By the time I hit 28 weeks, I'd given up on sleep. Not in the dramatic, new-parent way everyone warns you about - that comes later. This was the 'I physically cannot find a position that doesn't make me want to cry' kind.
The heartburn started at week 20. Propping up on pillows helped for about an hour before they slid out from under me. By week 24, the swelling in my legs was so bad my OB told me to elevate them above my heart. But elevating my legs flat on my back? That made the reflux worse. It was a cruel joke.
"My OB said something I didn't expect: 'Have you considered an adjustable bed? You need your head up for the reflux and your legs up for the swelling - at the same time.'"
I honestly thought she was joking. Adjustable beds were for hospitals and grandparents, right? But after another week of sleeping upright in the living room recliner while my husband had the whole bed to himself, I started Googling.
Most adjustable beds I found were either $8,000+ (Tempur-Pedic) or looked like they belonged in a nursing home. Then I found Sven & Son. The Harmony bundle - adjustable base plus mattress - was under $1,600 for a Queen. That's less than I'd already spent on the pregnancy pillow, the wedge, the memory foam topper, and the recliner I was sleeping in.
The First Night
Setup took about 30 minutes (my husband did it while I supervised from a chair). That night, I pressed the zero-gravity button on the remote. The head raised about 20 degrees. The feet came up slightly. And for the first time in two months, the heartburn didn't come.
I slept five hours straight. I actually woke up confused because I'd forgotten what that felt like.
What Actually Helps During Pregnancy
Here's what my OB explained and what I've experienced firsthand:
The Partner Angle
My husband was skeptical. Adjustable beds meant split mattresses, right? We went with a Queen (one base, one mattress, one remote). We both use zero gravity now - he loves it for his lower back. But if your partner has completely different sleep preferences, the Split King is two separate bases side by side. Each person controls their own side. That's what my sister did after she saw ours.
What Surprised Me Most
The bed is still incredible 14 months later. This wasn't a pregnancy purchase - it's a bed purchase. I use the elevation now for reading and nursing. My husband uses zero gravity every night. When the baby was colicky at 3 AM, I could raise the head of the bed to nurse without fully waking up or stacking pillows.
I genuinely wish someone had told me about this at 20 weeks instead of 28. I would have saved hundreds on pillow experiments and actually slept during the third trimester.
Every Sven & Son adjustable base includes zero-gravity, head/foot elevation, and a wireless remote. The Harmony starts at $895 for the base alone, or $1,445 bundled with a 10" firm mattress. 120-night comfort guarantee. HSA/FSA eligible through WithFlex.











































































