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He Loves His Wife, Then Her Sleep Disorder Turns Their Home Into a Night Shift

by Believe Johnson
January 7, 2026
in Social Issues

A husband says bedtime turned into a horror movie he never asked to stream.

He’s 42, his wife is 38, and she warned him early on that she used to sleepwalk. He believed her when she said it had mostly faded, because she lived alone for years and honestly thought it stayed manageable.

Then they moved in together, and the night episodes showed up almost daily. Some moments sound funny at first, like the random nonsense sentences, until you picture waking up to someone sitting upright, eyes open, staring at the ceiling. No blinking. No response. Just that empty, “not quite there” look.

She walks through the house like she has a mission. She opens doors, unlocks things, moves objects, and sometimes resists being guided back to bed. The scariest part, his kids from a previous marriage now fear staying overnight, after one of them saw something truly unsettling in the hallway.

He loves his wife. He also feels exhausted, on edge, and responsible for keeping everyone safe.

Now, read the full story:

He Loves His Wife, Then Her Sleep Disorder Turns Their Home Into a Night Shift
Not the actual photo

'I want to divorce my wife over her sleep problems AITAH?'

This might sound ridiculous, but please hear me out.

I’m 42M, my wife is 38F. When we first started dating, she told me she had a history of sleepwalking and that she’d been diagnosed with a sleep disorder as...

She said it used to be bad, but that it had mostly gone away. I believed her and I honestly don’t think she was intentionally lying,

just that she’d been living alone for so long that she genuinely didn’t realize how severe it still is..

So, she sleepwalks/talks almost every night. Lately, it’s been every night.

Sometimes it’s harmless, like seep talking, mumbling nonsense, laughing quietly. I honestly found it funny.

The very first time it happened, she rolled over, looked straight at me, and said with complete confidence that “a weatherman is a person who makes jam,”

then immediately went back to sleep.. But it stopped being funny pretty fast.

I started waking up in the middle of the night to find her lying next to me with her eyes wide open, not blinking and just staring at the ceiling.

Another time, I woke up and I found her sitting at the vanity mirror, brushing her hair over and over.

I said her name, and she dramatically turned her head toward me, whileee still brushing her hair.

She was staring at me with like, no expression, no emotion idek, just fing terrifying.. That was the first time I felt genuinely afraid.

She walks around the house with purpose. She opens doors, unlocks things, moves objects.

I’ve woken up to het standing in doorways just staring at noting.

When I try to guide her back to bed, she gets stiff or pulls away, like she doesn’t want to be redirected.. The biggest issue is my kids.

I have two kids from my previous marriage who stay over and now they don't want to stay overnight for that reason. Well, at least my daughter who is 12.

One night she was staying over and woke up because she heard a noise. She opened her bedroom door and found my wife standing in the hallway, repeatedly hitting her...

My daughter screamed terrified and she still thinks that my wife is actually faking it and actually plotting something evil.

On the other hand, my younger daughter who is 4 is absolutely mesmerised and amazed by this whole situation. She thinks this is like the coolest thing ever.

One morning I woke up and my wife wasn't in bed. I went looking all around the house to find her and so that the kids wouldn't be scared if...

but I found her sleeping in sitting position inside a bathtub downstairs and my younger daughter sleeping on her.

My wife doesn't remember anything that happened but my daughter said she woke up because she saw her walking in hallway and went with her,

followed her around the house, then when she went to bathtub she climbed inside and fell asleep.

I told her to immediately wake me up if she ever sees her walking around again but,

something similar happened again and her reason for not waking me up was that she was talking this time so she thought she was awake.

After that, I started panicking about having my kids over at all. I don’t sleep when they’re here. I just lie awake listening for movement.

She does try. I want to be clear about that. She feels horrible about it. She’s even tried tying her wrist to the bed so she wouldn’t be able to...

and it worked sometimes but sometimes she somehow frees herself. We locked the door and I hide the key so she wouldn’t find it and she literally finds it. It's...

Besides these sleep problems, we are really good for eachother. I really love my wife and I wish I could help her somehow but I feel like I literally can't...

As much as everything else is great I can’t lie and say that this isn't affecting the way I feel about her, I still love her but I don't know...

When she started telling me things she did when she was younger, I honestly didn’t know how to process it.

She told me that once picked up her younger sister from bed and took her outside and left her in grass.

She had no idea what she did, where she left her on anything about the whole situation. Knowing that I have a 4yo who is even happy to follow her...

I just can't imagine what would happen if she followed her outside or even worse if she actually took the kid somewhere. I don't know.

That’s the part that really messes with me, the total lack of memory. The next morning she’s herself again.

It makes me feel like I’m living with two different people, and one of them is completely unpredictable.. I love my wife. She is genuinely a good person. But I’m...

I really wish there was a solution. I wish I could say this is something we can fix. But I’m starting to think this is just… how it is. And...

