The simple change that ended years of snoring and broken sleep, without needing to be hooked up to a machine.
After years of separate bedrooms and waking up like the walking dead, a chance recommendation at a barbecue changed everything.
I'm 51, a heavy snorer, and I've been sleeping separate from my wife for years.
And that's not even the worst part. I feel like I've been surviving on 2 hours of broken sleep, and at times I feel like the walking dead.
Despite being in bed 8+ hours, I can't remember the last time I woke feeling rested, like I'd actually slept.
A few times a month I'd also wake up in the middle of the night gasping for air like a fish out of water. Honestly, those moments were terrifying.
"At times I feel like the walking dead."
Why I'd been avoiding CPAP
I'd search for answers online, but everywhere I looked kept saying the same thing. "Get a CPAP," "CPAP is your only real option."
But I honestly dreaded the thought of being hooked to a machine every night. I'd rather fix the problem myself.
And deep down, I knew I wouldn't be compliant. I'd read that over 50% of users abandoned it after the first year. I'd be one of them.
Mouthpieces caused jaw damage
I tried the obvious stuff first. Nose strips. Useless. Snored straight through them.
Next, I looked into custom mouthpieces. The dentist-fitted ones were over £2,000, so I picked up a cheap over-the-counter one to test the waters first.
To be honest, it seemed almost as invasive as a CPAP. But I wanted to give it a go.
A piece of plastic wedged in your mouth all night, forcing your jaw forward into a position it doesn't want to be in.
I woke up most mornings with serious jaw pain that lasted for hours. My bite started feeling off.
And reading more into it, it didn't seem to matter whether people had gone for the cheap moulded ones or the expensive custom-fitted versions. Most of them seemed to have the same issues as me.
Long-term jaw damage. One guy even had to have corrective jaw surgery.
Another dead end.
What my doctor told me next
So I went to see my doctor.
Again, he said usually the gold standard treatment is CPAP. But then he told me something I hadn't heard before.
He said a well-designed, high-quality wedge pillow is a less invasive first step compared to oral appliances and CPAP. And in many cases, they are highly effective.
He told me to look for one around 25 to 30 degrees. He said that's the perfect sweet spot. Clinically effective, but not so steep that it starts causing discomfort.
For the first time in years, someone in the medical world was telling me there was another way.
What's actually happening when you snore
My doctor explained it to me like this.
There's a phenomenon called gravitational airway compression, and he said it's the main cause of snoring.
Essentially, when you sleep flat on your back, gravity pulls down on the soft tissues in your throat. They fall backwards and start compressing your airway, reducing the space air has to travel through.
That's what causes the snoring. That's what causes the gasping and why I'd sometimes wake up like a fish out of water.
But when you elevate your upper body at the right angle, those soft tissues no longer get pulled straight back. The airway doesn't get compressed. It stays open. Breathing improves. And the snoring stops.
"It was the first explanation I'd ever heard that actually made sense."
A stranger recommended Hiquo at a barbecue
A couple of weekends later, we were at a family friend's barbecue.
I wasn't planning on bringing any of it up. But you know how it goes.
A few drinks in, the conversation wanders, and before I knew it I was telling them about the doctor's appointment. The snoring. Dreading CPAP. The wedge pillow recommendation.
Halfway through, one of the ladies at the table, a friend of a friend, someone we'd only met a couple of times, leaned in and said, "You know, my husband had exactly the same thing. He got a wedge pillow about a year ago and it was a game changer for him."
I looked up.
She told me he used to snore so loudly they couldn't share a bed. And he was tired all the time.
Within a couple of weeks of trying the pillow, the snoring had basically stopped. He was sleeping through and so was she.
"It's called Hiquo," she said. "Honestly, you should try it. We can't recommend it enough. It completely changed things for us."
I noted it down in my phone.
What makes Hiquo so good
That night when we got home, I sat down at the laptop and started looking it up.
When I looked at the pillow, I understood why she'd rated it so highly.
It was a properly and specifically designed wedge pillow, exactly the kind my doctor had told me to look for.
It's designed at a precise 27 degree angle, which falls right in the range my doctor recommended. The exact amount of elevation that stops gravitational airway compression.
Not so steep that you fall off or it causes back and neck issues. But steep enough to keep the airway open all night.
It's made with a medical-grade, high-density memory foam that holds its shape night after night.
And that matters, because if the foam can't hold its shape, the angle changes, and the pillow stops doing its job.
It's firm, but it's got a slight springy resistance to it too, which makes it genuinely very comfortable to lie on all night.
The first night I tried it
That first night, I set the pillow up and lay back. Within a few minutes I could feel the difference.
Head and neck properly supported, chest slightly raised. Breathing felt easier.
I drifted off without thinking about it.
The next thing I knew, I was opening my eyes to morning light. I sat up, confused for a second, and looked at the clock.
I'd slept right through.
And I felt refreshed. Actually refreshed. Not "less tired." Not "okay." Properly rested for the first time in years.
What's changed since
That first night wasn't a fluke.
Most mornings since, I've been waking up the same way. Restored, alert, and properly rested. No more dragging myself out of bed feeling like the walking dead. No more hangover feeling. No more crashing at 2pm.
After a few weeks, my wife came back into our bed. One morning she looked at me and said:
"You sleep so quietly now I keep checking you're still breathing."
I didn't really know what to say back, but for the first time in years, I'm waking up feeling like I've actually slept.
But what if I sleep on my side?
If you're anything like me, you're probably asking: "Will this work if I sleep on my side?"
I had the same concern.
But the angle and design of the pillow are built to keep your hips, spine, and neck all in alignment. It's not too steep to feel awkward.
And it comes with a contoured neck support that keeps the right amount of space between your shoulder and neck.
I switch between sleeping on my back and my side, and honestly, it's more comfortable sleeping on my side than without it.
The refund guarantee made it an easy decision
Here's the thing that made it easy for me to try it in the first place, and why I'm sharing this story now.
It comes with a 60-night risk-free guarantee.
You order one. You sleep on it for 60 nights.
If it doesn't work for you, if the snoring doesn't improve, if you don't sleep better, if you're just not getting on with it, you send it back and get a full refund. Simple.
That's how confident they are it'll work.
Look, if you're still where I was a few months ago, exhausted, snoring, dreading the thought of CPAP, I really can't recommend trying it enough.
"My only regret is not finding it sooner."
You've got 60 nights to see if it works for you. If it doesn't, you send it back. That's it.
Click the link below. Last I checked you can still get 40% off.
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