Couple’s Sleeping Positions

Category: Healthy Lifestyle
5 Comments

I came across an article that talks about how a couple’s sleeping position can reflect their relationship. My boyfriend and I sleep in all sorts of positions just to be comfortable so there isn’t a particular style to our sleep. Plus, I don’t think there has to be any secret meaning behind the way you sleep, its just rather interesting to see how this article dissects everything down. Enjoy!

The Spoon: “Semi-foetal, genitals against buttocks”, this position provides both of you with maximum physical closeness and is the most common sleep position for the first three to five years of a long term relationship.

The Honeymoon Hug: A position for the early months of a relationship “when you’re so deeply enamoured you wish you could fuse, or just after lovemaking”. Or it could indicate the couple are “overly enmeshed” and “too dependent on each other to sleep apart.”

Shingles: An attempt to focus total attention on a partner, even in sleep. Whoever’s head rests on the others shoulder is the more dependent and compliant partner. Or just shorter.

Sweetheart’s Cradle: A nurturing position when you are “literally being brought in under the wing” and a more intimate position than the Shingles because the partner is being held, like a vertical cuddle.

Loosely Tethered: Five or so years into marriage, many couples feel secure enough to allow a bit more space and comfort into their bed. The emotional current is sustained by a touching hand, knee or foot.

Leg Hug: Establishing physical contact indirectly. Such casual contact could imply that the couple are ambivalent about expressing affection or intentionally withholding it, maybe after a fight. It may also speak of healthy camaraderie.

Pursuit: If a partner turns his/her back and retreats to the far side of the bed this is known as a “freeze manoeuvre”. If one party then pursues and pushes up against the other partner while sleeping, that’s called “Illegal Spooning”. But it also may be that the partner who distances may actually want to be pursued. His or her distancing becomes an invitation – “a dance of the spoons”.

Zen Style: This position is usually pre-empted by buying a larger beds to accommodate one or both partners’ need for space. “Touching buttocks allows for large-surface contact and private connection, but without clinging. “Like two circles, separate but overlapping, this position is a perfect definition of interdependence.” Like a Venn Diagram.

The Cliff Hanger: This retreating may be a rejection or it could be the partner just needs a good nights sleep. Maybe the partner who creates the distance is finally comfortable enough to admit they’d rather get a good night’s sleep away from you than cuddle up together, listening to you snore. The experts however, do recommend a “heart-to-heart to find out what’s really going on.”

The Crab: You can tell this position is trouble just by looking at it. “As if to escape from each other or as if you’re travelling in different directions.” This position may be “acting out an unacknowledged need to pull away from each other, from the marriage”. Or he/she could simply be a creative sleeper.

To read more about couple’s sleeping positions, check out MyLifeTime.com.

To read decipher an individual’s sleeping style, check out my blog about Sleeping Positions.








Showing 5 Comments »


  1. laKidna
    Posted Monday, July 12th, 2010 at 11:52 pm

    The Crab is so funny lookin’, ‘creative sleeper’ indeed


  2. Diana
    Posted Tuesday, July 13th, 2010 at 11:35 am

    LOL I think we end up sprawling like that on really hot nights to try and get the cold corners of the bed or when we’re pissed drunk!


  3. Monica
    Posted Friday, July 15th, 2011 at 5:42 pm

    These are awesome. I’ve never even heard of most of these before!


  4. Calamnacus
    Posted Friday, July 22nd, 2011 at 3:50 pm

    Where’s the one where the guy’s on the couch?


  5. Robyn
    Posted Friday, July 29th, 2011 at 4:30 pm

    Sometimes sleeping positions are chosen out of necessity, such as one partner having to sleep on her right side because of hip and back problems, and the other partner having to sleep on her left slide to accommodate a CPAP (continuous positive airway pressure) machine.

    The state of our romance (which, incidentally, is excellent) has nothing to do with it.


Add New Comment