I've heard wake them for feedings and don't wake them for feedings.
Right now, I'm waking him up every 3 hours to eat. This is the first night of this whole 3 hour thing, but I've read that a lot of mamas just let their LOs sleep during the night/feed them when they wake up on their own and wake them up to feed during the day. That seems like it would mess up the whole schedule to me, which we're trying to establish.
So, just a simple question: Do you wake your LO to feed? Both during the day and at night?

Re: Do you wake your sleeping baby?
, 💙💙💙💙💙💙
He actually never went down from his birth weight. At his well baby check up, he weighed the exact same he did at birth. I won't be waking him up tonight, thanks ladies!
SCANDAL!
Mom of 2 monkeys and 1 on the way!
Christian12/06, Liam 08/12, Monkey #3 10/10
I wish. LO screamed for a bottle from 24:30am when I finally woke up SO crying to tell him I needed him to trade me spots because I was going to fall over or have a breakdown.
SCANDAL!
this.
What blissful world do you guys live in where your baby sleeps for more than three hours in a row!? Evie is up about every 2-3 hours during the day to eat, and lately about every 1.5-2 hours during the night. If she's still napping about an hour and a half before I want to sleep, I do wake her up so I can get her changed/fed/burped/settled for when I go to bed.
Never had an issue with having to wake her up to eat, she lets us know in ample time when she's hungry.
I think it really depends on your baby and whether he/she is producing enough dirty diapers. DD would sleep through the night if I let her, but after a little scare and a trip to the hospital again I wake her every 3-4 hrs at night and every 2-3 during the day. During the day it's easier to look for cues that she's hungry, but she will rarely wake up on her own during her naps even if she is hungry.
I also like having some sort of schedule, but I am exclusively pumping, so maybe our situation is a little different.
This.
The only reason I've ever been told to wake a newborn for feedings was if they were not gaining weight and/or not having enough wet/stool diapers. If jaundice or low blood sugar was an issue shortly after birth, then that might also be an indication to feed your newborn every 3-4 hours. You can always ask the nurse at your pedi's office though. HTH!
~Sweet Girl *8/18/08* c-section ~ Sweet Boy *12/2/10* VBAC ~ Sweet Boy *8/14/12* VBAC~
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