• @cm0002@lemmy.world
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    1007 months ago

    Damn morning people, idk why we night folks let them define things like business hours, we could have had everything opening at like 2PM instead :/

    One day night we’ll take it back…

    • niftyOP
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      7 months ago

      Sometimes it’s hard to smell something that’s all over you, you don’t know till you take a shower and go back to your room that you stank af

      I always suggest airing out your room while you shower

    • @Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world
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      57 months ago

      Then the dog comes in, and smells a snack he can lick up, while you try to keep them away, and play it off cool…but that dog REALLY wants that snack!

      And thats when your friends walk into you getting an unwanted bj from a dog, and everybody is like “OH MY GOOOOOODDDDDDDDDD!!!”

      And you’re like “wait, no, I can explain!!!”

      I’m imagining it like it could have been a scene in “Theres something about mary”

  • @Dvixen@lemmy.world
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    377 months ago

    6am friends could have also brought about world peace, but no, they had to wake up the 11am friend.

    • @MrShankles@reddthat.com
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      77 months ago

      And not grab me an extra muffin or something to eat for breakfast…

      Grab an extra plate for a bro if you gonna be awake that early anyway! You know you’re gonna need my ass to get everyone’s collective shit together at 1am, so we can all get back safely; why the disrespect for us “late wake’s”?

    • @Lucidlethargy@sh.itjust.works
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      27 months ago

      And yet, they seldom want to stay up past 9 to party it up, despite society labeling that behavior totally normal.

      The early birds sometimes pick and choose to an absurd degree.

  • @soloner@lemmy.world
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    357 months ago

    Why can’t people just compromise at a time like 10 AM instead of dying on their mutually incompatible hills?

    • @Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee
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      177 months ago

      For real tho.
      Why are we playing by morning people rules? We need to make some decisions in late afternoon after morning people already went to sleep, those lazy bastards! :D

        • @Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee
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          117 months ago

          Yeah, all morning ppl are loud af - it’s as if it’s some kind of rule or a dominance tactic to keep us in check.

          • @Lucidlethargy@sh.itjust.works
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            27 months ago

            Seriously, every morning from 7AM to 9:30AM my neighbors (a dense building of them) do shit like chainsaw trees, test their fire alarms, upset their barking dogs, and scream - literally fucking scream.

            Meanwhile, at 1AM I’m tip toeing around when my dog needs to go out.

            Morning people tend to be composed of a higher percentage of assholes.

            • @Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee
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              37 months ago

              Asshole raised as if it’s their god-given not just right, but an obligation to spread the morning-people way of life to everyone (by any means necessary or possible), as it’s the only correct one and others a inherently heretic.

    • @lightnsfw@reddthat.com
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      87 months ago

      Because most places run on morning person hours. If you don’t get up early enough you can’t get everything done because a lot of places close by mid afternoon. I think the compromise at this point is just divide society into day people and night people and just run everything 24/7. There should be enough of both for that at this point.

    • don
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      137 months ago

      Fellow stay at home friend here, 🫡 I got your six. From my home.

  • @Smoogs@lemmy.world
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    297 months ago

    Don’t get me started on the “first come first serve” bullshit that started this competition train wreck of a society.

  • @Dvixen@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    I want to punch whoever thinks being a shifted sleeper (4am-noon or 6am-2pm in my case) is a bad thing. I had a job that loved me for taking all the late shifts that my age cohort didn’t want so they could have a social life. I just didn’t want to have to wake before noon. :D

    If I try (and fail) to keep social hours, aka business hours, I have to contend with severe insomnia (in bed by midnight, awake til sunup), or I just don’t sleep. Either is bad for me, my health, and the sanity for those around me.

    Where I live, most things are finished by noon, and stores close at 4 on the weekend. Late night shopping means open til maybe 7pm on a Friday. (I miss my home city/country. Weekend hours til 6pm, late night (open til 9pm) three nights a week. Moving here was like going back in time forty years.)

    Grr Argh and stuff.

    • @ouRKaoS@lemmy.today
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      77 months ago

      It’s currently 7:30 am. I just got off work, I’m browsing a bit on my phone before I take a shower & head to bed. Perfectly normal day for me & my wife understands. I get a hundred apologies if she has to wake me up for something, and she usually doesn’t get out of bed before noon.

      Us night owls are a necessary part of a functional society!

      • @Dvixen@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        What I wouldn’t give to be somewhere where stores don’t close down while the sun is still up. This is a capital city, even.

  • Flying Squid
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    227 months ago

    I am so jealous. I am lucky if I’m able to sleep until 6 am. The dogs sometimes wake me up at 4:30 and my wife snores like a sawmill.

