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For this and other reasons, it is usually a good idea to have a separate set of blankets from your partner to avoid interrupting their sleep.
My wife and I are like this. When we first met, she called me at 5:30AM to see what was up. My question was "Who died?"

She's a 9p-5a kind of gal. Left to my own devices, I'd sleep 1a-8:30a.

It has been an object of contention to us over the years, but we work it out. Having our son and adjusting to the sleep deprivation afterward helped.

This is an object of contention between my current ladyfriend and I. How did you guys work it out? She likes to go to bed by 10pm and I am a stay up and code till 2am kinda guy. She comes and yells at me about it.
Having a pooing crying machine helps fix your schedule. You both sleep when the baby does.
My girlfriend goes to bed at 10pm and I go to bed at 2:30+ am.

But I do the dishes before coming to bed.

So far it's been working pretty well. I get my alone time when I'm up late, she gets her alone time before she falls asleep. We both need our alone time, might as well get it when the schedules don't match up.

Interesting. She doesn't kvetch about having to go to bed alone? Because mine does! Do you guys wake up at the same time? My lady likes to get up at 7am and go running, then she comes back and cooks both of us breakfast, so that is one perk of her going to bed first I guess.
> She doesn't kvetch about having to go to bed alone? Because mine does!

I try to make sure to "put her to bed" where she then spends the next hour or two on her phone. The hard part is getting back out of bed if I'm tired, but I'm usually not tired that early.

> Do you guys wake up at the same time?

Nope. She has to get up at 8 so she can be at work by 9. I have to get up by 9:45 so I can be at work by 10.

The core of our day-to-day interaction happens in the evening between the time I come back from the gym and her bedtime. And we also have Saturdays where the whole day is reserved for being spent together.

Why does she yell at you??
"let's cuddle" "let's have sex" "I miss snuggling" "I don't want to go to sleep alone" "we never spend time together" "I can't sleep when you're not there" "I'm bored" blah blah blah.

She even emailed me some article about how Priscilla Chan made Zuckerberg sign some agreement to cuddle x amount of hours when they were dating before she would agree to move out here to be with him.

I mean, I like cuddling generally and I like sex but I have a bunch of side projects and I get a lot of work done at night! So I've started "putting her to bed" and then coming out to do work. But the problem is sometimes we have sex and then I fall asleep cuddling her, so it's kind of a trap.

> So I've started "putting her to bed" and then coming out to do work

That is EXACTLY how I handle this

> But the problem is sometimes we have sex and then I fall asleep cuddling her, so it's kind of a trap.

Me having to sleep with a CPAP (or else horrible snoring and horrible sleep for us both) ensures that this will never occur with me (the falling-asleep-cuddling... not the sex... lol)

Tough duty. My heart goes out to you.
Basically, I adopted the only viable strategy. I compromise. :)

With my current schedule, I need to be at work at 8. So my midnight oil burning ways doesn't really work for me either. I've noticed in my advanced age that computer time before bed doesn't typically result in a good sleep experience as well.

When I'm too hopped up to sleep, I read in bed.

Having been married for eleven years I think my wife has finally accepted I'm not going to change (and I have long since accepted that she won't either). She's a 9pm-6:30am kind of gal and I'm a 2:30am-10am kind of guy. But, sure, through the years this has definitely been an area of contention. Now, we both find it convenient, I put the kids to bed while she watches TV or reads and I get to sleep in (on the weekends at least) while she cares for the kids.
The article didn't even touch on sleeping in separate beds or rooms, which, from my experience, seems to be a growing trend.
Growing trend according to whom?
"from my experience" - people in my circles, mainly, but it's a topic I see in popnews areas more than I used to.

http://www.today.com/health/happily-united-separate-rooms-wh...

http://www.builddirect.com/blog/why-more-couples-are-sleepin...

http://www.cnn.com/2008/LIVING/personal/09/12/lw.sleep.alone...

From that link: The preference for separate spaces has even begun to affect home design. According to the National Association of Home Builders, there's been a steady increase in the number of requests for "two-master bedroom" homes since 1990, prompting the organization to predict that by 2015, 60 percent of all custom upscale homes will be built with two "owner suites."

It's now 2016, and I don't suspect 60% are being built that way, but a realtor I spoke with last year says it's a topic that comes up with some of her home buyers, although it's never been a dealbreaker. Granted, that article was from 2008, and we had a major recession in there, which may have reaffected architectural planning.

I've seen a few articles on it recently, and know of at least one couple in my social network that does separate beds.

It seems like my grandparents' generation slept in separate beds a lot, my parents' generation swung to the single bed model, and in my generation single bed is still more common but awareness of sleep issues is leading to some people starting to try out separate beds again.

Given the crazy rate at which house prices are climbing and income is not, I'm surprised this is even a thing.
Best thing my wife and I ever did was having separate quilts (same bed though). Means we have independent heat adjustment, since we're like frosty vs surface of the sun at night.
This is common in Norway. I discovered this from my Norwegian partner and it's the best thing for comfortable sleeping. The only problem is my partner discovered all-in-one quilts as standard in Australia and thinks all-in-one is the best thing ever.
What is an all-in-one-quilt? It sounds awesome.
I assume they just mean a non-separate quilt.
Correct - a standard full size doona (Aussie for quilt)
A giant heavy doona is pretty comfortable itself though!
Odd the article didn't touch on an obvious problem with differing sleep patterns among couples: sexual activity.

Going to bed after your partner is asleep makes it a lot tougher to initiate since it involves waking that person up.

The alternative is to initiate during other parts of the day but that may not be possible for many reasons (children being the most obvious).

You missed the 'connect' euphemism

"She advises couples who sleep at different times to make sure they find other times to connect, whether it’s the morning, the half-hour before the first partner goes to sleep, or even the weekend."

Ah, hah, yeah, that would seem to be a euphemism. Odd they choose to be so circumspect about it...
That seems dismissive. Do these solutions really result in satisfying relationships?

I'm skeptical that fitting your sex life into odd hours/days works for everyone.

And especially so for couples trying to conceive.