I know this may be too soon to establish, but LO has his days and nights switched and I think I have been up for 3 days straight!
When did your LO start to sleep on a schedule and how did you get the schedule established? What methods worked best for you?



| Olowalu, Maui ~ August 6, 2008 |
| Family of 4 ~ April 2, 2011 |
| Family of 5 - October 24, 2012 |
Re: How did you get LO on a sleep schedule?
Aw, hang in there! He's still too new to know day from night and besides at this age they're pretty much up every 2-3 hours to eat or potty (or both)!
We didn't really get into a routine until Libby was around 8 weeks old and even then it was just a routine, not really a bonafide schedule. We started having more of a schedule around 6 months or so. And again, it's been adjusted every three months or so as she's aged.
For now, if LO is eating-sleeping-pottying around every 3 hours, he's on target. The three week growth spurt is just around the corner (Libby hit hers at 2.5 weeks) and then he'll be cluster feeding (i.e. eating every hour, on the hour for 5-6 hours at a stretch). Once he hits 6-8 weeks things should seem more predictable...
Hang in there and try to enjoy this time, it doesn't last forever! And if you can, sleep when he sleeps and try nursing (if you're BFing) side lying so you can doze while he feeds.
TTC/PG Blog | Mommy Blog
E.A.S.Y. routine from "The Baby Whisperer" -- I swore by that routine!!!!
Eat. (nurse, bottle)
Activity. (then play, change diaper, spend some awake time)
Sleep. (after about 2 hours, then 3 hours, it's naptime. Just watch the clock)
You Time. (when they sleep, you sleep too! or surf Fbook)
HTH!
Malia & Dave & Alexa
Happily married since 2-17-08! Three since 9-9-09!
Baby Blog
Lori had really good advice, so I don't have much to add.
We started out with a fairly steady routine out of necessary (if one boy woke up and was hungry, then we woke the other one up and he got fed too because we had to keep them on the same schedule), but we didn't really force the issue of a schedule. They dropped one night waking at about 8 weeks and then dropped a second one at about 12 weeks, both of which helped. Unfortunately it really is just one of those things that will happen when it happens!
My only real tip is to make nighttime = sleep time. By this, I mean make it BORING. Don't turn on lights (other than the minimum needed to see what you're doing, and I'd recommend just getting a bright nightlight so you don't even have to turn a light on), and don't play or laugh or giggle with your LO. Hell, we didn't even TALK - which I know sounds mean, but we wanted to keep interaction to the bare minimum and show Will and Dash that grownups are really boring at night so there's no point in wanting to party then.
This isn't to say that you can't soothe, cuddle, hum, sing, etc - of course you can and should do those things if they're needed. Just no chit-chatting for the sake of it, KWIM?
We also tried to help them set their internal clocks by closing the blinds in their room at night and opening them wide at when morning "officially" began at 7am - it's one of those hardwired biological things, as getting bright sunlight helps your body know that it's time to be awake and active.
| Olowalu, Maui ~ August 6, 2008 |
| Family of 4 ~ April 2, 2011 |
| Family of 5 - October 24, 2012 |
I love Hawaii!
Tara & Ian . 4/24/2008 . The Kahala Planning . Married
this!!! in the very beginning i felt like she was never even awake....just up to eat and went right back to sleep. if she was up it was only for a few min and then she'd doze again. and she was up like clockwork in the middle of the night to nurse! it's tough but it does get better so hang in there
once they start sleeping for 4 hour stretches it feels like 8!
i do agree it's good to start a routine though and we did follow E.A.S.Y. when she was older
in the beginning (around 6 wks) it was 2 hrs between waking and next nap and as she got older it became 3 hrs.
Jaime & Brent
Oahu, Hawaii | Sept. 9, 2005
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