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My answer: I keep a humidifier running in my bedroom at night throughout the year, because even when I don't need much humidification it's still a very good white-noise machine. (it's the wicking kind that inherently adapts to the ambient moisture level, so it doesn't over-humidify in summer: it just uses very little water then)
I also recorded the humidifier's sound and keep a copy on my phone, as an emergency backup in case of power outage or travel. (Haven't tried using it yet, not sure how well it'll work.)
I have a very hard time getting to sleep if I can hear snoring, though: I would definitely much rather have silence than that.
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A nightlight in the same room is excessive and keeps me awake. A bit of indirect light is best. The streetlights out the window work well for this.
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(My mom and occasionally my dad snore, and when I was a kid they always used a nightlight. I did not realise how terrible sleeping in their bed was until after I stopped. I actually resisted using my own bed at the time, because better the devil you know.)
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Date: 2018-12-27 02:49 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2018-12-27 03:31 am (UTC)(And nobody breathes in your face! Or leaves you with your face up against a sweaty back! Or overheats the blankets with their body heat!
...kid!me kind of figured taking an hour or two to get to sleep each night was just How Things Were.)
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The time a few years ago that we had a 16-hour power outage (10 AM - 2 AM) in winter, I moved my mattress into my parents' bedroom--not easy! my bed is a loft bed!--so we could share warmth and all that, regretted my life choices, and went and slept on the couch bundled in blankets and clothes instead. (By the time I realised Plan A wasn't going to work everyone else was asleep, so I couldn't enlist them to help me move the mattress back.)
My neck hurt the next day, but at least I could sleep.