eggwards: (kissy)
[personal profile] eggwards
It's now been a year that I grabbed up some of my belongings and moved into this house. It's been pretty good. I certainly love the TV! The companionship has been nice too. I'm also glad to have a dog in my life again. It's taken a little getting used to, having Chris around everyday as opposed to the weekends that we had shared previously.

Sure, we're both a little tough to talk to, and occasionally it's lead to some misunderstandings and some hurt feelings, but I'm going to guess that happens with every couple. Personally, I don't know. It's still my first time around. Still, I think we have learned to understand each other better in the past year and hopefully we'll get even more in synch.

Of course we're both pretty darn stubborn. I think I beat him in this in a lot of ways, especially with my eating habits. Chris doesn't like that I won't eat veggies, and a lot of the recipes that he knows have something in them that I won't eat, so we just end up going out to eat all of the time. It's something I need to work on because Chris would like to cook more and I could use to save some of the money we spend going out.

The real gripe about the big move has been the job. I won't dwell on it much tonight, but let me say that I think I was told things about this job that it clearly isn't. Still, I'm happier that my current boss is much more receptive to my wanting to do more, and be more than my previous one who only talked to me at my review. 2007 is definitely about setting myself up for, and getting a better position.

One of the biggest changes was the sleeping arrangements - and I'm not just saying this because we had both slept on the same side of the bed when we were single (on the left). I made the move over to the right. However, there's a study that said that couples get less sleep than singles do, and I believe it. The study says couples lose up to 49 minutes of sleep a night. I haven't seen exactly why this is, but I have some ideas.

for one, you're somewhat conscious of your partner while you're in bed. Not just in the way that when they move you might wake up, but there just seems to be a little instinctual thing that makes you a little bit aware of their presence. I know that when I move around I kind of "feel" where Chris is, so I won't kick him.

Strangely, I'm usually the one who stays in my zone. It's probably from the many years I have spent in a twin bed, even as an adult. My tossing and turning can be kept in a relatively small space. I think that this technique was improved over many band road trips where I'd have to sleep with someone in a hotel bedroom, and try not to touch them because I was scared that the other person would think that I was "that way".

Chris will slide his legs over to my side of the bed sometimes. I don't know why, but he likes to sleep diagonally. Since we both have CPAPs and are usually connected to tubes all night, we don't get to do a lot of spooning. Spooning's nice, but it usually wipes both of us out for the next day.

Of course there's one other element that has changed our sleeping arrangements over the last month or so. Joey the Dog has been joining us at night because my soft heart doesn't like sending her out to sleep on the porch on a cold night. She's a big 50 lbs lump who likes to sleep on top of the comforter in the space right between Chris and I. Somehow she steals the comforter off of me on many a night.

She's gained the privilege to sleep with us as she can stay still for most of the night. I remember when she was a puppy and I'd be over we tried to let her sleep with us, but she'd run around and bark and yes, she once peed on the bed while we were in it. Now that she's grown up (she just turned three), she's usually well-behaved. As it gets warmer again, I think we'll put her outside at night, so I hope she doesn't get to used to it.

For a few years I did sleep in my small twin bed with my family's wiener dog, Fritz. He was a pretty big dachshund, so there wasn't a lot of room for the two of us, but he liked to burrow under the covers. Joey certainly does not want to be under the covers. She likes to sleep where she can have a good view of everything.

There's a nice feeling, though, of once you put your CPAP mask on, that there's someone there who loves you. Just as you drift off there's a light touch from your partner, or maybe you hold hands for a little bit. It's nice, and reassuring.

Of course, it's a big bed, which is great. We go to hotels and suddenly we're in this small bed and there's no elbow room! Talk about having a tough time getting to sleep! I guess we're both guys who need our space. Still, our bed's up pretty high, so there are times where i worry that I may one day fall out of bed - though it's been years since I've done that.

Yeah, my life changed quite a bit over the last year, but it's been a good thing, something that's helped me grow up, and be more responsible in thinking about two instead of just one. Decisions I make, and the moods I express effect him, and his effect me. It's a different world.

I love being here with Chris. Really, it isn't about Dallas. I haven't found all that much to brag about, city wise. It's all about the relationship and learning about Chris and learning about myself. It's about the everyday lives of two people, and the difference in everyday living as opposed to dating, or just seeing each other on special occasions. Luckily the transition has been a good one.