Edit: A lot of people are asking questions about if she visited a doctor for all this because I haven't mentioned.

She’s been going to doctor for this since it started when she was a kid. She visited all kinds of doctors for sleep related things, neurologists, psychologists even.

She goes to the doctor regularly, she had multiple head scans and all type of s__t that I dont even know. She does have a head injury that nobody knows...

maybe from one of the first times she was sleepwalking or something, but apparently it's like a dent on top of her head.

So many doctors and none of them think that is a cause. She was prescribed multiple medications that some of them worked for some time and some didnt work at...

I don't know what was the medication that worked best for her but it was affecting her kidneys and doctor didnt want to continue her on it.

I don't know if this can be related but she said that before she used to sleepwalk she would have these realistic nighmares about waking up around decaying corpses.

Her doctor said that is related to sleep walking and its called night terrors or something like that. Ask for any other information.

Another very interesting point I completely forgot to mention is that she would set alarm on her phone at the time she usually does this

and she would turn the alarm off before it rings, like unknowingly.

I witnessed this when I was awake and she just took her phone and turned off the alarm and was about to get up. The doctor said this is common...

Everyone is acting so smart saying go to different doctor and all kinds of obvious things. She visited multiple, I'm talking hundreds of doctors, when she was younger and now.

Its an ongoing thing since she was a kid, its not something new. Basically they even though it may be some form of schizophrenia but it's not.

She's been to sleep clinics, mental hospitals etc. If all tgese years, all these doctors weren't able to find a cure

or even just the sole reason for all this I dont see why would anyone think its an easy fix. I love her but this is terrifying.

Its absolutely insane and I havent even mentioned the things she says during these episodes, some of them are straight up scary.

She once told me to take my eyes out. Like hello? Its terrifying and I dont care how anyone takes this. I said it, I love her but I dont...

This reads like someone running on fumes, trying to hold two truths at the same time.

He loves his wife in daylight. He also dreads what the night version might do, even when she never means harm and wakes up with zero memory. That gap, the fear plus the guilt for feeling fear, can chew up a marriage quietly.

The kid angle makes it heavier. A 12-year-old gets frightened and refuses overnights. A 4-year-old follows her around like it’s a magical adventure. That combo would keep any parent hyper-alert, even if the spouse tries everything and feels ashamed.

The part that sticks with me is how hard he tries to solve it alone, like he has to become the house’s overnight security guard.

That pressure points straight at the next question, what does “safe” look like here, and who helps build it.

When sleepwalking moves from “odd but harmless” to “frequent and risky,” a couple stops arguing about preferences and starts managing safety.

Clinicians group sleepwalking under parasomnias, which means unwanted behaviors that happen during sleep. Many episodes come from deep non-REM sleep, often earlier in the night. Some people do simple things like sit up or mumble, others unlock doors and navigate the home. This story sits at the high-risk end because the wife wanders with intent, manipulates objects, and sometimes injures herself by hitting her head.

One detail matters a lot, the wife shows long history and heavy medical contact. That history can make a spouse feel trapped, because it suggests the problem will never change. Yet sleep medicine rarely promises a “forever cure” for parasomnias. It aims for reduction, safety, and targeted treatment of triggers. Even long-running cases can improve when a team reframes the goal.

Frequency also matters. Adult sleepwalking appears less common than childhood sleepwalking. One overview puts adult prevalence around 4%, which means many clinicians see it, but far fewer families deal with nightly, complex episodes like these.

So where does a specialist start when someone sleepwalks almost every night and the household includes children?

First, they confirm the diagnosis with clarity. People often use “sleepwalking” as a bucket term, yet several conditions can look similar at 2 a.m. Some people act out dreams during REM sleep. Others experience confusional arousals. Some have sleep apnea or medication effects that increase arousals and trigger episodes. A sleep specialist can use a detailed history, sleep logs, and often an overnight study when danger escalates. That step matters because the best treatment depends on the pattern.

Second, they build a safety plan that assumes episodes will happen. Locking bedroom doors sounds practical until you think about emergencies like fire. Specialists usually aim for layered, low-tech protection that reduces harm and reduces the chance of leaving the house. Practical steps include door and window alarms, child-proof covers on exterior locks, removing hazards, padding sharp furniture edges, and placing a motion alarm that wakes the awake partner fast. The goal is not perfection, it is fewer opportunities for injury.

Third, they address predictable timing. One evidence-supported tactic involves scheduled awakenings. A sleep medicine chapter from Springer describes “anticipatory awakenings” as waking the person shortly before the usual event time. Mayo Clinic gives similar advice and puts it plainly: “Doctors sometimes recommend anticipatory awakenings.” In real life, that looks like tracking episodes for two weeks, identifying the common window, then waking her 15 to 30 minutes before that window, long enough for full alertness, then letting her fall asleep again. Many families see meaningful improvement because the reset disrupts the sleep stage transition that triggers the episode.

