
Home > Marriage > Humor & Fun
 Marriage Partnership, Winter 1997
Snore Warzzzzzzz
And other nocturnal habits of the North-American monogamous male
and female
by Nancy Kennedy
Recently I read an article about a woman who put a pair of sweatpants over
her sleeping husband's head and pulled the drawstring. Horrifying, but
understandable: Her husband was snoring.
I was reading the article in bed while my beloved sucked all the air out
of the room with his own turbulent throat vibrations. I looked over at my
snorting husband and felt a twinge of envy for that desperate wife. She would
snooze peacefully, doing 20-to-life in a nice, quiet prison cell somewhere.
I sighed, poked Barry until he rolled over on his side, then turned out the
light and attempted to go to sleep before he flipped over on his back again.
I know the routine much too well.
I start: "Barry, do not sleep on your back!"
He pleads: "I won'tI promise."
I reply: "You will and you'll snore."
Sure enough, I'm right. Again.
Barry thinks he's the innocent party, because science and statistics are
on his side. When I mentioned the poor woman who was driven to insane criminal
action by her husband's incessant buzz saw, Barry reached into his nightstand
drawer and produced a news article of his own.
"Look here," he said, handing me the magazine as he snuggled deep into the
covers, on his back. "Some science guys did a study and found eight times
more men than women snore. You know what that means?"
"Yeah. That eight times as many wives as husbands sleep with their pillows
over their heads."
"That means majority rules," he continued. Then he quoted some other science
guy who said male snoring is actually a clever defense system our early ancestors
used to ward off dangerous predators such as carnivorous cats by mimicking
their sounds.
"See," he said, "you should be grateful. I'm protecting your life."
I have to admit Barry's not the only one with annoying bedtime quirks. I
wear a retainer at night. It keeps me from grinding my teeth, but not from
drooling. Drooling is a trait some folks would find endearing, but unfortunately
Barry is not one of them.
He also doesn't like my cold feet on his warm back, although I've pointed
out it's biblical. ("If two lie down together, they will keep warm.") He
doesn't find my habit of wearing heavy wool socks to bed particularly appealing
either, so I lose all the way around.
But at least I don't snore.
Bedtime wasn't always like this. When we were first married we'd laugh over
morning breath and chuckle over bed hair. Barry would say, "I like the way
your smeared eye make-up makes you look like a raccoon."
And I'd tell him, "Of course I didn't mind your elbow in my ribs all night,
and when you accidentally kicked me, I barely screamed at all."
Now, two decades later, being kneed in the back has lost its charm. And while
I still find Barry's occasional jabbering in his sleep about catching pop
flies somewhat entertaining, I find absolutely no redeeming social value
in snoring.
Until just lately, that is. I'm afraid what began as a diatribe against my
husband's nightly soft palate serenade has turned into a confessional. An
unfortunate shoulder injury is preventing me from sleeping in my favorite
position (on my stomach). So I have to sleep on my back. And, well, you get
the picture.
(If you don't, Barry will draw you one: "Gee, Hon, not only did you keep
the neighbors up last night, but your snoring peeled all the paint off the
walls.")
As a result, I no longer consider snoring a moral deficiency or a character
weakness. In fact, now I think snoring might be an indicator that all is
well with one's soul. Of course, that's only if I fall asleep first. For
the times when I don't and Barry's the one who's peeling paint and sucking
air, I've got just the remedyan icy pair of size- seven feet poised and
aimed at his warm back.
Nancy Kennedy is a regular contributor to Marriage Partnership and the
author of several books, including Honey, They're Playing Our Song!
(Multnomah).
Copyright © 1997 by the author or Christianity Today International/Marriage
Partnership magazine. For reprint information call 630-260-6200 or e-mail
mp@marriagepartnership.com.
Winter 1997, Vol. 14, No. 4, Page 30
Marriage Partnership
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