Though I'd say I'm most grateful I didn't have to buy an HD-TV of my own!

Date: 2007-01-22 06:54 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] metacub.livejournal.com
Congratulations on your live-in anniversary. It's interesting to see the sleep difference quantified, as it's something I've felt and thought about myself. Regarding sides, John & I switch sides depending on whether we're at his place or mine, so at some point we'll have to resolve that. :)

Date: 2007-01-24 05:27 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] eggwards.livejournal.com
Yeah...we did that when he would visit me in my Houston apartment, and we switched back and forth during our first trip together, too, as we were in several different hotle rooms and his parent's house. Still, his lump was already on the left side of his nice, big bed, so I let him keep it!

Date: 2007-01-22 01:20 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dedos.livejournal.com
Gryphon's never slept outside, but there's no way I could sleep with him in the bed. He prefers to be as close as possible to people at all times, but no dice. I settled for a dog-bed at the foot of our bed, and he's happy with that. If his snoring gets out of control, I kick him out to the hallway or family room. No doggie CPAPs just yet. :D

Date: 2007-01-24 05:31 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] eggwards.livejournal.com
My feet go all the way to the edge of the bed so there isn't any room for her down there. She's pretty happy with being on the bed - where she usually lays while Chris and I are in the den on our computers. She likes that it's high up, and she can observe her domain.

Chris tried crating her when she was a puppy, but it didn't really take. Thank goodness she doesn't snore! That's why the two of us need CPAPs!

Date: 2007-01-22 05:25 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] polomex.livejournal.com
Nick's and my sleeping arrangements were set on Day One. I sleep on the right, against the wall. I really didn't have a problem with this, as every bed I've ever slept in was against the wall, and I had a habit of touching or leaning against it as I slept. The other logic behind this was that Nick figured he would wake up before I did, and it'd be easier for him to get out of bed first. Years later, I'm the one usually out of bed first, climbing over the Bear.

Nick can be a bit of a bed AND blanket hog when he sleeps. On more than one occasion, I've had to not-so-gently coax him over to his side of the bed. I also keep an extra blanket at the foot of the bed, just in case he gets a little comforter-greedy.

Finally, the very first time I spent the night and heard Nick's snoring, I thought I would never fall asleep again. Now, I have difficulty sleeping if I don't hear snoring.

Date: 2007-01-24 05:35 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] eggwards.livejournal.com
Chris can pull the comforter off of me at times, but generally it's the dog, nesting that does the trick. Chris will sometimes forget to put his CPAP mask on and then the snoring begins...yikes. Usually I'm just lulled to sleep by the white noise of the air from our CPAPs.

Our bedroom's big enough that we both have plenty of room to roll off our side of the bed...but we have been in some hotel rooms where we'd be up against the wall and having to cross over. Usually, as the smaller one, Chris gets the wall side.

Date: 2007-01-24 05:36 am (UTC)

Date: 2007-01-26 01:07 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] edbearaustin.livejournal.com
Hey guys, I am a beast to sleep with. I have the c-pap machine AND a mouth guard because I grind my teeth. I also have bouts of insomnia where I will go weeks on two or three hours a night. Marcus has woke up to rooms painted and cleaning that would impress Joan Crawford. I am a human furnace so cover stealing isn't an issue and our mattress sits on wooden slats so moving around isn't a problem. Marcus has allergies and once in a blue moon he will wake me up and I entertain the thoughts of duct taping the c-pap mask to his head. We have two pugs that shed 24/7 so they are not even allowed in the bedroom.

Date: 2007-01-27 06:09 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] eggwards.livejournal.com
Beast huh? I'm resesting the urge for a dirty come-hither answer here! :-)

I have a mouth guard as well. As soon as I got the CPAP and my mouth was actually closed during sleep, suddenly my jaw was hurting. The mouth guard is just another thing that makes sleep so romantic for us!

Chris has a touch of insomnia, but I usually can fall asleep anywhere, and don't wake as easily. I just have to be carefull of tossing and turning too much so I don't wake him. We don't redecorate rooms, but that would be a useful way to use the time, I suppose.

Chris can sometimes snore even with the mask on...and his seal isn't so good, so that can be fun. Still, there's nothing worse than having a runny nose and a CPAP.

Joey sheds like crazy, so she may be kicked out as spring begins.

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