According to a Study, Partners Who Sleep on the Right Side of the Bed are more Likely to be Cranky

Jethro

It’s a done deal! According to a study, partners who sleep on the right side of the bed are more likely to get out on the wrong side.

Researchers have found that people who scurry out of the covers on the right are more pessimistic than people who get out of the covers on the left.

Additionally, they are 3% more likely to despise their employment, which increases their likelihood of being cranky in the morning by 7%.

In contrast, those who sleep on the left tend to wake up in a happy mood because they have a 10% greater view of life and are 8% more likely to enjoy their jobs.

In a poll of 1,000 adults, bed manufacturer Sealy UK discovered that people who want to be alone prefer to sleep on the right while people with a broad social circle prefer to sleep on the left.

Although the margins are thin, the research does show an intriguing trend: could it be that the left side of the bed is actually the “right” side?

Neil Robinson, a sleep expert at Sealy.

Since each side of the bed is highly defended territory, moving from right to left may not be as simple for many cohabiting couples.

One in three couples, according to the study, sleep in separate beds, thus some couples need not worry about which side to sleep on.

Nearly half of people who don’t share a duvet go to the spare room to get away from their partner’s snoring and a quarter go there to escape their uneasiness. And one in ten people has their child or pet push them out.

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