Dear Level

An Extra Bedroom Could Benefit Your Marriage or Cohabitation

Forget sleeping on the couch — sometimes you just need your own space

Elisabeth Ovesen | NYT Bestselling Author
LEVEL
Published in
5 min readOct 8, 2021

--

Photo Illustration: Save As/Medium. Source: Getty Images.

For countless relationships, casual dating eventually turns into cohabitation. A percentage of those couples find themselves married, perhaps with kids — and decades of being stuck with each other when all you really want sometimes is space and time alone.

Unfortunately, modern convention dictates that couples should sleep in the same room and — since around the late 1950s — the same bed. Before that, it was doctor-recommended that couples sleep apart so that the lighter sleeper doesn’t disturb the deeper sleeper. So, as seen in vintage TV shows and movies, husbands and wives slept in separate twin beds with a nightstand between them. Historically, wealthier couples who could afford more living space, including royalty, slept in separate rooms, chambers, or even houses.

These days, however, telling your partner you’re about to sleep in another bed or room is likely to be taken as a sign of recoil and disrespect. But, you guys, it doesn’t have to be that way! Gently introducing separate bedrooms into your relationship can be just the thing you need to keep it from becoming monotonous, unsexy, and overwhelming.

--

--

Elisabeth Ovesen | NYT Bestselling Author
Elisabeth Ovesen | NYT Bestselling Author

Written by Elisabeth Ovesen | NYT Bestselling Author

3x New York Times bestselling author, art enthusiast, and design girlie living between Los Angeles and New York City

Responses (4)