Rosanna Davison has explained her reason for no longer sharing a bed with her husband Wes Quirke.
The former beauty queen married Wes in 2014 and they have gone on to welcome three children together - daughter Sophia and twin boys Oscar and Hugo.
Rosanna has opened up about how much her life has changed since becoming mum, admitting she can't remember who she was without her little ones.
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She said: "I found that becoming a mum has changed me profoundly. I can barely even remember the person I used to be before I had kids.
"I’ve had to streamline and simplify my life so much to be able to get everything done that I need to do, in terms of career, housework, doing the supermarket shop, all those kinds of things, and then having the rest of the day to give my time to them. Social life? I mean what is that?"
Motherhood is Rosanna's favourite job, although she has revealed that having a young family means she and Wes have been "sleep divorced" for the past few years due to their children's sleeping habits.
She told the Mind Full podcast: "Wes and I have been sleep divorced for the last year and a half, two years. He sleeps in the spare bed in the room with Sophia because she tends to wake in the night - it’s like divide and conquer.
"I sleep in the, what was our bed, because the twins always come to me. So I’m always woken by two boys in my bed at half five in the morning.
"But we laugh, I’m always like, 'Oh, well, you know, two boys in my bed, neither of them is my husband'."
Rosanna also shared the revelation on social media, explaining that she and Wes are "not the only ones" as many of her fans could relate.
"You are amazing parents; sleeping in separate rooms is practically the norm for young families now but nevertheless hope you manage to get back in the same bed soon," one fan commented.
Another said: "We were sleep divorced for about a year then this year we missed cuddles so we made a giant family floor bed with two mattresses and we all just go to bed at the same time and it’s my favourite thing!"
"Totally get it. I describe it as ' coming out of the haze' when the kids finally sleep the night," a third person wrote.
While a fourth added: "100% relate, we'll miss it all in a few years".