently told me how she too misses the quality restorative sleep she used to enjoy before she moved in with the boyf. The pair are blessed with a spare room but the few times she has used it, he complains that it 'isn't natural' for young, fresh, loved-up couples to sleep apart.

It sounds to me like he may have confused what is 'natural' with what we have made into a societal norm. Did you know that humans are the only animal to sleep and have sex in the same place? (Does your dog ever look like he got a bad night's sleep?) If my friend's bloke is so concerned with what is 'natural' perhaps he should read about the benefits of sleeping according to one's circadian rhythm. That is, falling asleep when you're tired, not going to bed and waiting to fall asleep because any minute now your partner's going to thud down beside you and wake you, just as soon as he's done with that one last episode of CSI.

It is hardly surprising that men don't appreciate the magnitude of REM interuptus. Multiple studies show that women sleep more lightly than men and find it harder to get back to sleep once woken. (Such as a paper by Austrian researchers called Sleep and Biological Rhythms and reported on by various media). Also, sixty per cent of men, compared to forty per cent of women over the age of 50 snore. Some men even think snoring is funny. Another ex in my collection used to play back the highlights from his 'snoring app' recording to his flat mate. They would roar with laughter at each crescendo.
The sleep-deprived need to get tougher. For starters, I demand a drop-down box on Internet dating profiles to forewarn whether a potential match is a snorer. We can specify non-smoker, why not non-snorer? We get a heads-up if a potential match is 'athletic' or have 'a few extra pounds' or if they are a 'social drinker' or 'drink heavily'. But we will never know if a night in their boudoir will cost us our productivity the next day until we've had a test drive.
Arianna Huffington once said that 'sleep is the next feminist issue.' She was referring to the fact that women tend to deal with young children in the night more than men. But the same can be said of snoring. Of course, many men are also the victim of a female's nocturnal percussion but statistically women get the duffer deal on sleeping.

This week's poll also disclosed that 87% of women have tried shaking, nudging or kicking their beloved snorer. Nine per cent admitted that they'd considered putting a pillow over their partner's face. (now that's good for intimacy.) The survey was endorsed by the manufacturers of the snoring product Snoreeze. It's a nice idea to take some medicine so we can sleep in each other's arms (I've never understood how that's possible anyway without getting pins and needles). But it is not helpful to perpetuate social rules on what constitutes a strong or loving relationship. Great if you can sleep in harmony but there are many more facets to love and partnership than lying next to each other unconscious. The only selfish person in a discussion about separate beds is the one who refuses to acknowledge what a serious issue sleep deprivation can be.
Helen Croydon is author of Screw The Fairytale: A Modern Guide to Sex and Love (John Blake Publishing)
Follow Helen Croydon on Twitter: www.twitter.com/Helen_Croydon
 
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  • Laura Breece · Hagerstown, Indiana
    Articles like this are why people don't take modern feminism seriously.
     
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  • Karen Winfield · Medical Transcriptionist at Integrity Health Documentation
    Snoring is health/medical issue, preventable and treatable. This is incredibly irresponsible piece of journalism.
    • Jennifer Adams · Top commenter · Works at Brisbane Catholic Education
      Not having enough sleep from a snoring partner is a medical/health issue too - preventable and treatable by having the choice to sleep separately and not be judged by society that there's something wrong with your relationship.

      I am surprised that you are so dismissive of a health issue that many women do face because their male partner insists on sleeping in the same bed together every night for socially constructed reasons. They snore, and the female partner is subjected to disrupted sleep, which then exposes her to a raft of sleep-deprivation related health issues.

      Where's the irresponsibility in putting this issue on the table?

      It's irresponsible not to.
      Reply · Like
      · Yesterday at 02:36
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    • Andrew Salgood · McMaster
      "I am surprised that you are so dismissive of a health issue that many women do face because their male partner insists on sleeping in the same bed together every night for socially constructed reasons. "

      Socially constructed reasons? What? Are you serious?

