Every dawn at 5 a.m., his girlfriend’s phone unleashed a full-hour demonic shriek while she slept through it like a corpse. He worked from home, cherished his 8:30 lie-ins, and finally snapped, silenced the alarm one fatal morning and let her rocket past wake-up time.
She stumbled in late to work, returned furious, and declared him the villain for “sabotaging” her job. The internet roared in: headphones, separate rooms, or break up with the human snooze button. Sleep war achieved nuclear status.
Man urns off girlfriend’s hour-long snooze alarm, making her late for work.
















Sharing a bed with wildly different schedules is basically relationship Russian roulette, and alarm-snoozing is the bullet. This couple’s morning war is peak “we love each other but we might actually murder each other before coffee.”
He’s losing an hour of sleep every day, while she’s treating the snooze button like her emotional support animal. Both are dug in like it’s a hill to die on: at 5:15 a.m.
Let’s be real: repeatedly hitting snooze isn’t just annoying for your bedmate; science says it’s legitimately terrible for the snoozer too. Sleep expert Adam Tishman, co-founder of Helix, explains it perfectly: “When you let yourself fall back asleep, you’re tricking your body into thinking it’s going back into sleep mode. When your alarm goes off again, your body and brain are confused, resulting in that foggy feeling called sleep inertia.”
In other words, girlfriend’s “easing into the day” routine is actually making her more exhausted and cranky.
A 2020 study published in Sleep Health found that habitual snoozers reported significantly worse mood and lower alertness than people who get up with their first alarm.
On the flip side, some people genuinely struggle with what sleep experts call “sleep inertia” or are extreme night owls forced into early-bird jobs.
Clinical sleep medicine specialist Dr. Michelle Drerup notes, “Sleep inertia typically happens when you wake up abruptly from a deep sleep.” That doesn’t give anyone a free pass to torture their partner with an hour-long alarm symphony, but it does explain why she’s clinging to her ritual like it’s the last lifeboat on the Titanic.
The mature fix? Compromise that doesn’t involve sabotage. Sunrise alarm clocks, smartwatch vibration alarms, or, hear me out, separate bedrooms a few nights a week are all proven, drama-free solutions. A 2023 survey by the National Sleep Foundation found that 1 in 4 couples already sleep apart at least occasionally for better rest, and they report higher relationship satisfaction. Shocking absolutely no one who’s ever been woken up by a 5 a.m. blaring phone.
Turning the alarm off without a heads-up was petty, but letting it ring for sixty minutes when you share a bed is low-key selfish too. They both need to adult harder, or this relationship is going to be running on caffeine and resentment before long.
Here’s what the community had to contribute:
Some people say OP is NTA because the girlfriend’s endless snoozing disturbs their sleep and she should get up when the alarm first goes off.



![Girlfriend Keeps Hitting Snooze For An Hour, So Boyfriend Turns Off Alarm And Makes Her Late For Work [Reddit User] − NTA she should’ve got tf up. She was disturbing your sleep at that point lmfao and it sound like she was going to be late anyway.](https://dailyhighlight.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/wp-editor-1764121391099-4.webp)

![Girlfriend Keeps Hitting Snooze For An Hour, So Boyfriend Turns Off Alarm And Makes Her Late For Work [Reddit User] − Nta my rule is if I'm awake bc of your alarm, then you're awake bc of your alarm.](https://dailyhighlight.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/wp-editor-1764121393641-6.webp)

![Girlfriend Keeps Hitting Snooze For An Hour, So Boyfriend Turns Off Alarm And Makes Her Late For Work [Reddit User] − NTA. I cannot stand people who snooze that many times when there's another person who has to live through it every single day.](https://dailyhighlight.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/wp-editor-1764121396002-8.webp)


Some people say ESH because both partners are being immature and refusing to communicate or compromise.








Some people say the real solution is separate bedrooms or silent/vibrating alarms, not fighting over one alarm.








At the end of the day, love shouldn’t feel like a daily sleep-deprivation experiment. Was our Redditor justified in his one-man snooze rebellion, or did he just nuke the bridge because he was tired of paying the troll (alarm) toll?
Would you risk the wrath of your partner to reclaim your precious Z’s, or is separate-bedrooms the real relationship glow-up we all secretly want? Drop your verdict and your own alarm horror stories below!








