Part of for better or worse, I guess. |
He lies there, humped mountain buried under duvets, sheeted, on his belly, face down: the mountain rumbles. It isn't always true about the breathing becoming deeper, slower for his is such that I would hyperventilate should I try to breathe that quickly. Sonorous he is not. Noise erupts on both: the in and ex.: hale of the mighty thunder, of mountains rumbling, of winds rustling or blowing-- a derecho in sleep. Whistles, warbles, puffs of air, raspberries that ne'er in fruit salad were. Hums and deep growling that shake the foundations. Shoves and pokes exacerbate. Belly, side, back, fetal; mouth opened closed-- make no difference. Never goes to sleep, falls or goes over the bay. Awake, flip of switch, asleep and roaring. Instantly. Slim, sinuous man in phenomenal shape for sixty-plus years. Almost indecently healthy; can out lift, out do, out run much younger men. Windows rattle, doors do not insulate, across the house reverberations shake the very foundations. Poke. Roll over. Snore. Shove, bounce the bed, not even yet back under the covers and it resumes. Such a quiet man when awake. Sleeps through thunder crashing, his alarm, the dog ferociously barking at night terrors or fireworks. Totally, completely, utterly deafened in sleep. The mound under the blanket fort creates sounds the likes of which no man should make. We, who are still awake, can but marvel at the cacophony. And, according to him: he doesn't snore--he's never heard it. Therefore: he doesn't snore. I could, I suppose, record him. That wouldn't convince him and might open the door to retaliation of a similar kind. Any wonder I catch naps during the day? |