      Maybe it's because men ENJOY the company of a woman when they're sleeping at night. Ever thought about that? There isn't some grand conspiracy that all men are forcing women to sleep beside them.
      Reply · Like
      · 6 · Yesterday at 04:50
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    • Karen Winfield · Medical Transcriptionist at Integrity Health Documentation
      Sleep deprivation is certainly a serious health issue with significant consequences, not relieved by blaming men or complaining. The writer would have done both parties in this situation a tremendous favor by presenting information about causes and available treatment options. That would have been the responsible course.
      Reply · Like
      · 9 · Yesterday at 08:35
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  • David Hyatt · Top commenter
    So....What does that say about menstruation and pms? Should men start to protest that, also? Perhaps it should be entered into the criminal code, so that male victims of pms and menstruation (in fact, all hormonal imbalances and mood swings) can seek help and support and the perpetrators are held accountable in a court of law?

    Guys, the real lesson here is: have sex at her place and then LEAVE. That way, you won't disturb her "productivity" the next day. Then, we can all be feminists and live happily ever after!
     
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  • Chris Gunn Fowler · London, United Kingdom
    I fell asleep reading this article, mercifully my snoring woke me up
       
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    • Jason Peal · Top commenter · University of Tampa
      I wouldn't sleep with you either.
         
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      • Lance Smith · Top commenter · Works at Self Employed and Loving It!
        Feminism: searching for relevancy in the West in 2014.

        The feminist Ayaan Hirsi Ali says it well when she says modern American feminism is focused on “trivial BS” and needs to be reclaimed.
           
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        • Charles Richmond
          Trash article, heteronormative, and I really don't expect anything more from HuffPo.
           
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        • Lee Grandmaison · Top commenter · Mastermind. at Evil genius low on funds.
          Stuff like this is why I can't take feminists seriously.

          Bunch of adult sized babies. Grow up.
             
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          • Angelica Perduta · Top commenter · Christchurch, New Zealand
            Wow... that's sexist!
            When I was married to a female, whenever our baby cried in the night I knew my wife had awoken because she stopped snoring, but she pretended to be asleep because she couldn't be bothered to get up and change the wet nappy... she left that to me *every single time* even though she was the self appointed full time stay at home mom and I had a full time job to go to in the morning.
            Females also disrupt mens sleep by demanding sex whenever they feel like it with no consideration for the fact the guy can't lie in every morning like she does.
            #EndFeminism
            • Angelica Perduta · Top commenter · Christchurch, New Zealand
              p.s. becoming a transgirl is the best thing I ever did for my happiness. I strongly recommend all male people should consider it as viable option.
              Love from ANgelica (especially to men) ♥
              Reply · Like
              · 1 · Edited · 21 hours ago
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            • Bledi Lalollari · Top commenter · St. Louis
              Angelica Perduta Well, im sorry but we don't have the dysphoria you have about gender, so that isn't happening. However, at least you provide us with some insight into whom it is easier to live, men or women. And your words seem to suggest that it is much easier to live as a woman.
              Reply · Like
              · 15 hours ago
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            • Angelica Perduta · Top commenter · Christchurch, New Zealand
              Bledi Lalollari Yes... well I was only trying to be what they said a man should be because they gave me aversion therapy and then claimed they had "cured" me... but deep down I hated it. I honestly I can't imagine why *anyone* would like to be a man!
              Whatever, the thing that annoys me about modern day feminism, is that it's completely hypocritical and based on projecting sexist false stereo type. They cultivate a resentful victim mentality in girls and an unjust guilt complex in innocent boys. It's psychological child abuse!
              Reply · Like
              · 14 hours ago
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          • Karl Mathews · Top commenter · Captain at Self-Employed
            You only consider involuntary issues as a "feminist issue" because men are more prone to it.. If women were more prone you'd be harping on about the health issues... but if a feminist can think of a way to demonise a man, she will...
               
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