Fourth, they look for triggers that the couple can actually control. Sleep deprivation, irregular schedules, alcohol, stress, and certain medications can raise the odds of parasomnias. Keeping a “sleepwalking log” sounds tedious until it produces a pattern, like episodes cluster after late caffeine, after a stressful day, or after a very warm shower. Once the couple sees the pattern, they can design prevention rather than guessing.

Fifth, they reconsider sleeping arrangements without treating it as a relationship failure. Couples can stay married and still sleep separately during an acute safety phase, especially when kids stay over. That choice can protect the children and reduce the husband’s nightly vigilance, which protects his health too. A separate room with a monitored door alarm, plus a baby gate or hallway alarm, can keep a 4-year-old from wandering after her.

Now, the divorce question. The husband’s fear does not make him a villain. Safety anxiety can feel like trauma when it repeats night after night. Still, divorce does not automatically solve the biggest risk, because the wife will still sleepwalk, only now she may do it alone. If the couple can agree on an immediate safety plan, a specialist re-evaluation, and a temporary change in kid overnights while they stabilize the home, they can make a clearer decision from a calmer place.

If he wants a practical line in the sand, it can sound like, “I want to stay. I also need a home plan that keeps the kids safe and lets me sleep.”

Check out how the community responded:

Reddit lined up behind “protect the kids first,” and they meant tonight, not someday.

Bamburguesa - My daughter sleepwalks. It is fascinating and a bit scary tbh. What does work is figuring out the time she tends to sleepwalk each night.

About a half hour before that time comes, you wake her up.

Bamburguesa - Then she’s not in the same sleep cycle at that time of night and is much less likely to sleepwalk.

Also, when my daughter started taking short acting guanfacine it has almost completely eliminated the sleepwalking.

Foreign_Plan_5256 - This is an issue for a neurologist and sleep specialist.

Snoo96949 - Is it time for another consult at the sleep clinic, this is pretty dangerous for her too. You could still be married and not live together, you could...

Fuller_House12 - Have your girls lock their doors. Use door/window alarms, they’re cheap and LOUD.

If you’re not going to her Dr appts with her, she may not be telling him just how bad it is.

A bunch of commenters went full “life hacks,” with mittens, sleeping bags, alarms, and cameras.

Surleighgrl - This makes me think of the comedian Mike Birbiglia who has REM Sleep Behavior disorder.

He almost died when he jumped through a window at a hotel. Encourage your wife to go to a sleep clinic.

Curly-help-plz - Mike Birbiglia has a severe sleep disorder and acts out his dreams. He sleeps with mittens on, zipped into a mummy sleeping bag.

Consider something like that before moving to divorce.

Kyonarai - Honestly, I'd probably have my husband lock me in a room from the outside at night if I had that issue. Dangerous in an emergency, but the wandering...

shammy_dammy - Cameras to start with so that she understands the severity of what's going on.

One camp side-eyed the divorce idea and asked why the medical plan felt vague.

clementine1864 - What do medical specialists say about condition and treatment.

Before deserting someone you married “for better or worse” I would exhaust every possible avenue. Maybe try a trained medical assistance dog to alert you.

JasMel_01 - YTA if you jump straight to divorce. You listed symptoms and didn’t provide info about formal medical intervention.

Has she been to a specialist recently, and do you explain each episode to her in the morning?

A lot of people will read this and focus on one question, “Can you divorce someone over sleepwalking?”

The more useful question sits closer to the kids, “Can this home stay safe at night, starting this week?”

The husband sounds worn down, frightened, and guilty for feeling frightened. The wife sounds ashamed and stuck with a condition that keeps humiliating her, even after years of doctors. That mix can wreck even a loving marriage, because fear and sleep loss make everything feel sharper.

If they want a real shot, they need an immediate safety plan that assumes episodes will happen, plus a fresh specialist look that checks the diagnosis and targets prevention. Temporary separate sleeping or different custody nights can count as responsible, not cold.

If safety improves, the relationship gets oxygen again. If nothing changes, then he can make a clearer call without living on adrenaline.

What do you think counts as a fair boundary here? Would you treat separate bedrooms as a smart fix, or as the start of the end?

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

OP Is Not The AH (NTA) 9/40 votes | 23%
OP Is Definitely The AH (YTA) 5/40 votes | 13%
No One Is The AH Here (NAH) 26/40 votes | 65%
Everybody Sucks Here (ESH) 0/40 votes | 0%
Need More INFO (INFO) 0/40 votes | 0%

Believe Johnson

Believe Johnson

Believe Johnson - a dedicated full-time writer specializing in entertainment and news writing. Her experience in various jobs related to movies and TV show news enhances her understanding of the industry, making her an indispensable team member.

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