Sunrise Star Edwina Bartholomew Reveals Her Weird Nighttime Routine With Husband Neil
Sunrise star Edwina Bartholomew reveals her VERY weird nightly routine with husband Neil Varcoe and how she ‘kept their love alive’
Edwina Bartholomew has been with her husband Neil Varcoe for 10 years and the lovebirds were married five years ago.
But the Sunrise host, 39, revealed on the daily telegraph On Thursday, the couple have slept in separate beds for the past seven years and couldn’t be happier.
She explained that their different morning routines make it difficult to sleep in the same room, saying that the current sleeping arrangements have “kept their love alive.”
Edwina Bartholomew, 39, (left) has been with her husband Neil Varcoe (right) for 10 years and the lovebirds were married five years ago.
‘People are surprised when they come to our house and see two rooms prepared. One for me with a pink bedspread, a big closet, and loads of magazines and books,” she wrote.
‘One prepared for my husband with his gym equipment and other “manly” stuff. My room is always messy. Yours is always clean. He is a bed maker. I am not. Put away his clothes. I like to file mine on top of a chair in case I need them again.
It’s been like that for about seven years. I sleep fantastic and he tosses and turns. When he would get me up to go to work, he had a hard time going back to sleep, so we decided to try separate rooms.’
But the Sunrise presenter revealed in The Daily Telegraph on Thursday that the couple have slept in separate beds for the past seven years and couldn’t be happier. In the photo with his daughter Molly
The TV presenter went on to say that their separate dream continued even after they had their two children, Molly, three, and Thomas, almost one.
Bartholomew said: ‘I slept through the night with the baby in my room and then he woke up early to take care of it. Ten years into our relationship and five years into our marriage, it works like a charm.
It comes just days after a media personality endorsed the radical proposal for ‘adults only’ suburbs and places for people without children who want peace and quiet.
She explained that their different morning routines make it difficult to sleep in the same room, saying that the current sleeping arrangements have “kept their love alive.” In the photo of her with her son Thomas
Despite being the mother of two young children, the Sunrise news anchor said she understands the benefits of child-free spaces.
“I think it’s a brilliant idea,” he wrote in his News Corp. column. ‘I love my kids. I love their company, but I don’t love the sound of someone else’s screaming child.’
Bartholomew, who welcomed her second child in March last year, said she was sympathetic to adults who don’t have children.
I would sleep through the night with the baby in my room and then he would get up early to take care of it. Ten years into our relationship and five years into our marriage, it works like a charm,” she said.