    • @MrShankles@reddthat.com
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      7 months ago

      Regarding the snoring:

      I snore like a freight train… a real “rattle the walls” type thing. It doesn’t bother me cause I don’t notice lol. Unfortunately, my wife is apperently “unable” to ignore it (I mean that sarcastically about her; my snoring can be/often is impressively loud)

      I tried taping my mouth for snoring, but ended up choking on my own saliva. Works for some, not for me

      But I went and got a sleep study done (that you can do at home, with equipment they loan you) because I didn’t want to do that to my wife (and I guess there’s health benefits too). Surprisingly, I was diagnosed as having only “mild” sleep apnea. As loud as my snoring (allegedly) can be; I thought it would be worse. So I was prescribed a CPAP and got my machine… mainly because I didn’t want to force my wife into another room 3x a week, due to my obnoxious snoring

      And holy shit… I hadn’t slept so well, in so long, that it made me feel a little sad/stupid that I hadn’t gotten a CPAP sooner. You have to find a set-up that works for your sleeping habits… but my god! I hate going without it now. Sometimes I forget to put it on, and sometimes I rip it off at night… but I can always feel how unrested I am now when I don’t wear it

      TL;DR - CPAP’s are awesome and worth any mild inconvenience they may cause. And they also stop the snoring, regardless of cause. It’s an inflammation/soft palate thing; sometimes you need a little extra pressure. The sleep you get is priceless though

      • Flying Squid
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        17 months ago

        Thanks for letting me know. I’m still not convinced a CPAP will help, but I don’t think she’s ever had a sleep study done either. If she did, it was long enough ago that it might be worth another.

        • @hydroxycotton@lemmy.world
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          37 months ago

          CPAP machines stop snoring by creating continuous positive air pressure that keeps your muscles from collapsing. It’s not really a matter of convincing – it’s a fact.

    • @stom@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      27 months ago

      Mouth tape. Explained how much snoring affected me and the missus started using it. Cheap, simple, and the snoring stopped inside a week.

      As for the dogs, stop rewarding then when they bark. Don’t feed em, let em out, whatever it is they’re wanting that they bark for that you keep doing. Sounds like they’ve trained you.

      • Flying Squid
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        27 months ago

        With the dogs, it’s a light sleeper issue. If they start moving around, they wake me up and I can’t get back to sleep. And then I have to use the bathroom and I’m totally awake.

      • Flying Squid
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        57 months ago

        I’ve tried and I can’t fall asleep with them in. Believe me, I’ve tried every suggestion anyone has come up with.

        Part of the problem is that it’s really hard for me to fall back to sleep if something wakes me up.

        • @meliaesc@lemmy.world
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          67 months ago

          I sleep in the guest bedroom most of the time. My husband and kids all understand its just healthier that way.

        • @deeply_moving_queef@lemmy.ml
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          37 months ago

          Silicone earplugs, that don’t enter the canal, solved this long-standing problem for me. I sympathise with you regardless, a snoring partner is a difficult situation for both parties.

        • Oof. I used to be that way (and a light sleeper). White noise really helped keep me asleep, and got me to where I don’t need it anymore. I’m sorry that it didn’t work for you.

          • Flying Squid
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            47 months ago

            It’s probably not apnea, it’s probably allergies, because it’s a lot worse right now and there’s very little in the winter. She’s tried breathe-right strips, but she says they’re too uncomfortable.

            I also have a feeling that it would take me weeks to be able to easily fall and stay asleep with the sound of a CPAP machine, but maybe one day it will be necessary. I hope not.

            • @Waraugh@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              47 months ago

              I got the latest airsense cpap machine and it’s extremely quiet for whatever that’s worth. If I took a video of it running with my phone it wouldn’t pick up any noise. I hate the thing and haven’t been able to get use out of it but I was shocked how quiet it is.

            • @JasonDJ@lemmy.zip
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              7 months ago

              I didn’t realize it was you I’m talking to. I’d trust that you and your partner have plenty of medical advice.

              Get some sleep, one way or another.

              Air purifier like the other said is a good idea though. Allergies are killer right now, at least around here. My car hasn’t moved since Friday. It was silver then and it’s green now.

            • @Passerby6497@lemmy.world
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              17 months ago

              Do you have an air purifier running in your bedroom? I found running a small purifier with a hepa like filter did wonders for my wife’s seasonal allergies.

                • @kalpol@lemmy.world
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                  17 months ago

                  A big one like the Honeywell HEPA ones is also great. Filtering only, don’t get the ionized ones. You can just replace the prefilters once a year or so (can vacuum them off to reuse once or twice) and the actual HEPA filter lasts a really long time.

                  Claritin or whatever works and aerobic exercise daily also does major wonders.