She moved in with her boyfriend of three years expecting partnership, but found a champion sleeper who clocks 14–15 hours daily: nine at night, four-to-five more in the afternoon, then wonders why she’s buried in chores.
When she asked him to cut one nap to help with basic housework, he hugged his blanket tighter and declared sleep his non-negotiable “mental health need.” Suddenly the woman doing 100% of the adulting became the villain for wanting a roommate instead of a human weighted blanket. Cohabitation dreams died under a mountain of unwashed dishes and one very rested man-child.
Girlfriend asks oversleeping boyfriend to shorten daily four-hour nap and help with chores, he cries boundary.













Our Redditor discovers her partner treats adulthood like an optional subscription. She isn’t asking for a chore chart worthy of a Pinterest board, she’s begging for basic equity while juggling work, a brutal commute, and part-time school. Meanwhile, Captain Nap-a-Lot insists 15 hours of sleep is non-negotiable and somehow still lacks the energy to run a vacuum.
From the outside, two stories are possible: either this guy has an undiagnosed medical issue (hypothyroidism, sleep apnea, depression, anemia—the list is long), or he’s comfortably weaponizing “tired” to dodge adulthood.
Both can be true at once, but neither excuses refusing to investigate or splitting chores fairly. Excessive daytime sleepiness affects roughly 20% of adults, according to a 2020 study in Sleep Medicine Reviews, and it’s often tied to treatable conditions. Ignoring it isn’t self-care; it’s just ignoring.
Charlene Gamaldo, M.D., a neurologist and sleep specialist at Johns Hopkins Medicine, explains: “We don’t exactly know the cause and effect” when it comes to oversleeping making you sick. That uncertainty is key here. If boyfriend genuinely requires toddler-level sleep, he needs a sleep study yesterday, not defensiveness.
Oversleeping like this can signal deeper issues, from thyroid problems to mood disorders, and leaving it unchecked risks everything from foggy days to foggy relationships.
Relationships thrive on reciprocity, not score-keeping, but when one partner is awake roughly 9 hours a day and still can’t manage half the laundry, the math stops mathing.
Neutral advice? He books a doctor (GP + possible sleep specialist) within the next two weeks, shares the results openly, and in the meantime they hire a cleaner or he pays for one, because love shouldn’t come with a side of resentment and dishpan hands.
Check out how the community responded:
Some people say NTA and insist the boyfriend’s extreme sleeping is not normal and requires medical evaluation.









Some people say NTA because the boyfriend is exploiting OP as an unpaid housekeeper and refusing to do his share.









Others are baffled how OP dated him for years without noticing he sleeps 14-15 hours daily.








At the end of the day, whether it’s medical mystery or masterful mooching, one thing is crystal clear: no relationship survives long-term when one partner is permanently on crib duty while the other is literally in one.
So tell us, was she reasonable to question Mount Nap-more, or did she stomp on a genuine health boundary? Would you hand him a doctor’s appointment card or a moving-out checklist? Drop your verdict below!







