Meet the Other Phone. A phone that grows with your child.

Meet the Other Phone.
A phone that grows with your child.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

to be so annoyed? Deep sleepers.

88 replies

KateRambeau · 23/04/2014 09:24

I genuinely don't know if IABU because I'm such a light sleeper.

Our DD, 5, has an illness which means we have to get up and check her in the night and if needed - provide medication.

I go to bed around 10-11, my DH never comes to bed at this time and prefers to stay up playing on computer games etc. Pretty much every single night he falls asleep downstairs, he'll rest his head on the sofa for a minute and then that will be it until morning.

So, when it's his 'turn' to check DD, he sets an alarm on his phone in case he doesn't make it upstairs.

This is pointless, however, as he never wakes up. Last night was the final straw, I felt really poorly and I was so glad for it not to be my turn. But I woke at 4am and he hadn't been in. Again. This keeps happening. I came down to make breakfast and he was asleep on the sofa with controller in hand.

I was very annoyed, as this keeps happening and I find it unfair. He was embarrassed and went off to work without an apology, but I've just had an email from him saying that he's very sorry, he sets 8 alarms but sleeps through them and the only times that he has managed to go in to her during the night - he's been waiting up until 3am to do it! Because he 'doesn't trust himself'.

I am really, really tired of being the one to shoulder all of the responsibility. But I wondered if deep sleepers could tell me, is my anger here futile? Is there really nothing he can do to make sure he wakes up? Should I just give up and do all of the night checks myself?

He has also been known to fall asleep on the train on the way home from work and miss his stop, so I guess he does have sleep issues to an extent.

OP posts:
TheRealAmandaClarke · 23/04/2014 16:40

And to be fair to him, he is probably caught in a loop here. He's probably very stressed and worried about the whole situation. Gaming might be distracting him from a lot of anxiety.
But Kate's stressed and worried and exhausted too. And he should step up.

ConfusedPixie · 23/04/2014 16:55

Buy him a vibrating alarm. Got no choice but to wake up then! He also needs to sleep earlier as others have said.

He does sound like an overgrown child I'm afraid though.

JessieMcJessie · 23/04/2014 17:17

He may be incredibly worried about your DD and using gaming as an escape, despite knowing it is contributing to the problem. I know that if I have a stressful day at work ahead I can sometimes end up staying up till the small hours messing about on MN rather than getting the sleep I need. I know logically that it's bad but I can't help myself and it avoids me closing my eyes and having anxious thoughts going round and round my head.

Perhaps approach from that perspective when you speak to him? I agree he needs a serious kick up the backside re his diet though.

Anotheronebitthedust · 23/04/2014 17:47

How, seriously, how, can he sleep through his alarm 8 times? You can set so many ringtones on modern phones now, seriously foghorn ones at decibel level- if he's actually sleeping through that then he has a problem, as presumably he would also sleep through the fire alarm going off, someone breaking in, you screaming, etc.

However I think it is more likely that he half-wakes up and then turns the alarm off/snoozes it. Which, as other posters have said, basically means that subconsciously he really does not care about your daughter;s health. Sorry.

Tbh, with that, staying up late to play games, his sad-voice pathetic excuses and refusal to take responsibility for his actions (or his child) his food issues, etc, he sounds like a teenager. Do you really find him attractive? Can you honestly say you respect him, as an adult? I don't see how anyone can find a manbaby like that sexy.

KateRambeau · 23/04/2014 17:59

No, as things stand, I don't find him particularly sexy. I was a bit more tolerant of the fortnightly showers and takeaway diet when we were students, but 6 years on it's bothering me.

It's all such a mess.

OP posts:
TheRealAmandaClarke · 23/04/2014 18:06

Do you have access to overnight respite/ shortbreaks?
You must be shattered.

Inertia · 23/04/2014 18:36

It sounds exhausting. And I don't know how you could possibly respect a man who was putting his child's life at risk because he prioritised late night gaming.

However, in view of his declarations of being unable to help it, maybe a new schedule is in order . Obviously I don't know exactly how your daughter's check-up timings work, but I would suggest something like this :

  • DD goes to bed at 7 . DH also goes to bed at 7 pm and gets a deep 4 hour sleep in then . In bed, no screens, no games. You are on checking duty between 7 and 11 so he can sleep as deeply as he likes.
  • At 11pm you get H up and he has to physically get up and get showered - he can play games then if he wants. He has an alarm which goes off at the checking intervals, and the alarm is something like an alarm clock which he has to get up to switch off. You sleep from 11, and he is up and on checking duty until 3am , at which time you have had a solid 4 hours sleep. He has to then provide evidence of having made the checks .
  • At 3am he comes to bed and you take it in turns to check thereafter.

Obviously he will hate this plan. If he wants to come up with a plan in which he behaves like a responsible adult and sticks to it then great. I would also insist on consequences for him personally if he doesn't do the monitoring - the consequences for your daughter are so serious that he can't just expect to fob you off with pitiful excuses

Tiptops · 23/04/2014 23:18

I have an illness that really disrupts my sleep patterns and regularly turn off alarms in my sleep, with no recollection of it when I wake up. If you're a deep sleeper, and exhausted from not enough sleep then it is possible to sleep through alarms.

His excuse for being so tired is taking the piss in the extreme. He needs to take a long hard look at his priorities. Getting to bed at a decent time could resolve this instantly.

expatinscotland · 23/04/2014 23:29

'I was a bit more tolerant of the fortnightly showers and takeaway diet when we were students, but 6 years on it's bothering me.'

This is why I will be warning mine about being tolerant of crap behaviour in adulthood.

This guy is still kipping on a sofa, too.

Better off binned. He has no respect for you or your child together.

Poughle · 24/04/2014 01:22

Every time he doesn't get up when it's his turn, you smash one of his games.

I think what is most ugly about this is that he's made it into your problem to solve. He actually is willing for you to be exhausted and stressed, to carry all the burden alone; he actually sees that as acceptable.

weatherall · 24/04/2014 02:30

From your first post I was thinking along the same lines as others- gaming problem.

However your updates- repetitive eating, rigidity in sleeping patterns, lax personal hygiene, perhaps lack of empathy ring possible autistic spectrum bells for me- have you ever considered this?

eg how are his social skills?

needaholidaynow · 24/04/2014 02:51

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

madwomanbackintheattic · 24/04/2014 03:10

Need, your partner has a drinking problem. Not the same thing, although equally frustrating, I'm sure.

New posts on this thread. Refresh page
Swipe left for the next trending thread