Families logo
Content warning
This story may contain sensitive material or discuss topics that some readers may find distressing. Reader discretion is advised. The views and opinions expressed in this story are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of Vocal.

Sleeping With a Yeti: The Bed Divorce That Saved Us

Two Beds, One Room, Zero Regrets.

By Ash YlvisakerPublished 4 months ago 4 min read
Credit: Museums of History New South Wales

There are so many different ways couples and even families sleep.

Some are cultural, some are out of necessity, some are for security.

There are those that fit into the societal norm, and those that are a bit unconventional for no other reason than, we prefer it—like mine.

That's right. Today I want to talk about my sleeping arrangement with my husband.

Spoiler alert: it's magical!

Grab a drink of your choice, a cozy blanket, and enjoy.

I’m going to preface this by saying, this is just a humorous way for me to bring light to different sleeping arrangements. All of this is just my personal experience.

When in history did we, as the human species, decide to start sharing a bed with our significant other?

Whoever it was that thought: "This is a great idea! Now let's make the rest of the world aware so everyone thinks you must sleep in the same bed as your spouse or your marriage is in trouble”, go suck a Gatorade bottle.

Our matching full size separate beds.

My husband and I have found the trick to the most harmonious of marriages and the sweetest of dreams for both.

It comes in the form of us each having our own beds.

We've switched over to the old I Love Lucy episodes from the 1950s. Separate beds, but in the same room.

Next to each other, just like Lucy and Ricky.

I’m even the funnier one!

I got lucky and he doesn't snore, but he is a very large, gangly, Yeti-shaped human. So he takes up a lot of space.

I'm a small person. However, I also take up a lot of space.

That is not the reason for our separate bed situation.

No, that comes from the fact that he tends to fling his long, gangly appendages around like he's doing the hokey pokey in his sleep.

I've had an elbow to the head, I've been half laid on—like I was just a pillow he was rolling over onto.

My daughters Tiny Dinosaur hiding under my bed one day.

The real kicker...

Pun not intended, but appreciated.

One night, he kicked his leg out so far and hard, he kicked my legs clear off the bed. A queen size bed.

Yes, we could have gotten a King. It was discussed.

We have slept in a King together... it was only mildly better.

When I tell you that man is all legs and arms...

Picture Migo from the movie Smallfoot.

We've laid next to each other and compared our torso sizes. They are the same.

I am 4'11". He is 6'1".

Our first weekend together circa May 2024.

Even a king size bed wouldn't help.

I can still hear his leg kick the wall his bed is next to.

And every time I breathe a sigh of relief that it's the wall and not my legs as I stretch out in my own full-size bed next to his.

Good sleep = Happy marriage.

For us at least.

I'm a light sleeper, so sleeping in separate beds has been something I've brought up with everyone I've lived with.

I've always been met with:

"Absolutely not.”

“What about intimacy?”

“That's not what happy couples do.”

When I brought it up this time, I was again met with a resounding no.

Society tells us a happily married couple sleeps in the same bed.

That's the status quo.

Anything outside of the status quo is scary.

Society also has us believing the only time we can be intimate with our partner is in our bed.

I even once had a therapist tell me: “The bed should be for two things and two things only. Sex and sleep.”

Instantly lost trust.

I wasn’t speaking about sex.

This was also my first time meeting the man.

I never went back.

Beds are not just for sex and sleep.

I personally am typing this on my laptop on my bed while my husband peacefully sleeps a floor lamp’s distance away.

Working in my bed.

Intimacy should be spontaneous. You don't need one shared bed for it.

What about cuddling at night?

That can also happen literally anywhere—even one of our beds.

I personally cannot fall asleep cuddling, so that's a non-issue.

But never forget, you get to make the rules to your own relationship.

You can say, "Let's cuddle for a bit then go to our own beds."

What about talking?

We do that a lot in the living room. We've had countless check-ins on our couch.

Our beds are next to each other so we can still talk.

So, how did I "convince" my husband to get separate beds?

By communicating this was a need for me, not just a want.

He took some time and said, "Ok, let's do it. Let's get separate beds."

I immediately got one of my kids' beds out of her room.

She let me know I’m allowed to borrow it. 🥰

The next day we were both feeling great! So well rested! It was magic.

From that moment on, we decided this is OUR marriage and WE get to define it.

The beginning of our separate bed adventure.

Some couples prefer separate rooms as well.

This is where our lack of snoring really comes in handy so we can stay in the same room, our beds separated only by a single nightstand.

We each put our glasses on it at the end of the night.

I turn on white noise. He turns off the light.

We say goodnight, chat a bit, then he passes out and I stretch out in my cozy bed before falling asleep.

Another bonus: He’s a morning person. I am a night owl.

He's up early. I never realize it.

So to wrap this up with a pretty bow, I get peaceful sleep and he gets to Hokey Pokey his way through the night.

It's wonderful.

10/10 recommend to anyone who has ever considered this type of sleep arrangement with their spouse.

Even he says it’s a game changer and with that he has yet again proven to be my emotional support adult who I am safe to bring my thoughts and ideas to because he actually listens.

Our separate beds prove it.

Written By: Ash Ylvisaker

Previously published here.

advicehumanitymarriedparentsvalues

About the Creator

Ash Ylvisaker

I'm Ash Ylvisaker, a queer millennial mother of 2 with a whale size amount of trauma I'm processing as I enter my 40's and prime of life, through writing.

Check out my pinned posts, grab a drink of your choice, a cozy blanket and enjoy.

Reader insights

Be the first to share your insights about this piece.

How does it work?

Add your insights

Comments

There are no comments for this story

Be the first to respond and start the conversation.

Sign in to comment

    Find us on social media

    Miscellaneous links

    • Explore
    • Contact
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Use
    • Support

    © 2026 Creatd, Inc. All Rights Reserved.