DD will be 3 whole weeks tomorrow and this day/night confusion has got to go! She will sleep fairly well during the day but rarely at night! This is killing me! I need sleep! Oh and I am breast feeding and our pedi doesn't want her on a bottle yet (she is not the greatest latcher and bottles flow so easy that our lazy feeder is likely to reject my breast becaus it is more work...)
During the day she sleeps ok, mostly on my chest (she would most likely kill to be able to sleep on her stomach), but occasionally in her swing or bassinet. But her long stretches are all on me. The other stretches are for only about 10-15 mns, so I am not able to get a nap in while she sleeps. I am scared of loosening my arms and dropping her if I sleep while she is on my stomach.
I hope this makes sense, I am not too coherant because of the lack of sleep...
Any ideas out there?
Thanks so much!
Beth
Our Twin Baby + a Big Girl Blog
And with the delivery trifecra of one twin vaginal, one c-section with general anesthesia for twin B, Spencer and Sidney joined us at 35 weeks exactly on June 18.
Re: help me straighten out her days and nights
I am a firm believer that babies will figure out their internal clock on their own. She might be too young but she should start figuring it out very soon. Both of my girls started sleeping longer stretchs at night (4 hours +) around 4 weeks.
But this is the routine I did/do with my DD's. Bath, bottle, bed.
I think the bath helps relax them, then bottle to help fill them.
Good luck! We've all been there!
DS son does this as ell. the exact same thing. I have only been able to sleep at night holding him. I just prob pillows up around me. I have also found you really don't loosin your hold it's like instinct.
I have been told to keep it drk and quiet at night lud nd bright as possible during the day. I try keeping him awake most of the day with whateer techniques that work. I have also tried getting into a bedtime routine. I figure at some point it will start helping.
DD #1 passed away in January 2011 at 14 days old due to congenital heart disease
DD#2 lost in January 2012 at 23 weeks due to anhydramnios caused by a placental abruption
The first thing I would tackle is trying to get her to sleep on her own. When she falls asleep while you are holding her, start or continue to make shushing sounds as you lay her down. When you put her down, keep your hands on her and keep firm pressure. Keep shushing but slowly release the pressure until you are no longer touching her. Then back slowly out of the room while shushing. This worked for both my kids, I hope it works for you! Good luck.
I also don't let DS sleep for more than 2-3 hours during the day (no more than 3 hours without eating).