Sleep Apnea Snoring
Snoring: The Emotional Problems
What is sleep apnea snoring?
Readers who themselves aren’t snorers, but have lived with (or
currently live with) a first class snorer, might find themselves shedding a tear or two as they read this
section. That’s because often overlooked in the whole snoring discussion are those people who don’t snore.
These are the husbands, the wives, the kids, the nanny’s,
the siblings, the in-laws, and even the neighbors who have found themselves on the receiving end of a chain saw, or
a lawn mower, that tended to start at around 10:00pm, and continued – unabated! – Until about 7:00am the following
morning.
For such people, trying to fall and stay asleep was not merely an
exercise in stress coping; it was an exercise in crisis management!
It’s not at all overly dramatic to suggest that the emotional
costs of snoring are as severe, or possibly even more severe, as snoring’s physical
toll. This is because snoring can lead a disturbing array of emotional problems, including:
- lack of sleep, leading to depression and
anxiety
- Marital breakdown and divorce, due to lack of sleep and lack
of empathy (remember, the snoring partner doesn’t often know the pain that they are unwittingly
causing!)
- Eviction by a landlord and the resulting humiliation (this
may sound funny, but some people have literally been kicked out of their homes because of their
snoring!)
- warring roommates and neighbors
- job loss, due to inability to concentrate and focus (because
of sleeplessness)
- memory and retention problems due to sleeplessness
And within these problems (and this just a simple list, an entire book can be filled to document the real life
emotional damage caused by snoring) are a host of painful mental states that infect both the guilty-snorer, and
the enraged non-snorer.
These unproductive emotional states include:
• frustration
• anger
• feelings of violence
• helplessness
• desperation
• anguish
• exhaustion
• growing resentment
• lack of confidence and self-esteem
And let’s not forget the millions of non-snorers who drive cars
or operate heavy machinery; without a solid night of sleep, some of them can (and regrettably do) put both
themselves and others at risk.
Indeed, the emotional problems associated with snoring are,
unfortunately, less discussed; especially since the snorer himself or herself isn’t aware that he/she is causing so
much unintentional emotional damage! Yet, as you can easily see (perhaps even in reflecting upon your own
life), the emotional costs can be severe and incalculable.
Different Degrees of Sleep Apnea Snoring-Related
SufferingUltimately, the point here is not to try and see whether the physical problems
associated with Sleep Apnea Snoring are more important, or more devastating, than the emotional
problems. Different people are going to experience different aspects of both levels; and some,
unfortunately, are going to experience the worst of both.
Quite simply, it’s enough for us to conclude without question
that snoring is one of the most serious health problems in the world; and the notion that it is merely a nighttime
inconvenience, or something that can’t lead to anything severe or lasting, is just plain
incorrect.
Snoring is a real problem, and hundreds of millions of people
around the world – both snorers and non-snorers – would readily agree.
The Race to End Snoring
It is in this light – that snoring is such a massive global problem – that the quest for a solution has been
nothing short of monumental. Virtually every corner of the health care world claims to offer something to
mitigate or eliminate snoring; from acupuncture to invasive surgery.
On the one hand, this focus on solving snoring is quite welcome;
it signifies that qualified medical people (i.e. the educated folks in lab coats who are paid to solve health
problems) are very interested in finding some answers, and very willing to commit their large brains to this
important task.
Yet on the other hand, this focus on solving snoring is, ironically, beset with additional problems. Quite simply, there is
a lack of quality information with respect to what solutions work, and what solutions quite frankly don’t
work.
Though it’s always more fun to focus on the positives – and
that’s certainly what we’ll do in this book – it’s necessary for us to first take a look at something a bit
negative: surgery; or more specifically: why surgery isn’t often the way to go if you want to end snoring once and
for all. We take a look under the topic Why
Surgery Can Be A Bad Idea
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