Hmmm..did she marry very young? Come from a large family? One of my sisters went directly from home to being married and was then divorced. It was very difficult for her to sleep alone. She was scared for awhile, but it did pass in a month or two.
I had a roomie in college for about six months right before I got married at 18. She was a total slob. I would come home after work/classes and clean everything, only to come home the next day to it being totally trashed again. And the refrigerator???? Ugh...it got to the point where I didn't even want to put food in there.... The wedding just couldn't come soon enough for me.
Hubby was a LITTLE better, having been in the military, but it still took some adjustments.
I had to learn some things:
1. Men are perfectly fine with wearing a pair of favorite jeans all...week...long, and will actually HIDE them if they have to;
2. Forget the toilet seat thing. It's gonna be up. Period. You'll fall in during the night a couple of times and learn to put it down in your sleep;
3. No matter how many valets, drawer dividers, etc. you get them for their dresser, everything that comes out of their pockets is gonna stay in a pile on top of the dresser until they dress the next morning;
4. Don't bother discussing laundry sorting. It ain't gonna happen. Just sort it from the hamper when doing the laundry. And if they leave ink pens, etc. in their pockets and ruin your stuff, they owe you a new whatever it was
;
5. Manly noises happen. Not only do they happen, men are entertained by them;
6. Men will never understand all of the STUFF we need in the shower stall. Separate bathrooms are helpful;
7. Make it a habit to LOOK AT THE TOILET PAPER ROLL WHEN YOU FIRST WALK INTO THE BATHROOM and plan on it being EMPTY;
8. If you clean out your hubby's closet, you must save whatever you removed for at least 6 months. If he doesn't miss it, it can be donated to charity/sold at a garage sale. If you have a question as to whether it's important to him, you must subtly work this into a conversation before removing it. NEVER GIVE AWAY/SELL OLD SPORTS HATS OR T-SHIRTS - knowing this can save your life;
9. Never let a hubby help you with a garage sale because he'll take all of his stuff back into the house because he can't live without it;
10. If he offers to put the laundry away, just accept the fact that he doesn't understand your dresser/closet system and nothing will be where you want it. Thank him for his efforts and move it later;
11. He doesn't understand your kitchen cabinet system. If he thinks he's helping by putting the groceries away, thank him and check when he isn't looking to make sure the milk isn't in your spice cabinet;
12. When your hubby offers to help you clean, divide the chores according to the things you're picky about, which are normally going to be the bathrooms and kitchen. It's hard to mess up dusting, vacuuming and taking out the trash;
13.If he snores, you "accidently" let you arm flop across his chest hard enough to wake him or hold his nose until he begins to snort, the quickly let go and fake being sound asleep;
14. Keep two blankets on the bed or a spare within arm's reach. If he takes one for himself during the night and you wake up frozen, you don't have to get up to get one for yourself or fight him for it;
15. Never move furniture at night if your husband isn't home. Many men have been injured because of this;
16. Husbands wreck diets. Count on it. The week you start a diet is the week they will want to go to every high-cal restaurant in town and/or bring home cookies, ice cream, etc.;
17. Sharing a checkbook never worked for me because he would forget to make registry entries, though duplicates are helpful. It's helpful to have two checking accounts with both of your names on them with each person having certain financial/bill paying responsibilities. Since most of us use debit cards more and more, it's even more important and helpful in keeping track of spending habits. After we did this, we never had the checkbook/bill paying arguments;
18. Men don't understand what some of your items are and will use them for the wrong purposes, oftentimes rendering them unusable for the correct purposes. BEWARE;
19. If you go to sleep before he does, it's highly likely that the light will come on, you will hear singing/humming/whistling, the rattle of the stuff he has to remove from his pocket and dump into a pile on his dresser, after which time he will ask, "Oh! Were you asleep???!!!"; and
20. Newspapers in the bathroom. Stacks and stacks and stacks. Maybe this is why they don't care whether there's toilet paper on the roll or not...