Husband Tired Of Wife Snooze Habit Takes Secret Night Action

A husband grew weary of his wife’s endless snooze button presses that kept shattering his sleep each morning. Despite repeated requests and her temporary promises to stop, the habit always returned, turning their bedroom into a noisy battleground.

Tired of the disruptions, he began a quiet nighttime tactic during his own bathroom visits, shifting her phone to hidden spots like the bathroom, under the bed, or even another room. When the alarm rang, she had no choice but to rise fully and search for the device, breaking her snooze cycle completely.

A husband uses petty phone-hiding revenge to cure his wife’s snooze-button habit.

Husband Tired Of Wife Snooze Habit Takes Secret Night Action
Not the actual photo.

'Petty (but oh so rewarding) revenge on my snooze-button-hitting-wife?'

My darling princess wife (the absolute love of my life), hates getting up in the morning. She is, by her own admission, not a morning person.

Each and every morning when her alarm on her phone goes off, she hits snooze. Over and f__king over again.

I have asked her several times to just get out of bed on the first alarm and be done with it.

I have asked her to change the time that the alarm goes off if she wants to sleep late. She apologises and promises to change her behaviour.

She complies for a while, but soon reverts to The Snooze Button Monster.

So now when I get up in the night to have a p__s (I'm old, it happens and will happen to you too), I move her phone away from her...

Sometimes I put it in the ensuite, sometimes I put it in the cupboard, sometimes I put it under the bed. Sometimes I put it in another room.

Now when her alarm goes off, she HAS to get out of bed to find that screeching, incessant, dream-breaker.

She knows that it was me. She knows that this is petty revenge for disturbing my sleep unnecessarily, and so I lie in bed all nice and smug.

It is a very good thing that she still loves me.

The husband grew frustrated with his wife’s repeated snoozing, which disturbed his rest despite her promises to improve. After failed talks and temporary changes, he opted for petty but effective revenge by hiding her phone at night, turning her wake-up into an active search that guarantees she gets out of bed.

From one angle, his move seems like harmless fun in a long-term relationship. Creative problem-solving wrapped in affection. Yet others might see it as passive-aggressive, potentially escalating small irritations into bigger tensions if not balanced with open communication.

The wife’s awareness and continued love suggest mutual understanding here, but motivations on both sides highlight how sleep differences can test even the strongest bonds.

This story taps into broader family and couple dynamics around morning routines. Research shows snooze alarms are incredibly common: a large-scale study of over 3 million sleep sessions found that more than 55% ended with the snooze button being pressed, with heavy users averaging 20 extra minutes. Women tended to snooze slightly more than men in some data sets. These habits often link to erratic sleep schedules and can fragment rest, especially in shared bedrooms.

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Sleep scientist Dr. Rebecca Robbins from Brigham and Women’s Hospital explains the science clearly: “Unfortunately, the snooze alarm disrupts some of the most important stages of sleep. The hours just before waking are rich in rapid eye movement sleep. Hitting the snooze alarm will interrupt these critical stages of sleep and typically only offer you light sleep in between snooze alarms.”

She recommends setting the alarm for the latest possible time and committing to getting up on the first ring to optimize sleep and daytime performance.

In this Redditor’s situation, the husband’s tactic cleverly bypasses the cycle by making snoozing impractical, though experts note better long-term solutions exist. A Japanese study found that using snooze prolonged sleep inertia compared to a single alarm, due to repeated forced awakenings that increase light, non-restorative sleep stages.

Neutral advice points toward collaboration: couples could explore consistent bedtimes, gentle wake-up tools like sunrise simulation clocks that gradually increase light, or even vibration-based alarms for minimal disturbance. Placing the alarm across the room voluntarily achieves a similar “must-get-up” effect without the hide-and-seek element. The key is empathy while prioritizing shared rest quality.

Here’s the comments of Reddit users:

Some people fully support the OP and say the action is justified as fellow snooze-button abusers.

ThrowawayFishFingers − As a snooze-button abuser myself, what you’ve done is completely justified.

Ok-Understanding7658 − I applaud you. I am also a snooze button abuser. Along with multiple alarms set in the morning.

I try I really try. I have learned to put it on vibrate so it only wakes me up and not my boyfriend

Some share creative or alternative alarm solutions they or others have used.

TerrorNova49 − Found an alarm years ago and gave the info to a co-worker for her teenage son

who would shut off the alarm and not wake up… there were 4 puzzle pieces that fit together on the top of the clock.

When the alarm went off it would spit the puzzle pieces into the air. To shut the alarm off you had to find all four pieces and complete the puzzle...

Lipfood − Have you ever heard of a sunrise / gentle wake alarm clock? It’s a wonderfully peaceful way to wake up,

and once the light hits my eyes, I’m awake. No snooze! Also has the tiniest, most inconveniently placed buttons to turn the literal sun off.

heliyon − Y’all may want to consider a vibration based alarm. I have one because I’m deaf but I’ve heard a lot of couples like them when they have staggered...

The one I use is “iLuv SmartShaker 3” and I’m only sharing that so you have an idea of what I mean, not for advertising purposes.

PreparationMediocre9 − As a chronic snooze button hitter, nothing got me to stop faster than sleeping next to someone who does the same thing.

Maybe try setting your own alarms at weird intervals.

Others reflect on their own habits or warn about potential consequences from the wife.

Zoreb1 − I was never like this as I learned early that one doesn't really go back to sleep in that short a period and when you do get up...

Better to just get up and start the day. Now that I'm retired I rarely bother with an alarm.

lapsteelguitar − Like you, I am a married man, and like you I am older & have to pee in the night.

My only comment is this: You are living the dangerous life. One day, your wife will get her revenge. And she will laugh as only a wife can.

May God have mercy on your soul, because your wife will not :)

KTB1962 − I'm not a morning person either, even though I need to be out of bed by 6 am.

I do hit the snooze 3 times. Any more than that and the 2 furry alarm clocks will come into the bedroom and start meowing for their breakfast.

They don't have a snooze button...

GenXnewb − "Not a morning person" here I feel attacked. I am taking this post personal.

In the end, this couple’s snooze saga reminds us that small bedtime battles often stem from love and shared life rather than malice.

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Do you think the husband’s phone-hiding prank was a fair nudge for better habits, or might it risk tipping into annoyance over time? How do you and your partner handle differing sleep styles or morning routines? Share your own stories and hot takes below!

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